AN EXPOSITION OF
THE DOCTRINE OF
THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENTS
(ONCERNING THE MANIFESTATION
OF THE
INVISIBLE ETERNAL GOD IN
HUMAN NATURE
Dr. JOHN
THOMAS
Hints
on Studying the Name 5
Index to the Titles of
Deity 7
Analysis 21
Preface
to Phanerosis 25
Introduction to
Phanerosis 31
The
Subject Itself 38
Appendix 126
Index
to Scriptures Quoted 134
In 1869, one hundred
years ago this year, Phanerosis was first published in book form. The subject
matter originally appeared as a series of articles in The Herald Of The Kingdom for 1857-1859, edited and published by
Dr. Thomas. They were ultimately reproduced in pamphlet form in Birmingham,
England, under the title Phanerosis. Since then, various editions have
appeared, though for some time now, this work has been out of print.
The present publishers
feel that they are performing a valuable service to the Brotherhood by
producing this further edition of Phanerosis.
Other works have appeared from time to time, largely based upon matter
supplied in the writings of Dr. Thomas, but we feel that the Brotherhood will
welcome the opportunity of reading the Doctor’s exposition of this grand and
lofty subject.
In preparing this
Edition, opportunity has been taken to supplement the original text with
footnotes wherever it has been considered expedient. In addition, an Index of
the main titles of the Deity as found in the Scriptures has been included to
enable the student to follow the subject more closely.
Phanerosis has been attacked by some, but we believe that the criticism has been
unwarranted. In The Christadelphian for
1881, the late J. W. Thirtle, who had considerable
knowledge of the original text of Scripture, wrote:
“Both in ‘Eureka’ and
‘Phanerosis’ Dr. Thomas wrote much about the name ‘Yahweh.’ To study the word
aright, introduces us to the subject of God-manifestation, the Scripture
teaching concerning which many have misunderstood. Some people, with nothing
better than a vague notion as to what Dr. Thomas’s writings on (his subject
really amount to, have adjudged him in error on some points; and most
frequently a little examination has shown that the points of difference have
involved a difficult criticism or an investigation of matters beyond the
compass of those who have not seen their way to be content with dealing with
things which are within their reach. Others, however, convinced of the
impregnability of Dr. Thomas’s position, have been thankful for the plainly
expressed results of his labour and study, and
grateful for the light he shed upon the doctrine of God-manifestation in its
many revealed phases; and this, notwithstanding their individual inability to
follow him in every stage of his reasoning, owing to their own lack of the
qualifications necessary to support them in an adventure on the field of
Biblical criticism . . . It will be patent to any reader of Dr. Thomas’s works
that he did not find his problems ready worked out, neither were the
difficulties he encountered already solved and only waiting to be ‘re-hashed
up.’ It is also clear to anyone having only a slight acquaintance with current
and recent literature on the subjects dealt with by the Doctor, that hard study
and careful investigation were required before he could, in the lucid way he
did, ‘open up the Scriptures’ to inquirers after the way of life. Bringing to
bear upon the subject of God-manifestation, a knowledge of the revealed purpose
of the Deity, he was well equipped for his task of examining both the Old and
New Testaments.”
There is no more important
theme in Scripture than that of God-manifestation. In fact, the two basic
doctrines of the Bible
The Name Yahweh is
prophetic, and proclaims God’s intention to manifest Himself without
particularly specifying the manner in which this will be done. The addition of
titles indicates the form of manifestation. For example, Yahweh Tz’vaoth proclaims that He will be manifested in an army,
and being prophetic, points to the time when the Lord Jesus shall lead the
saints, as the army of Yahweh, against the world of darkness.
The value of searching
out the significance of a Name or Title by considering the circumstances of its
original proclamation, is shown by ascertaining the first use of El Elyon rendered
“the most high God” (Gen. 14:18).
First consider
the meaning of the words used.
El signifies
Might or Power; Elyon signifies that which is elevated,
lofty, or supreme, and is derived from halah, “to
ascend.” This high and lofty Power is described as being Possessor of heaven
and earth, so that the title is associated with dominion (see Ps. 93: 95:3;
83:18). In Psalm 91:1 it is linked with El
Shaddai. In this verse, the one title expresses the lofty dominion of Yahweh,
and the other reveals that He is the dispenser of grace in sustaining His
subjects, or destroying their enemies. In Isaiah 14:12-13, El Elyon is associated, by comparison,
with rulership. The word “ascend” in this place is literally to “go up high.”
The Name was first
proclaimed on the occasion when Abram returned from the conquest of the kings,
and met Meichizedek outside Jerusalem. Melchizedek brought forth “bread and
wine” as the type of Christ. The narrative is obviously typical, and
foreshadows the future victory of the faithful over the forces of darkness, and
their blessing at the hands of the antitypical Melchizedek following the
conquest of the kings at Armageddon.
At that time, Yahweh
will be revealed as the Lofty Power of the heavens, Whose dominion extends to
the earth.
In consequence of his
victory, obtained only through the help of God, Abram worshipped him as El Elyon, the
most high God (or Power), whose dominion in both heaven and earth has been thus
revealed.
The Name is associated
with the Lord Jesus, for he is described as “the Son of the Highest” (Luke 1;
35). This title
likewise can be
applied in relation to all those who are “born from above” (John 3:3 mg.), and
such are invited to “set their affection on things above” (Col. 3: 1). In
considering this manifestation of Yahweh, therefore, His servants are
encouraged to reach to a higher plane than mere flesh. This, indeed, is the
purpose and value of the doctrine of God-manifestation, and the study of the
names and titles of Deity.
The circumstances that
induced the first use of the title El Elyon, therefore, revealed in type how that the Most
High will use His authority, power and dominion to bring all nations into conformity
with His will and purpose. Thus the title epitomized all that is summarized in
such statements of the Divine attributes as are expressed in passages such as I
Chronicles 29: 11; or in the Lord’s prayer: “For Thine is the kingdom, the
power and the glory for ever.”
Other significant
composite titles are:
Lord God of Hosts — Adon, Yahweh Tz’vaoth: The Ruler, He who will
be manifested in Armies (Isa. 19:4).
Lord God of Gods — Yahweh El Elohim: He who will be the Strength
of the Mighty Ones (Josh. 22:22).
The Lord of Hosts the God of Israel — Yahweh Tz’vaoth Elohim Israel: He who will he
manifested as armies of the Mighty Ones of Israel (Isa. 37:16).
The Lord our Righteousness -~ Yahweh Tz’kenu: He
who will be our righteousness (Jer. 23:6). —
Other composite titles
will be found in Isa. 26:4: Judges 6:24: 11:27; Jer. 10:10; 17:13; 51:56; Psalm 23:1, etc.
This is a study
that will repay the closest attention that can be put to it.
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The Authorized Version
has indiscriminately rendered many of the titles of Deity by the words “Lord”
or “God.” These words do not express the ideas conveyed in the name Yahweh, or
the titles Eloah, Elohim, El, and so forth. By the use of this index the student will be able to trace
the places in his Bible where the different titles occur, and will thus be able
to follow the reasoning of Dr. Thomas and other writers upon this subject more
easily.
Much of the
information contained in the following pages has previously appeared from time
to time in Logos. It has been culled
from various sources, mainly the writings of Dr. Thomas, and from lexicons and
concordances. It is issued without any pretensions to scholarship on the part
of the compiler, who claims no real knowledge of the original languages.
The study of names has
even greater force when considered in relation to God. The names and titles
that He has selected to describe and reveal Himself to man, are of outstanding
importance if we would truly seek to “know” Him, Nowhere in the
7
It is possible for us
to overlook this feature of the Divine revelation, and view the Bible as a
glorified history book. The Bible is not history, either sacred or profane, but
a revelation of the character and purpose of its Author. The incidents recorded
therein are selected to reveal both. Whether they show Him as educating and
protecting Israel, or giving the nation over to judgment and punishment, they
have been set down not merely to record the facts, but as exhibiting facets of
the Divine character. And the names and titles of God give point and force to
this truth. He has selected words and applied them to Himself, and by so doing,
has charged them with power. They become transformed with new meaning as they
are considered in relation to His will and purpose, and the circumstances under
which they were selected. Any of the names and titles of God can, and should,
be studied from that standpoint. When this is done, we will come to “know” the
only true God better, and will be drawn more towards Him.
The Psalmist looked to
the time when the Divine Name will be magnified throughout the earth (Ps. 8:1),
and when His people shall rejoice at all time in His name (Ps. 89:15-16). In
anticipation of this glorious future, Isaiah declared: “Thy memorial name is
the desire of our soul” (Isa. 26:8). The prophetic significance of the memorial
name of Yahweh is expounded m the pages of Phanerosis.
The study of the names
and titles of Deity is most fascinating. It not only assists us to “know” God
more fully, but in addition makes the Bible itself more meaningful.
In Phanerosis, Brother Thomas states that
the words “Lord” and “God” have been used indiscriminately in translating
various Hebrew terms, and it is extremely helpful to the better understanding
of the theme of God manifestation, to be able to determine where these
different titles occur. This can be done by marking each with a distinguishing
color. For example, you may elect to colour in red
pencil the word “God” wherever it is El in
the original; and blue where the word Eloah
occurs. In
8
the front of your Bible,
you could append a definition of the word used, together with the color whereby
it can be distinguished.
When this is done, and
the context of each title is considered in the light of its meaning, its
significance will become apparent, and the reading of the Bible will prove much
more enlightening. The Index we have provided has set these titles out in the
most convenient form.
Jesus declared: “I can
of mine own self do nothing” (John 5:30). This is true also of the heavenly
host. However, with the aid of Ail, (which
Power they manifest) “nothing is impossible” (Luke 1:37). EL or Ail, therefore,
refers to that mighty Power whose work is exhibited in all creation, and whose
energy is the basis of all matter for “out of Him were all things made.”
“Lord,” declared the Psalmist, “thou hast been our dwelling place in all
generations. Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting
to everlasting thou art God (El)” —
Ps. 90:1-2.
According to Young’s Index-Lexicon to the Old Testament, El has
been translated “God” 212 times: “god” 15 times, “power” three times, “goodly”
four times, “mighty” four times, and “idol,” might,” “mighty one,” “great,”
“mighty,” “strong” once each.
The following is the
list of passages in which El has been
translated “God”:
Genesis: 14:18,19,20,22;
16:13; 17:1; 21:33; 28:3; 31:13; 35:1 (altar Unto G.); 35:3, 11; 43:14; 46:3 (1 am G.); 48:3; 49:25.
Exodus: 6:3;
15:2 (He is my G.); 20:5 (jealous G.); 34:6,14 (twice).
Numbers: 12:13;
16:22 (0 G); 23:8, 19,22, 23; 24:4, 8, 16, 23.
Deuteronomy: 3:24;
4:24 (jealous G.); 4:31; 5:9 (jealous G.); 6:15 (jealous G.);7:9 (faithful G.);
7:21 (mighty G.); 10:17 (great G.); 32:4,
9
Joshua: 3:10; 22:22 (Lord G. . . . Lord G.); 24:19
(jealous G.).
Judges: 9:46.
1 Samuel: 2:3.
2 Samuel: 22:31,32 (who is
G.), 33,48; 23:5.
Nehemiah: 1:5
(terrible G.); 9:31,32 (terrible G.).
Job: 5:8 (seek unto G.); 8:3,5 13, 20 9:2;
12:6 (provoke G.); 13:3,
7,8; 15:4,11,13,25;
16:11; 18:21; 19:22; 20:15, 29 (by G.); 21:14,22;
22:2,13,17; 23:16; 25:4; 27:2,9,11,13;
31:14,23,28; 32:13; 33:4,6,14,29;
34:5,10,12,23,31,37; 35:2,13; 36:5,22,26;
37:5,10,14; 38:41; 40:9,19.
Psalms: 5:4; 7:11~ 10:11,12; 16:1; 17:6’
18:2,30,32,47; 19:1; 22:1,10;
29:3; 31:5; 42:2 (living G.), 8,9; 43:4 (unto
G.); 44:20 (strange G.); 52:1,5;
Micah: 7:18.
Nahum: 1:2.
Zechariah: 7:2.
Malachi: 1:9;
2:10,11.
El has been rendered
“mighty” in Ps. 29:1; 50:1; 82:1;
89:6; “mighty one” in Ezek. 31:11; “strong” in Ezek. 32:21; “power” in Gen.
31:29; Prov. 3:27; Mic. 2:1; “goodly” in Ps. 80:10; “great” in Ps. 36:6, etc.
It has a plural form: Elim, powers. See Num. 15:11; Dan. 11:36, where it is
rendered “gods.”
ELOAH
Eloah thus signifies a Powerful or Mighty One. In regard to the doctrine of God
manifestation, it signifies one who is made strong by Divine power (El). God is Himself Eloah, or a Mighty
One, and so are the angels who manifest His power. This idea is expressed in
the words recorded by Isaiah: “Exists there an Eloah without Me. Yea, there is no rock (metaphor for power), I
know not any” (Isa. 44:8). David declared: “Who is Eloah without Yahweh?” (Ps. 18:31 —— “save” balhaday, — “without”
or “apart from” — see
Strong’s Concordance). David’s question can be answered safely in the
negative. There is no true strength apart from Yahweh. Man might claim to be
Eloah, but his strength is but weakness compared with that of Yahweh, who, as
Job remarked, can readily “gather unto Himself His spirit and breath, and all
flesh would perish together.”
Paul taught that
believers are “in hope of the glory of God” (Rom. 5:2), and Peter that “divine nature” will be bestowed upon those
who attain unto the “great and precious promises” (2 Pet. 1:4). Each saint
attaining unto that position will be an Eloah,
or a Mighty One; whilst combined they will constitute Elohim, or Mighty Ones. These titles will be applied to them
because they will manifest El or the
Divine power. Thus Isaiah represents the nations making supplication unto Cyrus
(who was a type of Christ) saying: “Surely God (El - the Divine power) is in thee” (Isa. 45:14).
Eloah has been translated “God” fifty-two times, and “god” five times as
follows:
Deuteronomy: 32:15,17 (not to G.).
2 Chronicles: 32:15 (no
G.).
Nehemiah: 9:17.
Job: 3:4,23;
4:9,17; 5:17; 6:4,8,9; 9:13; 10:2; 11:5,6,7,: 12:4,6 (whose hand G.); 15:8; 16:20,21; 19:6,21,26; 21:9,19;
22:12,26; 24:12; 27:3,8,10; 29:2,4; 31:2,6; 33.12,26; 35:10; 36:2; 37:15,22; 39:17: 40:2.
Psalms: 18:31 (who
is G.); 50:22; 114:7; 139:19.
Proverbs: 30:5.
Isaiah: 44:8 (Is
there a G.).
Daniel: 11:37
(regard any G.). 38 (G. of forces), 39.
Habakkuk: 1:11:
3:3.
ELAH
Ezra: 4:24; Ch.
5 to Ch. 6:18 — every instance where the word “God” appears. Ch. 7 from v.12 to
26, ditto.
Jeremiah: 10:11
(plural form).
Daniel: Throughout
Ch. 2:11 to 6:26. Where the word “gods” appears, the word is in the plural;
where the word “God” appears, the word is in the singular. An exception is
found in Ch. 3:25, however, where the
word, though rendered “God,” is plural, and should be rendered “a son of the
gods.”
11.
quently used instead of Yahweh, is a spurious form of
the word. In Eureka, vol 1, p.100, Brother Thomas writes:
“Yahweh or Yah, as a
noun, and signifying ‘He who will be,’ is the memorial name the Deity chooses
to be known by among His people. It reminds them that HE will be manifested in
a multitude, and that, in that great multitude which no man can number, of all
nations, and kindreds, and people, and tongues, which shall stand before the
throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands
(Rev. 7:9)— in each and
every one of them, ‘He will be the all things in all’ (Cor. 15:28); or, as it is expressed in Eph.
4:6, ‘there is one Deity and Father of all, Who is above all, and through all,
and in you all’.”
The word occurs some
6,823 times in the Old Testament. It has been translated “Jehovah” in a few instances
(Exod. 6:3; Ps. 83:18; Isa. 12:2; 26:4; see also Gen. 22:14; Exod. 17:15;
Judges
6:24), but most often
it has been rendered as LORD or GOD. To indicate the presence of the name of
Yahweh in the original text, the translators have printed these words in small
capitals. For example, in Ezekiel 38: 1, the word LORD appears in small
capitals, whereas two verses on (v.3) it is printed in the lower case. In the
former verse, the word is Yahweh; in the latter it is Adonai. Again, in Ezekiel
37:27 the word God appears printed in the lower case, whereas four verses on,
in Ezekiel 38:3, the same word is printed in small capitals. In the former
place the word is Elohim; in the latter it is Yahweh.
Yahweh also occurs in
a contracted form as “Yah.” Usually the condensed form is used for
incorporating the Divine name in proper names, such Joshua (Yahshua).
but it also appears in the text of Scripture, an example being found in Psalm
68:4: “Extol Him by His name Yah.”
In The Christadelphian for 1881, J. W. Thirtle wrote: “The Name is a Hebrew word of four letters,
and is spelled — Yod, lie,vav, he .
. . . Some have wondered how the letter J came to be the initial of the word
among us (i.e., the word Jehovah), as well as of the shorter form Yah in the
common version, Jah. The answer is found in the fact
that early translators and commentators wrote in Latin — a language which has
no letter such letter as Y in it and those scholars selected J to do duty for
the letter they wanted”
These Latin
translators and commentators transposed the Memorial Name from Y.H.V.H. to
J.H.V.H.. Previous to this, however, the Jews, owing to a misconception of the
two passages Exod. 20:7 and Lev. 24: 16, placed against these four letters
the vowel points of the word rendered in our Bible “Lord,” but in Hebrew Adonai. J. B. Rotherham
in The Emphasised
Bible states: “They intentionally wrote alien words — not for combination
with the sacred consonants, but for the purpose of cautioning the Jewish reader
to enunciate a totally different word, vis., some
other familiar name of the Most High.” When the Jewish reader came to the words
Yahweh Elohim, he would read Adonai Elohim, thus following the vowel
points annotated to the text. But in some places, such as Ezekiel 38: 10, the
words used
are Adonai Yahweh. Here, to avoid the
repetition of Adonai Adonai,
the vowel points of the word Elohim were
supplied, and the Jewish reader read Adonai
Elohim. Combine the vowel sounds of those words with the four letters,
J.H.V.H., and the following combination results: JaHoVaiH,
or Jehovah.
At one time, the
correct pronunciation of the Name was subject to controversy; but today it is
generally accepted that Yahweh is the correct form, linger’s Bible Dictionary states: “The Hebrew tetragrammaton
(YHWH) traditionally pronounced Jehovah is now known to be correctly vocalized Yahweh. New inscriptional evidence from
the second and first millennia B.C. point toward this fact . . . . and has
commended itself in the light of the phonetic development and grammatical
evidence of increased knowledge of Northwest Semitic and kindred tongues . . .
. The Name Yahweh has been found to
be unique to Israel and has not been verified as the name of any deity outside
Israel.”
In pleading for
the restoration of the Name to its proper position in Scripture, Rotherham wrote:
“Is it too much to
assume that The Name has about it something very grand or very gracious, or at
least something very mysterious? Whichever conclusion is received, the
question arises whether there is not something essentially presumptuous,
however little intended, in substituting for it one of the commonest of titles,
seeing that there are on earth “lords many,” and the master of the humblest
slave is his ‘lord’? There is surely nothing very grand or gracious or
mysterious in that! It is therefore the most natural presumption that the
suppression of The Name has entailed on the reader, and especially upon the
hearer, irreparable loss” (Introduction to The
Emphasised Bible.)
Rotherham claims that the suppression of the Name was a
serious mistake that should be corrected:
“Thereby serious evil
may be averted. Men are saying today that Yahweh
was a mere tribal name, and are suggesting that Yahweh Himself was but a local deity. As against this, only let The
Name be boldly and uniformly printed, and the humblest Sunday School teacher
will be able to show the groundlessness of the assertion” (p.24).
In his
translation of the Bible, he restores the Name wherever applicable.
This was done in
measure in the Revised Version of the Bible of 1881. However, the Revised
Standard Version reverted back to the practice of the Authorized Version.
Whilst it acknowledges the use of Yahweh as the Name, it reverted back to the
usage of the A.V. because “the use of any proper name for the one and only God,
as though there were other gods from whom He had to be distinguished, was
discontinued in Judaism before the Christian era and is entirely inappropriate
for the universal faith of the Christian Church” (Preface, p.9).
In other words, it
follows the practice of Judaism because of the “universal faith of the
Christian Church.” That faith, of course, is based upon the doctrine of the
Trinity which is refuted by the doctrine of God manifestation, and the
acknowledge
ment of Yahweh the one God of Israel as the sole God to worship. Recognizing these facts, Bible students see the need to understand and use the name of Yahweh. They will not stand in judgment upon those who cannot see their way to use the name through lack of understanding of it; but at the same time, they ask that they be not harshly criticized when they seek to revere God by using it with understanding.
We mention this, because some have the mistaken idea that to use the Name, is to “take it in vain.” That is not the case. To take the Name of Yahweh in vain, is to act inconsistently with the principles of the Name whilst endorsing its teaching. “Lest I . . . steal, and take the name of my God in vain,” is the statement of wisdom (Prov. 30:9).
Speaking of the restoration of Israel, Yahweh declared through the prophet Ezekiel:
“I do not this for your
sakes, 0 house of Israel, but for My
Holy name’s sake, which ye have profaned among the heathen, whither ye went”
(Ezek. 36:22).
They profane the Name, yet, through a superstitious reverence for a Law that they fail to understand aright, they will not mention the Name. A person does not profane the Name but hallows it when he uses it aright; and part of the Lord’s prayer is: “Hallowed be Thy Name.”
One final point regarding
the way translators have indicated the presence of the Name in the text. We
have stated above that they have used small capitals to designate the places
where the words “Lord” or “God” have been used as translations for the word Yahweh, but though this is the general
rule, there are a few exceptions. Sometimes capital letters are used to
commence a new chapter, and in a few Psalms this has been done when the word
has not been Yahweh. Thus in Psalm 46: 1; 60: 1; 63: 1; 67:1; 79:1; 82:1; 108:1
the word in Hebrew is Elohim.
PASSAGES WHERE “YAHWEH” WAS ALTERED TO “ADONAI”
Genesis: 18:3,27,30,32; 19:18; 20:4.
Exodus: 4:10,13; 5:22; 15:17; 34:9,9.
Numbers: 14:17.
Joshua: 7:8.
Judges: 6:15; 13:8.
1 Kings: 3:10,15; 22:6.
2 Kings: 7:6; 19:23.
Isaiah: 3:17,18; 4:4; 6:1,8,11; 7:14,20; 8:7; 9:8,17; 10:12; 11:11; 21:6,8,16; 28:2; 29:13; 30:20; 37:24; 38:14,16; 49:14.
Ezekiel: 18:25,29; 21:13; 33:17,29.
Amos: 5:16; 7:7,8; 9:1.
14
Zechariah: 9:4.
Micah: 1:2.
Malachi: 1:12,14.
Psalms: 2:4; 16:2; 22:19,30; 30:8; 35:3,17,22; 37:12; 38:9,15,22;
39:7; 40:17; 44:23; 51:15; 54:4; 55:9; 57:9; 59:11; 62:12; 66:18; 68:11,17
19,22,26,32; 73:20; 77:2,7; 78:65; 79:12; 86:3,4,5,8,9,12,15; 89:49,50; 90:1.
17 110:5; 130:2,3,6.
Daniel: 1:2; 9:3,4,7,9,15,16,17,19,19,19.
Lamentations: 1:14,15,15; 2:1,2,5,7,18,19,20; 3:31,36,37,58.
Ezra: 10:3.
Nehemiah: 1:11; 4:14.
Job: 28:28.
To these may be added the following, where Elohim was treated in the same way:
2 Samuel: 5:19-25; 6:9-17.
I Chronicles: 13:12; 14:10,11,14,16; 16:1.
Psalms: 14:1,2,5; 53:1,2,4,5.
ELOHIM
SO.
In Psalm 8:5, Elohim has been rendered “angels,” and this translation is endorsed by Paul in Hebrews 2:7, who likewise renders it in this way. This usage by the Apostle is significant. It reveals that the term “God” can apply to those heavenly beings who manifest the attributes of the great Increate. Thus, the statement, “God said: Let us make man in our image, after our likeness” (Gen. 1:26), relates to angels mutually discussing the work of creation, and not to the Trinity as erroneously taught by the Church!
In Exodus 21:6; 22:8,9,22,28 (see mg.), Elohim has been rendered “judges.” They “shall bring him unto the judges” (Elohim). They are so described because they judged on behalf of Yahweh and with His authority. In administering the Law they were invested with Divine authority, and acted in the name of Yahweh. Because they represented the authority of heaven, they were given the name Elohim, and the Revised Version has rendered most of these places as “God.” For example, Genesis 3:5 which, in the Authorized Version, is rendered “Ye shall be as gods,” appears in the Revised Version as “Ye shall be as God.” The reference in Exodus quoted above appears as: “His master shall bring him unto God.”
In Exodus 7:1, the term is applied to Moses: “I have made thee a god to Pharaoh.” He was elevated to this position in that he acted with Divine authority and power before the King of
15
Egypt.
It can easily be
understood, therefore, that as this title is applied to angels and mortal men,
it can be applied to the Lord Jesus (John 20:28) without endorsing the doctrine
of the Trinity (see John 10:34-36)
Wherever the words
“God,” “gods” etc. appear in the Old Testament, other than those places already
dealt with above, or in the list below, it may be taken that the Hebrew word is
Elohim.
“God forbid” Hebrew chalilah, signifying, “Profanation; far be it!”
The term occurs: Gen. 44:7, 17: Josh. 22:29.
“God save” — Hebrew chayah signifying “to live,” “let live,” “give
life.” See I Sam. 10:24; 2 Sam. 16:16; 1 Kings 1:25,34, 39; 2 Kings 11:12; 2
Chron. 23:11.
Where the word “God”
is printed in Italics, such as in Psalm 132:2, 5. In these cases there is no equivalent word in the original.
Words printed in italics in the Authorized Version are the translators’
indication that they have been added to the text to supply the sense of the
passage, though, in fact, there are no comparable words in the original.
There is one example
of the Hebrew word adonai being rendered
as “God.” It occurs in Habakkuk 3: 19, and is quite an unusual form. We know of
no other occurrence where it appears as “God.”
The use of this title
in Scripture will illustrate its meaning in relation to the doctrine of God
manifestation. Yahweh is King of Kings, Lord of Lords, or Adon of Adonai; for
as Adon is in the singular number, Adonai is plural.
Adonai, like Elohim, is used of the
angels. They are the “overseers” of Yahweh’s creation (Heb. 1: 14), placed in
control
16
over His people. The idea
is expressed in Exodus 23:20-21:
“Behold I send an
Angel before thee, to keep thee in the way, and to bring thee into the place
which 1 have prepared. Beware of him, and obey his voice, provoke him not; for
he will not pardon your transgressions; for My name is in him.”
Like Eloah and Elohim, the words Adon and
Adonai are not used exclusively for
Yahweh or the angels, but are often used for mortal rulers, or men of note and
prominence. Adon has been frequently
rendered both “Lord” and “Master” (e.g. Gen. 24:35; Exod. 21:4-8), and “Sir”
once (Gen. 43:20), and “Owner” once (1 Kings 16:24).
The Greek equivalent
is Kurios rendered “Lord” in the New
Testament. In Ephesians 4:5, Paul
teaches that there is “one Lord” even Christ Jesus. He is Lord, Master or
Owner, of those who have taken upon themselves his sin-covering name. They are
his “purchased possession” (Eph. 1: 14), which he owns jointly with the Father,
for Paul taught that Yahweh “hath purchased with His own blood” (or, lit.
“with the blood of His own”— see
Diaglott), the Ecciesia that He claims as His own (Acts
20:28).
Adon has been used over two hundred times in the Scriptures, but in the
majority of instances as a term of respect to mortal men, the equivalent of the
titles “Sir” or “Master.” The following are places where the word has been
rendered “Lord” and have some bearing upon the doctrine of God manifestation:
Genesis — 19:18;
Exodus .-- 23:17; 34:23; Deuteronomy — 10:17;
Joshua — 3:11.13; 5:14; Judges — 6:13; Nehemiah —
3:5; 8:10; 10:29;
Psalms — 8:1,9; 45:11; 97:5; 110:1; 114:7; 135:5;
136:3; 147:5; Isaiah —1:24; 3:1; 10:16,33; 51:22. Daniel —10:16,17,19; 12:8.
Hosea — 12:14;
Micah — 4:13. Zechariah — 1:9; 4:5,13,14; 6:4,5.
Malachi — 3:1.
In other places where
the word “Lord” appears in relation to the Deity, the Hebrew is the plural word
Adonai. Note that in Psalm 90: 1 the
word Adonai, rendered Lord, has been
printed in small capitals, which is the normal practice when commencing a new
chapter. The Hebrew here is not Yahweh as the small capitals might indicate,
but Adonai.
This prompted David to
write: “The angel of Yahweh encampeth round about them
that fear Him, and delivereth them” (Ps. 34:7). He
viewed the protecting arm of Yahweh manifested through the heavenly host, as
an encampment encircling those who reverenced Him. Hezekiah, in faith, likewise
acknow
17
ledged this fact.
Challenged by the might of Assyria, he exhorted the people: “Be strong and
courageous, be not afraid nor dismayed for the king of Assyria, nor for all the
multitude that is with him; for there be
more with us than with him; with him is an arm of flesh; but with us is Yahweh
our God to help us, and to fight our battles” (2 Chron. 32:7-8).
This help is always
available to the saints, though they must have faith to leave it to Yahweh to
act on their behalf or otherwise. He has the power to do so, but He alone
knows best when it should be used.
When Joshua was about
to enter upon his campaign for the subjugation of Canaan, there appeared unto
him a man with a drawn sword. Joshua questioned him: “Art thou for us, or for
our adversaries?” The answer was: “No, but as captain of the host (army) of
‘Yahweh am I now come.” The captain of Yahweh’s army then instructed Joshua:
“Loose thy shoe from off thy foot; for the place whereon thou standest is holy. And Joshua did so” (Joshua 5:13-15).
This heavenly army
fought on Israel’s behalf (see Exod. 23:23). At the request of Elisha, its
presence was made visible to his servant in the besieged city of Dothan (2
Kings 6:17). Christ made mention of it when to Peter he declared: “Thinkest
thou that I cannot now pray to my Father, and He shall presently give me more
than twelve legions of angels?” (Matt. 26:53).
The title also points
forward to the future when another Divine army will be manifested, for Tz’vaoth being appended to Yahweh proclaims that He will be
manifested in an army. The recruiting of that army has proceeded throughout the
centuries (see 2 Tim. 2:4), and its manifestation in the future is predicted in
Revelation 19:11-15: “1 saw heaven opened, and behold a white horse; and he
that sat upon him was called Faithful and True, and in righteousness he doth
judge and make war . .And the armies which were in heaven (the ruling ,places
of the Age to come) followed him . . . And out of his mouth goeth a sharp
sword, that with it he should smite the nations; and he shall rule them with a
rod of iron.”
In Romans 9:29, the
preservation of Israel is attributed to the overshadowing protection of Yahweh
of Armies, or “the Lord of Sabaoth.” In James 5:4, the oppressed are called upon to
look to Him for their help, as One who will avenge them speedily.
The future work of
Christ as Commander of this host (Isa. 55:4),
is indicated in Isaiah 9:6 where the “increase of his government and peace
upon the throne of David,” is attributed to “the zeal of Yahweh Tz’vaoth.” It
will be the army of saints, then constituted as such, which will accomplish
this (Zech. 14:3,5). It will then be
acknowledged that it is not by fleshly “might, nor by power (of man), but by my
spirit, saith Yahweh Tz’vaoth,” that His purpose will be brought about.
Thus Haggai,
predicting the shaking of the nations, and the
18
consequent elevation
of Jerusalem and restoration of the Temple, declares that it will be brought
about by Yahweh Tz’vaoth, and in the course of three verses (Ch. 2:6-9) refers
to the title five times. The time is at hand when those “who have overcome”
will “have the name of God written upon them” (Rev. 3:12), and will exercise
“power over the nations, ruling them with a rod of iron” (Rev. 2:26-27). Then,
every accepted saint will be an Eloah, and combined they will constitute the Elohim (Mighty Ones), Shaddai (Destroyers or Nourishers as the case might be), and Adonai (Rulers) of the Age to come. The divine El or Power will be manifest & through them, and as they go
forth to “execute the judgments written” (Psalm 149:9), they will do so as Yahweh Tz’vaoth.
The word “Almighty” is
translated from the Hebrew Shaddai, which,
according to Hebraists, is a plural word.
Brother Thomas points
out in Phanerosis that the Shaddai plunged Sodom and Gomorrah to
destruction, whilst protecting and caring for Abraham (Gen. 17: 1). The word is
derived from a Hebrew root which, according to the vowel points, can signify
either nourisher (breast - Heb. shad) or destroyer (shadad).
The Almighty nourished
Abraham, but destroyed the wicked people of Sodom. Yahweh can be to us either a
Nourisher or a Destroyer, according as we treat Him
and His Word (see Psalm18:24-27); a “savour of life unto life or death unto
death” (2 Cor.2:16).
Usually, Shaddai is joined with El as God Almighty, or “The Strength of
the Destroyers” (or Nourishers).
DIVINE TITLES IN THE NEW TESTAMENT
The Names and Titles
of Deity are best expressed in the Hebrew: There
is great significance in the words of Zephaniah spoken in relation to the
future: “Then I will turn to the peoples (R.V. — i.e. Gentiles) a pure
language, that they may all call upon the Name of Yahweh, to serve Him with one
consent” (Zeph. 3:9). Much of the significance of the various titles is lost
when the Greek Old Testament (the Septuagint) is compared with the Hebrew. In
the New Testament, the words Adon, Adona,, Elohini, Yahweh, El and
Eloah are rendered by the two words Theos and Kurjos, or, as they appear in our version, by God” and “Lord.”
Thus Theos does duty equally for Elohim (Matt. 4:7, 10), El (Matt. 27:46) and Yahweh (John 6:45). Kurios is also used for these same words. In Mark 12:36, it
is used for Adon, whilst in Luke
20:37 it does duty for Yahweh. in
Romans 9:29 and James 5:4, the title
“Lord of Sabaoth” is used, but the powerful,
prophetic import of the title is lost in the Greek by the use of
19
Kurios instead of Yahweh.
It may be questioned
why the plural word Theoi is not used
for Elohim in the New Testament or
the Septuagint. As Brother Thomas shows in Phanerosis,
there are important reasons. The former represents a plurality of Gods all
independent of each other, and even antagonistic to each other under certain
circumstances. The Elohim, in
contradistinction to that idea, are all dependent upon El, and are thus united as one, for God in multiplicity and not
God in trinity is the Bible doctrine of truth.
The word Elohim is derived from El (Strength or Power) and Alah meaning to bind together as by an oath.
Thus the word suggests plurality in unity, whilst Theoi only denotes plurality. The dominant feature of the Elohim is their unity not their plurality.
They are made strong by One, even El. Though
many, they act in strict conformity with one another as a unit. The idea is
perhaps better comprehended by the common use of the word Ecciesia. The later suggests a multitude called out of “every
kindred, tongue and nation” and made “one” by the blood of Christ. That unity
will be brought to perfection when each member is clothed upon with Divine
nature, and thus made really “one” in Christ and in Yahweh (John 17:21). The
use of the word Theoi would destroy
the fundamental thought of the unity of the Elohim,
and would suggest that they are independent beings deriving their power
from various sources.
Did Christ use the
Divine Name and titles? We are confident that he did. Christ spake in Hebrew
(Acts 26:14), and there is strong evidence to suggest that the original gospels
were written in that tongue. The fact that Christ spoke in Hebrew is evidenced
by the words that are still retained in the text (see Mark 5:41; 7:34, etc.).
Luke refers to Hebrew
as “the proper tongue” of the dwellers at Jerusalem (Acts 1:19), and when Paul
wanted to hold their attention, he “spake unto them in the Hebrew tongue” (Acts
21:40—see also Acts22:2; Luke23:38; John5:2; 19:13,17,20: etc.). Speaking in
that tongue it is surely obvious that they would refer to Deity by the titles
and names He selected should be used. (See also Romans 9:29 and James 5:4).
The New Testament
abounds in semitisms, which reveal the influence of
the Old Testament upon the thinking and language of its writers. It is obvious,
therefore, that Hebrew colors the Greek in which the earliest manuscripts that
we have were written. Many scholars believe that behind the Greek manuscripts of
the Gospels there were Hebrew originals which were ultimately translated into
Greek. Be that as it may, there is no doubt that Christ conversed and spake in
Hebrew, as did also the Apostles.
20
Hebrew Titles of Deity
and their Significance How
they appear in the Auth Version
El (or Ail) . .
Strength or Power. The
One Supreme, Omnipotent, Spirit-Power
Eloah
A Mighty One. Deity is an
Eloah, and so are
those messengers of His
who manifest His
power. They are mighty
because of the pre
sence of El ---------------------------------------------------------------------------God.
The Chaldee form
of Eloah ---------------------------------------------------------God.
each one of
which is an Eloab, but combined
are the Elohim -------------------------------------------------------------------God
The purpose of Deity
memorialised in a Name. It is prophetic
of His intention to
manifest His nature (2 Pet. 1:3) and glory
Rom. 5:2), in
certain ones whom He is taking out from the
Gentiles for this
purpose (Acts 15:14). The word means “He Who will be.”------- LORD or Jehovah
An abbreviated form
of Yahweh, used in the
poems of Israel and
incorporated into names
of
individuals------------------------------------------------------------------- LORD or Jah.
Adon . .
Plural of Adon -------------------------------------------------------------------------Lord.
Shaddai
Tzur . - - -
Rock, a metaphor
for strength Rock--------------------------------------------------
God.
The strength of the
powerful Ones. El manifested through the “ministers of Deity”… --God Almighty.
Yahweh Elohim- . -
“taking out from the
Gentiles a people for His Name” (Acts 15:14).
These people will be
the Elohim of the future Age --------------------------------------LORD
God.
Adonai Yahweh - . -
Lords of He who Shall
be. This title has a
21
The militant title of
Deity. He who will be
Armies. It signifies the
manifestation of Power-------------------------------------------------LORD of
hosts
through divine Armies of
the future
Yahweh Elohim Tz’voath . .
Armies---------------------------------------------------------------------------- LORD God of hosts.
His purpose to manifest himself in flesh (1Tim 3:16) This was fulfilled in an “IAM THAT I AM”
individual, the Lord Jesus Christ (John 17:5,6,26), and will ultimately be (Exd 3;14) This is
so in a community: the multitudinous Body of Christ. The
scope of the Name an incorrect
trans-
is revealed in two quotations: Isa. 44:6 and 41:4. “I am
the first and I am the last.” lation. It has been
in the first
reference “last” is in the singular number, and relates to the Lord corrected in the
Jesus Christ; in the second
reference it is in the plural, and is expressive of margin of the RSV
Christ’s brethren
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In certain instances,
the Hebrew words El, Elohim, A don, etc.
have been rendered in the Authorized Version by words other than those noted
above, and in references unrelated to the doctrine of God-manifestation.
Reference to this has been made in other parts of this work. For the purpose of
the Analysis above, it is not necessary to list them here.
22
PHANEROSIS
23
Phanerosis originated in the following circumstances. Two Jews, converted from Rabbinical Judaism to Protestant Gentilism, commenced a meeting in New York City, for the purpose of convincing their “brethren according to the flesh,” that the “Jesus preached” and believed in by Protestants and Papists is the Christ promised in the prophets to their fathers. The meeting was numerously attended by Jews, among whom was a certain Portuguese Jew, Dr. de Lara. He boldly and justly disputed the claims of what he styled “orthodox Christianity” to a divine origin. His acumen and arguments were too astute for their treatment, so that they were put to shame before the Jews they sought to proselyte. In this emergency they applied to the Author for aid against their persistent and indefatigable opponent, who had attacked the weakest part of their position. The author agreed to attend their meeting, and to examine the ground occupied by de Lara. He found that the philosophical Israelite was impregnable in his position against popular Christianity. When Epstein, the Jew converted to Congregationalism, and since returned to Judaism, after making considerable capital by his hypocrisy:
and his companion, Lederer, since also apostate from the principles he professed, though still a distributor of Protestant tracts among the Jews at a certain annual stipend; when these two worthies enunciated their platitudes, they were riddled by the shafts of their adversary, amid the laughter and contemptuous ejaculations of the Jews. Calm being restored, the Author was invited to speak. He told them that he did not present himself for the defense of popular Christianity, for which he had no more veneration or admiration than they. Popular Christianity, he continued, is as different from the ancient and original faith of Christ preached by Jesus and the apostles, as is modern Judaism from the institutions of the Mosaic law and the testimony of the prophets. He had not a word to say in defense of such an unscriptural system, condemned alike by the Old and New Testaments. He advocated the doctrine set forth in the form of sound words” employed by Jesus and the apostles, and attested by the law and the prophets. The New Testament, as originally delivered, perfectly agrees in its teaching with that of the Old. These Scriptures, and not the clerical creeds and symbols of popular credulity, are the authentic and authoritative records of the faith expounded by them. Dr. de Lara was, therefore, beating the air; for while he was assailing something he styled “orthodox Christianity,” he was not touching ancient New Testament Christianity at all! The Author was, consequently, under no obligation to meet Dr. de Lara’s arguments against Jesus as the Christ founded upon Protestant and Catholic misconceptions of his relations to Deity, and so forth. He would, therefore, leave him in all the glory of his conflict with “orthodox Christianity,” so called, and proceed to show them “a more excellent way.”
Having addressed the Jews upon this for an hour or more, in showing them what Moses and the prophets teach concerning the Christ, and to what extent it was fulfilled in Jesus — how that he was to be a sufferer, and on the third day rise from the dead, and afterwards ascend to the right hand of power, when he is to come again, and “revive h~s work in the midst of the years,” the consummation of which will result in their acknowledgment of him as their king, and their consequent restoration to their land and national independence and glory. Having set these and
other things before as peaceable an assemblage of Jews as could be desired, he concluded, exhorting them to a candid and dispassionate study ,of Moses and the prophets; for that the testimony for Jesus was the spirit of prophecy, which left no doubt that he was the Prophet like unto their great law giver, whom Jehovah promised to raise up to Israel, as “His salvation to the ends of the earth.”
Bit though the Jews, before so turbulent, heard the Author with marked and respectful attention (and one of their number declared that “if the Jews could hear him they would all become Christians”!) the manifestation of approval kindled the indignation of Messrs. Epstein and Lederer, who had invited him. They determined, therefore, to silence him, which they did effectually, by decreeing that no one should speak longer than five minutes.
The door of utterance to the Jews thus being closed in their meeting, the author invited them to hear him at another time and place. Some of them accepted the invitation, and among them, Dr. de Lara, who, as the author was about commencing his address, caused to be put into his hand the following epistle addressed to the Author:— “Dear and Honored Sir.—In your address last Sunday evening, you
observed that the New Testament perfectly agreed, or harmonized with the Old,’ or you may have used an expression conveying this idea.
I can conceive the idea of a Christian by birth and education giving his assent to this proposition, and conscientiously believing the doctrines which orthodox Christianity tells us are taught in both volumes: you are, however, aware that these two points, namely, the disagreement or agreement between the exclusively Jewish, and the Christian sacred books. and the doctrines of orthodox Christianity, said by the latter to be revealed in both volumes — that these are the very points at issue between Jews and Christians.
A devout Jew may perhaps be brought to the belief that the personage stated by Christians to be the Messiah, had already appeared: and that Jesus of Nazareth was he; that his history was recorded in the books of the New Testament; and he may give his assent to the purely historical parts of these books. Believing in the divine power of performing miracle. since he finds a display of that power in the Old Testament, he may even believe in that other part of the New Testament in which history and miracle are blended together as they are in the books of the Old Testament. The same God who enabled and permitted Moses and Elias to perform miracle, may have bestowed the same power upon another mortal:
and that mortal may have been Jesus of Nazareth as well as any other man. I say. that a devout Jew may. perhaps, be brought to believe all this by inquiries satisfactory to his own; and by his own reasonings founded upon such inquiries; but I have very strong doubts of such a view of the case ever becoming universal, or even general among the Jews; or that they will extend beyond a few, very few, and isolated instances, and amongst Rabbinical Jews exclusively.
The modern, or self-styled enlightened Jew (whether he is justly entitled to this denomination, or not, is not now the question). may regard Jesus of Nazareth as a philosopher, a moralist, the Socrates of his age and country as a man who, discarding all the laws that govern man’s conduct in his relation to God, yet conforming to them in compliance with custom, just as the wise Socrates in his last moments ordered a cock to be sacrificed to Aesculapius — disbelieving himself in divine revelation, and regarding with contempt the sacrifices, observances, and ceremonies, taught the doctrine of a certain prophet, that true religion consisted in the practice of virtue, mercy, justice, and humanity; that the Creator and Father of all mankind had not, and could not have selected one very small and almost insignificant fragment of the human family to make it his chosen and favorite people, to the exclusion of all the rest.
26
I say, a philosophical Jew may entertain this conviction, rejecting the doctrine of a Messiah, whether temporal or spiritual, altogether; and, if I am not much mistaken, such are the views entertained by modern Jews, though not by modern Judaism (for the difference is marked), and are gaining ground rapidly.
And this, I say, may ~ possible, and partly is true: the moment, however, a Jew is told that God has a son, and that there are three persons, three essences, three something’s or anything’s in the Godhead; and that these three distinct units or Unities constitute only one unit or One Unity — that that Tri-Unity is the God. of Israel, the Jehovah of the Old Testament:—the moment, I say, a Jew is told of this, he shrinks back, and stands sternly aloof. The devout Jew points to the declaration on Horeb, “I am the Lord thy God. Thou shalt have no other gods before me.” And again, “Hear, 0 Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is one.” The philosophical Jew regarding God as an incorporated, invisible, incomprehensible Being, rejects with scorn and ridicule the idea of such a Being having a son; of coming “down” (as it is called) from heaven, and enacting with the Virgin Mary the scene related by Luke. He smiles contemptuously at the idea of three being one, and one being three; and maintains that a book which teaches such an absurd doctrine, and contains such disgraceful tales, is utterly contemptible; and that the writer who could propagate a falsehood so glaring, a story so evidently fabulous, and blasphemous to boot, cannot be otherwise than a liar and impostor, or a man who wrote, or was only fit to write for the nursery; and that any writer that could declare that there are three persons, or three anything’s, in one Godhead, if he himself honestly believed such ,an absurdity, ought to be set down as demented, and only entitled to pity, and to a cell in an asylum.
Both sections of the Jewish world on being told that the writers of the New Testament were all Jews (and admitting for the sake of argument that they were so), deny that, provided they were in the full possession of their mental faculties, the possibility of their honest belief in the history of the Annunciation, the Miraculous Conception, and the Incarnation, though the Pharisaical and Rabbinical Jews might, perhaps, admit the possibility of the story of the Resurrection and Ascension. They deny that any Jewish writer could have believed in the doctrine of the Trinity (I use this term conventionally, and as a laconism): that therefore as Jews they never could have written this; and if this doctrine be found in the New Testament, it has either been foisted in there, or the writers were not Jews.
Now they open the New Testament, and there they find it distinctly recorded, that the Virgin conceived of the Holy Ghost — a spirit, an incorporeal existence (which is itself a contradiction in terms) — a carnal intercourse between a spirit and a woman: a mortal, mere flesh and blood! They find there, further, the following expressions amongst others used by Jesus of Nazareth, “I and my Father are one”; “Before Abraham was I am”; which is bad grammar at all events. “Of these things knoweth no man, no not even the Son, but the Father who is in heaven.” They find John telling them that “In The beginning was the word, and the word was God, and the word was made flesh, and dwelt among us”; which, though they laugh at such language as that of an idiot, they find it written there, “The only begotten Son of the Father.” They are told that Thomas addressed Jesus as “My Lord and my God.” John tells them distinctly, that “There are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Son, and the Spirit”; and that “these three are one.” Prima facie, therefore, they find the doctrine of the two natures inferentially, and that of the Trinity plainly taught in these books, taking them as they are.
Comparing these declarations of the New Testament with the stern commandments of God on Sinai, and the declaration of the unity of God
27
in Deuteronomy; upon your declaration, therefore, and with the New Testament before them, they ask: “How can you reconcile these, to them, so evidently clashing declarations? How will you be able to show that the New Testament agrees and harmonizes with the Old?”
As your views differ very materially — or at least appear to do so to rue — from those of the generality of Christians, I should be glad to hear your expositions of the doctrines with that of the absolute unity of God, as revealed in the Old Testament.
I am, with the highest regard, dear and honored Sir,
Yours very truly,
New York, May 9th, 1857. D. F. DE LARA.”
Dr. de Lara’s letter seems to have been originated in a
spirit of astonishment, incredulity, and candor; of astonishment at our
statement concerning the entire and absolute harmony of the teaching of the two
Testaments, in the face of the dogmas of “Orthodox Christianity’ referred to;
of incredulity, because of the unphilosophical and
irrational character of the facts testified in the New Testament; and of candor
in seeming. though by education hostile to the Nazarene, to desire a fair
examination into “the stone of stumbling”
presented to the Jewish mind in “the
things concerning His name.”
We can easily appreciate the astonishment under which he seems to labour. Our declaration, which we here admit, of the entire and absolute harmony of the teaching of Moses and Jesus, is calculated to excite astonishment, confounding astonishment, in the mind that has no other, idea of the teaching of Jesus and the apostles than the parody thereof exhibited in the old wives’ fables of what Dr. de Lara styles “orthodox Christianity.” But, we do not affirm the harmony of “orthodox Christianity” interpretations, or rather “imaginations, high things, and thoughts” (2 Cor. 10:5). with the teaching of God, in Moses and the prophets: we are. therefore, under no obligation to attempt the impossible task of reconciliation. We do not believe in the self-styled “orthodox Christianity” of the world. It is not the Bible teaching of the Spirit of the Christ which was in Moses and the prophets, Jesus, and the apostles. Admit what Nehemiah and Peter testify, that one and the same spirit was in them all, and that that Spirit was God’s..” in whom is no darkness at all”; and it follows. of necessity, as we have affirmed, that the doctrine of the Old and New Scriptures is entirely and absolutely harmonious and uncontradictory (I Pet., 1:11: 2 Pet, 1:21: Neh. 9:20, 30). We believe in the doctrine of God, in the deep things of God, revealed by His spirit (1 Cor. 2:6-16). not through disobedient fanatics, or a clergy, Jewish or Gentile, infidel thereof: but revealed by His spirit in the Spirit’s own words, through the holy and faithful heroes of the faith, to whom, under God, we are indebted for the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments. This is the Christianity of our faith which we are prepared to state, illustrate. and prove, in opposition to modern Judaism, Jewish rationalism, and Gentile perversions of the truth.
Dr. de Lara appears incredulous. He is reported to have said, in one of his speeches at Centre Street, he cared nothing for Moses and the prophets. He may, perhaps, care more than the report of his words gives him credit for. We rather think that he meant he did not care for their testimony as proof of the Messiah having appeared: for vie find him saying, in a certain periodical, “he did not care if fifty prophets had prophesied the coming of Messiah, unless the facts can be adduced to prove that the Messiah had come.” From the letter before us, it is difficult to determine with certainty whether he is “a devout Jew,” “an enlightened Jew,” “a Rabbinical Jew,” or “a philosophical Jew.” We suspect he is in feeling a Jew, archaeologically devout, unfettered by Rabhinism, and giving credence only to what “the thinking of the flesh,”
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untutored by revelation, approves. From these elements seems to be generated the spirit of the letter before us. A Jew incredulous of those oracles committed to his nation’s care, is a hard and slippery case to deal with. We feel no interest in arguing with such a Jew; for he has lost his Jewishness, and disappeared in the bottomless pit of nations — the undistinguished multitudes of earth. In the midst of uncertainty, then, we have preferred to view Dr. de Lara as a professed believer in Moses and the prophets, too enlightened therein to be hoodwinked by Rabbinism, but not sufficiently so to see into their attestation of the righteousness of God in Jesus as the Christ — the Yahweh -tzidkainu, We will not think of him as a rationalistic or philosophical Jew, Rationalism and “philosophy” in religion may do for Gentiles, but are highly unbecoming in a Jew. A Jew ought to be a man of faith, and not a mere rationalist or fleshly pietist; but, unhappily, and generally speaking, they are true to the character given to them by Moses, in whom they glory, who says:
“They are a very froward generation, children in whom there is no faith” (Dent. 32:20), really as faithless of Moses as of Jesus, if faith is to be measured by conforming to the obedience it demands. A Jew faithless of the Mosaic teaching must necessarily be a rejecter of Jesus of Nazareth, apostolically displayed. Moses spoke of Christ; and, therefore, Jesus inquired: “If you believe not Moses how can ye believe me; for he wrote of me.” This is the secret of Jewish incredulity; not that the testimony for Jesus is insufficient f or faith; but because of their extreme frowardness in making void the word of God by Moses and the prophets, through the corrupting influence of their traditions.
There is a candor about Dr. de Lara’s letter that is quite attractive, Its points are distinctly stated, and the views of its writer boldly averred. This is according to our taste, We like a man to stand out in his true character, and not to appear one thing and be another, Moral honesty and moral courage are virtues which few possess in this age of sham. Neither Jews nor Gentiles are pre-eminent in these respects. The former fear one another, and have not lost their terror of the Gentiles. Many, as of old, do not confess Jesus for fear of losing caste, of being cast out of the synagogues, or denied sepulchre among Judah’s dead; while Gentiles confess a Jesus, but know not the true doctrine, or fear to bear the cross, lest the clergy should blow upon them. Between the two there is nothing to rejoice in. The world is wilderness, and its oases desert, Bold and sterling honesty of purpose and principle is the desideratum of the times. Sham and swindle everywhere abound, and few remain to do battle for the truth at all hazards against the world. Candor and courage are exceedingly scarce.
On the evening upon which Dr. de Lara’s letter was handed in, we had perused it, marking its points with pencil as we proceeded and then answered them in general terms before the audience, After we had finished, Dr. de Lara rose and apologized for having afforded us no time for examination, and hoped that we would believe that he did not design to extort an advantage by taking us at unawares. We graciously accepted the apology, being satisfied that such was not his policy; but that he really desired the , information indicated in the concluding paragraph of his epistle. This being the author’s conviction, and recognizing the importance, the primary importance, of the subject, on the great question at issue between the disciples of modern Judaism and the writers of the New Testament, he announced, that on the following Sunday evening he would lay, before the audience the Mosaic and Nazarene teaching concerning Deity. In accordance with this announcement, the author duly submitted the testimonies and arguments which are now reproduced in pamphlet form, somewhat enlarged. He has named it Phanerosis, because it expounds the most important and wonderful manifestation, formerly and hereafter to be exhibited to the world — namely, the manifestation of the Deity in flesh, and styled “the Lord Jesus Christ”; and the future mani
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festation of the same “Invisible Deity” in the “many sons” whom he, as their Elder Brother and Captain of Salvation, leads to glory.
Dr. de Lara, like his countrymen of old, is ready to stone
Jesus, because he says that the Deity is his own Father, thereby making himself
equal with God, which he thought it not robbery to do so (John 5:18; 10:33; Phil, 2:6), He errs in his
quotation of the disputed passage of 1 John 5:7.
It does not read there “the Father, the Son, and the Spirit,” but “the
Father, the Word, and the Holy Spirit,” which, whether the passage be genuine
or spurious, “are one,” * They are one, for John says: “In the beginning the
‘Word’ was the Deity, by whom all things were made”; and, in another place, he
says “the Deity is Spirit.” Nevertheless,
though one, they are not three distinct and independent entities or persons.
The distinction of person did not
obtain until the relation of Father
and Son was developed in the creation and birth of “a body,” as the medium of
“Divine Manifestation.” The Deity thus manifested is styled “The Lord Jesus
Christ, the Saviour,” “who is over all God, blessed for the Aions” (Phil. 3:20;
Rom. 9:5).
The Author is enabled to present the thinking and truth-seeking portion of the public with this exegesis of the “great mystery,” revealed through the Son, and preached by the apostles, but afterwards so grossly perverted by the traditions of the Trinitarians, Arians, and Unitarians, through the liberality of one, who having found “the truth as it is in Jesus,” has not only laid fast hold of it, but seeks to introduce it to the notice of others. That his labour, in this instance, may not be in vain, is the sincere desire of
Birmingham, October
15th, 1869.
THE AUTHOR.
and was first cited (though not as it now reads) by Virgilius Tansensis. a Latin writer of no credit, in the latter end of the fifth century; but by whom forged is of no great moment, as its design must be obvious to all,” The Verse is omitted in the Revised Version, The Twentieth Century Version, Moffatt’s New Translation, etc. (Publishers).
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INTRODUCTION
THE RENEWING EFFICACY AND IMPORTANCE
OF THE SUBJECT
1.—That the life of Messiah’s Aion is not for all mankind!
2,—That the life is for those specially donated to the Son; and
3.—That the attainment of this life by those specially given to him, is consequent upon their intellectual enlightenment concerning what constitutes “the only true God,” and the relation to Him of Jesus in his begettal and anointing.
The apostle John, who heard the utterance of this
teaching, and who had delivered the same to the Jews and Gentiles whom he and
his co-labourers were sent to enlighten with the
light of life, reproduces the same doctrine in his first epistle, saying to
them, “We have comprehended (oidcimen) that the Son of the Deity is come, and hath
given to us discernment that we might understand the True One, and we are in
the True One, in His Son Jesus the Anointed. This is the true God, and the life
of the Aion (he zoe
aionios). Little children keep yourselves from
the idols” (1 John 5:20).
This intellectual comprehension of the true God is renewing, and capable of developing the likeness of His moral or spiritual image in the illuminated. This is clear from many passages of Scripture. Jesus, the image of the Invisible God, in addressing the Father said: “I have given them (whom Thou hast given me) Thy word: sanctify them through Thy truth: Thy word is Truth” (John 17:8,9, 14, 17). And again, “Ye are clean through the Word which I have spoken to you” (15:3). And John says: “the Spirit is the testifier, because the Spirit is the truth” (I Epis. 5 :6). And Paul alluding to the transforming efficacy of God’s revelation of Himself comprehended and believed, tells obedient believers of the word, that they had put off the old man with his deeds, and PU! on “the new,” made new again by exact knowledge (eis eplgnosin) after the image of Him creating him (Col. 3:9-10).
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Here are two characters, or moral natures, in relation to one and the same animal man. ignorant of the true God and Jesus the Anointed whom He has sent, the man A.B., is “alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in him” (Eph. 4:18): and is invested with “the body of the sins of the flesh” as with an apron of fig leaves. He is then in the Old Man state, and stands before God naked as Adam and Eve in Eden, obnoxious to the anger of offended Deity. He does not know or comprehend the Almighty. He thinks He is altogether such an one as himself, fickle, inconstant, mutable and false. He is as ignorant of His character, or Name, as he is of His hypostasis or substance. In the fulness of the ignorance he turns “philosopher,” and presumes to discourse of God, and of soul, and of the ground of acceptance with Him! The presumption of this Old Man of the flesh, laden with sins and superstitions, is marvelous! He has filled the world with his lucubration’s, or skotifications rather, and calls them “wisdom,” “theology,” “divinity,” “philosophy,” and so forth. Adam habited in fig leaves under the inspiration of the Serpent, is the incarnation of them all, He was “the Word of the Serpent made flesh”; the Federal Patriarch, or Chief Father, of all who walk in his steps: —the type, or representative pattern of all clerical and philosophical Jews and Gentiles who, “with the flesh,” or its reasonings and gospel-nullifying traditions and practices, “serve the law of sin.”
(*)Brother Thomas used the term “Jehovah” because it was in common use among people when he wrote, whereas “Yahweh” was not. He acknowledged, however, that the latter provided the more correct pronunciation of the Name. Today, Yahweh is generally accepted as the true form of the Divine Name, and therefore should be used before “Jehovah,” particularly on the part of a people called out of Gentile darkness for the Name (Acts 15:14; 1 Thess. 1:1). In his later works, Brother Thomas used “Yahweh” much more frequently than the hybrid
word, “Jehovah.” “
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wise men shall perish, and the understanding of their prudent men shall be hid. Woe unto them that seek deep to hide their counsel from Jehovah, and their works are in the dark, and they say, Who seeth us? and who knoweth us? Surely your turning of things upside down shall be esteemed as the potter’s clay, for shall the work say of Him that made it, He made me not? Or shall the thing framed say of Him that framed it, He has no understanding’? Is it not yet a very little while and Lebanon shall be turned into a fruitful field and the fruitful field shall be esteemed a forest”? Thus testified the Spirit of Christ in Isaiah, concerning the wise and prudent men of Israel (ch. 29:13), who professed to know God, but in their works denied Him. Their wisdom and understanding have shriveled and perished from off the land, in which they took counsel against Jehovah and His Anointed, to burst their bands asunder, and to cast their cords away (Psalm 2). The stately cedars of Lebanon have been hewn down, and their fruitful fields are a forest; and all because “they knew not the true God and Jesus the Anointed.”
But, as the Spirit of Christ in the same prophet, and in the same place, also testifies, although Jehovah has poured out upon the staggering guides of Israel the spirit of deep sleep, and hath closed their eyes, and covered the prophets and rulers, and seers; and the vision of all is become as the “words of a sealed book,” which the learned confess they cannot explain; yet “the deaf hear the words of the book, and the eyes of the blind see out of obscurity and out of darkness; the meek also increase their joy in Jehovah, and the poor among men rejoice in the Holy One of Israel.” How literally this began to be accomplished in the day when Jehovah cut asunder his staff, Beauty; for whom, as the Spirit of Christ in Zechariah predicted, Judah and Israel’s rulers weighed out to the traitor Judas, thirty pieces of silver; and afterwards cast the blood money to the potter for the purchase of his field (ch. 11: 10-13). In that day, when “the poor of the flock were waiting upon Beauty,” the deaf were made to hear, the blind to see, the meek to increase their joy, and the poor to rejoice in the broken staff Beauty, in the hand of the Holy One of Israel. The poor had the gospel preached to them.” When the deaf and the blind were cured, they rejoiced in what they heard. They embraced it as the wisdom of God, confirmed to them by Him with signs and wonders, and with divers miracles, and by the resurrection of Jesus, on the reunion of the fragments of the broken staff he had severed in his hand; “So,” says the prophet, the poor of the flock that waited upon me knew that it was the Word of Jehovah.”
But the rich and the powerful of the flock did not know, and do not know to this day. They are still the deaf and the blind,
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with all their “vast learning” (I) and philosophy. We go to the Holy Land, the arena of Zion’s controversy, and we inquire with Isaiah and Paul, Where are the wise? Where is the scribe? Where the disputants of the Mosaic Aion, who withstood “the truth as it is in Jesus”? The standing answer is, that “God hath made foolish their wisdom”; yea, the wisdom both of Jews and Greeks; for, says Paul, “the world by wisdom knew not God.” They had wisdom but He pronounced it “foolishness”; and James steps in and adds his testimony, that their wisdom was from beneath, being a lie against the truth, and earthly, sensual, and demoniac (Jas. 3: 14-15).
Such is the wisdom of the Old Man of the Flesh. It can rise no higher in conceptions of God than the zenith of its own halo. He thinks as he feels, and his feelings are only blind. Being a creature of earth, and sense, and sin, his conceptions of God are earthly, sensual, and demoniac. He proclaims Him to be an incomprehensible existence, without body or parts. Having assumed this, he deposits Him in every created thing, and pantheistically worships Him in men, birds, beasts, creeping things, and their images. In this assumption, the philosopher, the theologian, the idolater, all meet together upon common ground. This is their “One God,” whom they represent as fierce, vindictive, cruel, and implacable; who, but for some more benevolent being, interposing between Him and men, would increase His own glory and enjoyment, and satisfy His eternal justice, by tormenting them in fire and brimstone endlessly. This is the God created and worshipped by the Old Man of the Flesh; worshipped, not because he loves Him, or sees anything in Him to admire, but because he is afraid of Him. Hence, all the fancy superstitions he has devised are all based upon one common error of the brain, namely the necessity of the worshipper doing something to placate the Deity. The prescriptions extant in the Old Man’s dispensary for the purpose are multitudinous. Some of the most notable with which the world is empiricized and overspread, are those of cutting the flesh with knives after the manner of Baal; of causing children to pass through the fire after the manner of Moloch; of “covering the altar of Jehovah with tears, with weeping and with crying out,” after the practice of the priests in the days of Malachi; of straining at gnats, and paying tithes of mint and cummin in the fashion of hypocrites; of self-immolation under the fervid wheels of Juggernaut; of voluntary martyrdom, after the manner of the disciples of the Nicolaitanes, Balaams, and Jezebels of the early centuries after Christ; of papistical penance in afflicting the body for its commendation to God; of many long “prayers” or rhapsodical rants, weeping, and cryings out for religion, after the manner commonly witnessed at the camp meetings and revivals
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of the names and denominations which now fill the unmeasured court of the Gentiles (Rev. 11:2). These, and ten thousand other absurd practices of the temple, the synagogue, and church, are all expressive of the common error referred to above, and indicate the total ignorance of Jews and Gentiles, both of the Mosaic and Nazarene teaching concerning the Holy One of Israel.
The Purpose of Divine Revelation
Now, it is to exorcise A.B. of this Old Man, to deliver him from him, to cast the demon out, to “put off the old man and his deeds” from A.B.; to strip him of the fig leaves, and to put on the sacrificial victim’s skin, the garment appointed of Jehovah Elohim, to hide or cover his sin or shame, that “the knowledge of God,” or system of divine truth hath been devised. The Old Man of Sin’s Flesh, who is the Devil, cannot be converted. His destiny is destruction; “for this purpose was the Son of God manifested that he might destroy the works of the Devil,” or the works of the flesh, which are the same things: and “forasmuch also as the children (of his Father) are partakers of flesh and blood, He (the Son) himself, likewise, took part of the same; that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the Devil” (1 John 3:8; Heb. 2:14). Hence the Old Man of the Flesh and his deeds are doomed to extirpation from the earth at the hands of Jesus and his brethren. The Devil and all his superstitions of temple, synagogue, and church, whether dissentient or established, are all to be destroyed. Clergymen and Rabbis, philosophers and fools, will not indeed “go to the devil,” but far better will vanish with him from the earth, which will remain emancipated and blessed for the “meek” whose heritage it is.
But if the Old Man cannot be converted, A.B. may. Our friend A.B. may “be taught of God,” not by direct spirit-afflation, according to the Old Man’s theology, but by the direct operation of the heavenly ideas of God upon his brain-flesh. These ideas are the living spirit, the divine agent in conversion, which, when understood and believed, inscribe upon the tablet of A,B.’s intellect and affections “the Law of the Spirit of the life in the Anointed Jesus,” which “Spirit,” as he himself hath said, “it is that makes alive,” and “the words which I discourse to you is spirit and is life” (pneumu esti kai zoe estin). That is, spirit is the words, and life is the words discoursed. The spirit or power of the words is in the ideas they represent; and those ideas generate intellectual and moral, that is, spiritual life; which life having been fully developed in a character approved of Him from whom the ideas originate, is permanently manifested in “the crown of life, the reward of righteousness, which is received by the resur
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rected and transformed made incorruptible and immortal, or deathless, by “the Lord the Spirit.”
Here, then, is a New Man created by the Spirit, who is the rival and deadly enemy of the Old Man, generated of blood, of the will of the flesh, and of the will of man. The germ of the New Man is the ideas of God. These ideas are aggregated in what Peter terms “the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord.” If A.B. have this knowledge in him, God’s seed is in him; “The Word of the Kingdom” is there; he knows the True One, and his knowledge leads him into the True One — into His Son Jesus the Anointed; and he comes to know that “this is the true God, and the life of the Aion.”
Conflict Between Flesh and Spirit. When A.B. knows God, and Jesus the Anointed, apostolized, or sent; in other words, when he has believed into the true God, in believing the gospel of the Kingdom, and obeying it; in the act of obedience, styled by Peter “the obeying of the truth,” he puts of f the Old Man of the Flesh with his deeds, and puts on the New Man of the Spirit. He is still A.B.; but he is no longer A.B. invested with fig-leaf devices. He is A.B. in a new character. Instead of thinking with the Old Man in his wickedness and folly he thinks with the Spirit. That is, God’s thoughts and ways have become his. He understands, believes, and loves what God has spoken by His Spirit in the prophets in Jesus, and in the apostles; so that this thinking is now no longer “the thinking of the flesh,” which is always wrong, when speculating upon divine things; but “the thinking of the Spirit,” which is always right, so long as the seed of God abideth in him.
Here, then, are two men, each of whom set up rival claims to A.13. — The Old Man of Sin’s Flesh, or the Devil; and the New Man, the Spirit, or the likeness of the Image of God. The likeness is Jesus Christ in A.B. dwelling in his heart by faith working by love of the truth (Eph. 3:17; 2 Cor. 13:5; Gal. 2:20; 5:6). It is “A New Creature,” or creation within him; and upon whom the Old Man of the Flesh is incessantly seeking to impose the yoke of his traditions. Being a great theologian and philosopher, he is ever laboring to bring the New Man into bondage, and to turn him from “the simplicity which is in Christ.” For this purpose he sets Moses against Jesus, prophet against prophet, Old Testament against New, and the New against the Old; puts them into his crucibles, for he is a great alchemist, and transmutes them into Rationalism, Transcendentalism, Natural Religion — into any thing, in short, to suit the occasion and the times — and dignifies them with the titles of philosophy, science,
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and “the higher law.” But the New Man of the Spirit is free, looking searchingly into the perfect law of liberty, and having no respect to “the philosophy and empty delusion,” and antitheses of gnosis, or “oppositions of science,” falsely so called, in which the flesh delights. He troubles not himself about Trinitarianism, or Antitrinitarianism, Unitarianism, Arianism, or Socinianism. He has no more deference for these than for any other of “the works of the Devil,” or for the Old Man himself. He does not commune with him in the knowledge of God and of Jesus Christ, whom He has sent, the Old Man judges after the flesh; the New Man after the Spirit, in Moses and the prophets, among whom are inc1uded John the immerser, Jesus, and the apostles. The spirit of the Old Man is the spirit that exhales from the flesh, and is known as the “nervous fluid,” “animal magnetism,” “vital electricity” and so forth. It is secreted from the blood by the secerning system of vessels and membranes, supplied with the raw material by the process of digestion and respiration. This spirit of the Old Man of Sin’s Flesh is the spirit which his disciples say “accompanies the word, and applies it in the conversion of the soul.” The word, or letter, saith this hyperbolical sinner (kath’huperholen hamartolos) killeth, but the spirit giveth life; by which he means, that the simple word itself, the doctrine, the testimony, and the commandments of Jehovah, are not perfect, converting the soul; are not sure, making wise the foolish; are not pure, enlightening the eyes; but that what the Old Man or the Devil, calls “the spirit,” is necessary to give them efficacy and power. “The Word,” saith he “is a dead letter.” True, it is dead as far as its ability to convert the devil is concerned; yea, and kills him, too. He feels this; and, therefore, speaks experimentally. This dead and devil-deadening word has power, nevertheless; for it never ceases to enrage him, especially when the New Man of the Spirit rejects the dogma of vitalizing the idea words of God, by the animal magnetism of the flesh, as blasphemy.
The New Man of the Spirit is the mental likeness of God in Christ photographed, so to speak, on the fleshly table or sensorium of A.B., by the Holy Scriptures, “which,” as Paul says, are able to make wise to salvation, through faith, which is by the anointed Jesus.” It is only the A.B.’s thus enlightened that are ‘taught of God,” and know Him. None else are made alive by the Spirit; and, consequently, none others “know God”; for He, and all the deep things pertaining to Him, are “spiritually discerned,”
Furthermore, the high importance of this great subject, that, namely, of knowing the true God understandingly, is manifest from the magnitude of the evil consequent upon not understanding Him. Thus, in writing to the Thessalonians, Paul testifies,
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that the Lord Jesus shall be apocalypsed or revealed from heaven; and that in that apocalypse he will inflict condign punishment upon them “who know not God,” and who obey not the Gospel of Jesus the Anointed. Surely here is incentive powerful enough to induce A.B. to study God’s revelation of Himself, and to obey the unadulterated word of the kingdom. Is A.B. wise? Is he mighty? Is he rich? Then thus saith Jehovah to him: “Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in his might, nor let the rich man glory in his riches; but let him that glorieth glory in this, that he understandeth and knoweth Me, that I, Jehovah, do exercise mercy, judgment, and righteousness on the earth; for in these I delight, saith Jehovah.”
THE SUBJECT ITSELF
God’s Revelation Of Himself, We now purpose to set forth some of the things extant pertaining to the subject itself. But, in turning to the Bible, which we regard as the only reliable source of information concerning God, we are met by the inquiry of Zophar, the Naamathite, saying, “Wilt thou find out ‘Eloahh’ by searching? Or to perfection, wilt thou find out ‘Shaddai’? The height of the heavens, what wilt thou do? Deeper than sheol, what wilt thou know? The lengthening out is more than earth’s measure, and broader than the sea” (Job 11:7-9). The subject is indeed great, for God is great; and when we come to contemplate it aright, we are led with the apostle to exclaim: “0 the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable His judgments, and His ways past finding out! For who knows the mind of the Lord? Or who becomes His counselor? Or who bath first given to Him, and it shall be recompensed to Him again? For out of Him, (ex autou) and through Him, and for Him are all things. To Him be the glory for the Aions. Amen” (Ram. 11:33-36).
To Zophar we reply, that “by searching” through the height of the heavens, or the depth of the unfathomed abyss, we cannot find out Eloahh Shaddai, “That known of God is made manifest among men; for God makes manifest to them: (for His invisible things from the creation of the world being understood by the works, are discerned, both His ever-existing (aidios) power and deity) that they may be inexcusable” (Rom. 1:19). But to discern this by a contemplation of the heavens, earth and sea, is not to “find Him out to perfection.” They proclaim an “EVER-EXISTING POWER” and that this power is superior to “corruptible man,” and, therefore “incorruptible (Theos), incorruptible power; or, as we say, “God.” But while they proclaim this, they do not reveal the mode of His existence, the place of His throne, His
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mode of thinking, His character, purpose, and so forth. The wisest of men, who have speculated upon these apart from a written revelation, have only become vain in their imaginations; and, though professing to be wise, become fools. They have thought to define the Deity; and in so doing, have imagined that He was such an one as themselves. But all their speculations have been stamped with the seal of His reprobation; for both Old and New Testaments testify that “the world by wisdom knew Him not” (Ps. 14:1,2; Rom. 3:11).
The Deity delights in stimulating the intellect of His creatures. In revealing Himself, therefore, to them, He manifests Himself mysteriously. “It is the glory of Elohim,” says Solomon, “to conceal a word, but it is the glory of kings to search out the word.” A word is concealed when it is enigmatically expressed; and it is the glory of those whom God has chosen for His kings in the future government of the world, to search out the wisdom He hath hidden from the wise in their own conceit. “The world by wisdom,” saith Paul, “knew not God . . . . but we speak the wisdom of God in a mystery, ‘the hidden’, which none of the chiefs of this Aion knew; for had they known they would not have crucified the Lord of glory” (1 Cor. 1:21; 2:7, 8). Paul was sent to turn the Gentiles to the knowledge of the true and living Deity, and in so doing taught them the mystery which it was the glory of the apostolic proclamation to explain or reveal. Hence their preaching came to be styled, “the Revelation of the Mystery,” and is thus alluded to by Paul (who taught “the gospel which God had promised through His prophets in the holy Scriptures”) in Rom, 16:25 — “To him that is of power,” says he, “to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus anointed; according to the revelation of mystery concealed during Aionian times (chronois aionios) but now made manifest also through the prophetic writings according to the commandment of the God of the Aion (tou aioniou Theou) for obedience of faith made known to all the nations: to God only wise, through Jesus anointed, to him be the glory for the Aions. Amen.”
This mystery, which as we see, was the burden of the apostolic preaching, was a great enigma — an enigma, dramatically, as well as doctrinally, explained. “Without controversy,” says Paul, “great is the mystery of godliness — ‘Deity manifested in flesh , justified by spirit, made visible to messengers, preached among nations, believed on in the world, received again to glory” (1 Tim. 3:16).
It would be premature to go into the consideration of these Six points of godliness. It is sufficient just now to bear in mind that they exist; and constitute integral parts Of “God manifestation” as far as at present developed.
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The First Principle: God is One. We proceed to remark that Paul, as well as Moses, declares, “there is no other God but one”; and having so said, proceeds to remark: “For though there be that are called gods, whether in the heaven, or upon the earth (as there are gods many, and lords many), but to us there is one God the Father, out of whom (ex ou) all things, and we for Him; and one Lord Jesus Anointed, on account of whom (di’ou) all things, and we through Him. Howbeit the knowledge is not in all. (1 Cor. 8:4-7).
Here then, we have good authority for saying, that in the universe there are many gods and many lords; but that over and above them all is “One Supreme,” who is styled “the Blessed and Only Sovereign, (monos dunastes) the King of kings, the Lord of lords; the only one having deathlessness, inhabiting light unapproachable, whom no one of men hath seen, nor is able to behold” (I Tim. 6:15). He is God of gods, whose existence He Himself admits in saying to Israel: “I am Jehovah, thy Elohim . . . . “There shall not be to thee other Elohim above me.”
Thus far Moses and Paul are in agreement. They both teach one supreme Deity, and the existence of others beside; but that these others were not to be made objects of worship by dwellers upon the earth. Now Jesus of Nazareth is perfectly Mosaic in his teaching upon this subject. When a certain scribe asked him: “Which is the chief commandment of all”? He answered in the words of Moses, so often referred to by the Jews of our day, when disputing the claims of Jesus, and by Dr. de Lara among the number: “the first of all the commandments,” said he, is, “Hear, O Israel; ‘Yahweh’ our ‘Elohim’ is ‘one’ Yahweh. And thou shalt love ‘Yahweh’, thine Elohim, with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength: this is the first commandment. And the second is like; as, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. There is none other commandment greater than these.” “Well, Teacher,” said the scribe, “thou hast said the truth; for there is one ‘Deity’ (hoti eis estin Theos) —and there is no other but of him — ouk estin al/os plen autou” (Mark 12:29-34).
HEBREW TITLES OF
DEITY
But at this stage
of our inquiry it behooves us to pause and to look into the signification of
certain words brought before us in these and other passages of the sacred
writings. This is the more necessary, because the names of God which occur in
the Bible are not arbitrary sounds; and one of the chief imperfections of the
English authorized translation, or rather version, is the slovenly manner in
which all the names by which God has been
40
pleased to make
Himself known to His people, have been rendered, after the fashion of the
Septuagint, by the two words, “Lord” and
“God.”
These words do not
convey the ideas of the Spirit in its use of terms. Lord is of Saxon origin, and signifies monarch, ruler, governor,
something supreme or distinguished. The word to which it answers in the
Septuagint and New Testament is kyrios. Under this
word Parkhurst says: “Plutarch informs us, that the
name of Cyrus, who in Isaiah 44:28; 45:1, is called koresh, did in Persic signify the Sun.” “This name,” then continues Parkhurst, “seems an evident corruption of the Hebrew, the
sun; and as the sun is manifestly the great ruler
in material nature, and the idolators of several nations accordingly
worshipped Him under the title of meleck, the King,
and Baal, the Ruler, Lord; so from
the same word, keres, may, I think, be deduced the Greek kuro, authority, and kurios, lord; and even the word kuro, to exist; for it was a heathen tenet, that the sun was self-existent. Thus, for instance, the
Orphic Hymn, Eis Helion, 1. 3,
calls him Autophues, self-born.”
But, if this be the
radical idea of kyrios it fails to represent the meaning of Ail,* Eloahh,
Elohim, Shaddai, Yahweh, for all of which it is often, or rather, most
frequently, and almost generally used. The word Adon is properly enough
rendered by Lord, in the singular;
but not the other words, for which it should never be used. Elohim, Shaddai and
Adonai, are plural names of Deity, and require terms of the same number to
express them.* *
The common use of God in the English language, is as
little justifiable as that of the word Lord.
“God” in Saxon, signifies good: a
meaning which cannot possibly be extracted from any of the names recited above.
God is indeed good, exclusively so, as we are taught by Jesus himself while in
the mortal state. In this sense, he refused to appropriate the word good, saying to one who styled himself
so, “Why callest thou me good? No one is good except
one, that is God” (Mali. 19: 17). Jesus was free from personal transgression,
and therefore in character good; as
he did not refer to character, he could only have had reference to nature, or to God as substance. He is
good in the sense of being deathless or incorruptibility itself; which, when
Jesus refused the term, did not define the nature
the Spirit was tabernacling in, and was
encumbered with. “In me, that is, in my flesh,” says Paul, dwells no good
thing.” God, then, whether in the
sense of moral, or of material goodness, while it is a term expressive of
· Dr. Thomas invariably transliterates “El” as “Ail,” thus spelling the word as it is pronounced. (Publishers,)
· * See additional Note in Appendix.
·
.41.
the truth, is not a
translation of any of the words before us; and where used in their stead,
leaves the mind in the dark concerning the things they were intended to convey.
To Melchizedec and
Abram the alone “Good One” was known as All
Elyon, “Most High Ail,” which teaches by implication
that there were Ailim of inferior rank, station and power.
Melchizedec, King of Jerusalem, was the priest of the Highest Ail, whom he
understood and proclaimed to be konai, “Possessor
of the Heavens and Earth.” In Gen. 14:22, Abram is made, by transcribers, to
call the “Most High Ail” by the name Yahweh;
though we are expressly told in Exodus 6:3, that Abraham did not know Him
by that name. He knew Ail, and he knew Shaddai;
but with any superior or divine being of the name “Yahweh,” he had no
acquaintance,* The name has no doubt been substituted for Adon, Lord or Ruler, which the Most High is by virtue of His being
the owner or sole proprietor of the heavens and the earth. The use of the word Yahweh is evidence that Genesis was
compiled at least 430 years after the events of Chapter 15.
Abram, the Hebrew,
spoke the language of Moses. This is evident from the narrative, and the name
applied to altars and to God by his immediate family. Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,
all called upon the Possessor of the Heavens and Earth, by the word Ail-Shaddai, which in Gen, 17:1, He
bestowed upon Himself, saying ani-ail-Shaddai —
“walk before Me, and be thou perfect”; and in verse 3 it says, “and Elohim talked with him”: and Ail told
him through Elohim that He would be
to him lai-lohim, “for Elohim and to his seed after him” (verse 8).
As often as this
word au passed before his mind, the
idea of POWER, might, strength, would
stand out in bold relief. “It always,” says Gesenius,
“presented to the Hebrews the idea of strength and power.” Nebuchadnezzar is
styled in Ezek. 31:11, Ail Goyim, the
Mighty One of Nations; and in Isaiah 9:5,
Messiah is termed Ail Givbor, the Mighty Warrior.
Shaddai is plural,
and comes from the root shadad, to be strong or powerful. Shaddai signifies mighty or powerful
ones. Several appeared to Abraham, and three of them at one time condescended
to partake of his hospitality. Their power is tremendous when they choose to
exert it upon the wicked, as in the instance of Sodom and Gomorrah, Admah, and Zeboim, cities of the
Plain; but towards “the Heirs of Salvation” they are ministering spirits, beneficient and good (Heb. 1:14; 13:1).
But, by what
were these Shaddai so powerful that
they could
· See additional Note in Appendix.
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stand by cities and
send them into the abyss profound? Was it by their own power, or by the power
of another? By the power of another certainly; even by His power who is higher
than they; and who, being Possessor of the Earth hath alone the right to lay
its cities in heaps, and sweep it with terror and distress. And because this is
the fact, therefore, the Possessor of the Heavens and the Earth announced
himself to Abram, Isaac and Jacob, as Ail-Shaddai,
or THE STRENGTH of the POWERFUL ONES, whose might he had witnessed in the
destruction of the Plain.
In this sense, that
namely of POWER INCREATE, being the strength of creatures formed by it, we find
Ail associated with other words than shaddai. In Gen. 33:20, it is testified,
that Jacob erected an altar, and called it Ail
Elohai Yisraail, rendered in the margin of the
English Bible, God, God of Israel. An
altar, mizhaiach, is a thing to sacrifice or present
offerings upon, from zavach, to kill, etc. It was regarded as “most
holy,” so that whatever touched the altar was sanctified or made holy (Exodus
29:37). The blind fools, as Jesus styled the Rabbis of his day, had reversed
this, and by making the altar of no account (Matt. 23:18), destroyed its
typical and sanctifying character. In the days of the patriarchs and prophets,
the typical altar was temporarily sanctified, but in the days of the apostles,
and consequently now also, Jesus is the
sanctifier, as Paul teaches in Heb. 2: Il, saying that “Both he that sanctifieth, and they being sanctified, are all out of one
(Father) ex henos:
and in Chapter 13:10-13, he plainly identifies Jesus as the sanctifying
altar of which none have any right to eat who hold on to the types rejecting
the things they shadow forth.
‘ Now Jesus was one and the Father was another. “I can of mine own self,” said he, “do nothing.”:
“My doctrine is not mine, but His that
sent me”; and it is written in the Law of Moses that the testimony of two
men is credible. “1 am one that bear
witness of myself; and the Father who
sent me, (the other witness) He beareth witness of me” (John 5:30; 7:16; 8:17,18). Here, then, are
two personages. The Father by Himself, being Ail, or POWER, but when associated with the Son of Man, who, when
so associated, was powerful —
“anointed with the Holy Spirit and with power” — He was Ail Eloahh, the Power mediately
manifested; the power being one, and
the medium of manifestation another Eloahh. “It is in the ail yahdi, power of my hand,” said Laban to Jacob, “to harm you; but the Elohim of Your Father forbade it.”
Now the altar
erected by Jacob was typical of those referred to in the title he bestowed upon
it. When the Spirit descended Upon the Apostles, and shone through them,
holding forth the Word of life confirmed by power, there were many other Elohim
43
in Israel. They
were full of power, and therefore full of Ail, as Jesus promised they should be,
saying, “Ye shall receive power of the Holy Spirit coming upon you” (Acts 1:8);
and when Jacob poured oil upon the
pillar-stone of Baithail, he represented this
anointing of the Elohim of Israel with
Au. The marginal reading of the title
of Jacob’s Altar expresses nothing of this. “God, God of Israel” is an
unmeaning phrase: rendered after the Saxon version of “God,” it is “Good, Good
of Israel”! But with the promises before us, we interpret the Altar as typical
of the Power of the Powerful Ones of
Israel in sacrificial manifestation.
Another word
applied to “Power Increate,” and improperly rendered God,* is Eloahh. It occurs fifty-six times in the Old
Testament, of which forty-one occur in the Book of Job. It is used four times
in the Psalms; only twice by Moses; once by Isaiah and Solomon; three times in
Daniel, and twice in Habakkuk. It is not in all these places applied to the
Most High. In Daniel it is applied to that power in the Little Horn’s estate or
dominion which enforces the adoration of “Guardian Saints”; and in Hab. 1:11, zu koho lailoho it informs us that the Chaldean shall offend in
taking his power for his Eloahh. And Job, in speaking of him that
provokes Au, says in Chapt. 12:6, “Who carries Eloahh in his hand”; that is, he calls the sword in the hand of the
violent, his eloahh, in the sense of its being his power.
Power, then, is the radical idea of Eloahh as well as of Ail. It is of the singular number
and masculine gender. In Isaiah 44:8, the Spirit of Eloahh in the prophet inquires: “Exists there an Eloahh without me? Yea, there is no rock (tzur, metaphor for power), I know not any.” And in Psalm 18:31: “Who is an Eloahh without mivhaladai Jehovah? And who is a rock (or strong) except our Elohim”? “The Mighty One (hah-’Ail), girdeth
me with strength; and hath made my way secure.” Is not Eloahh the Majesty of the Heavens”? (Job 22:12). “In my flesh shall I see
Eloahh” (19:26). And “At the presence of Adon, the Lord, be pained, 0 earth; at
the presence of the Eloahh of Jacob” (Psalm 114:7).
The plural of this
word is elohim, and occurs in the Old
Testament about 2,470 times. In the first and second chapters of Genesis, it is
rendered in the English version by the word “God”;
but in chapter 3:5, it is
translated gods.* In 23:6, it is
· In other Editions of Phanerosis a misprint here occurs. Dr. Thomas is represented as writing that ‘Eloahh is rendered Lord.’ The Word is rendered “God” in the A.V. We include this footnote to explain the divergence in the text of the various editions of the book. (Publishers).
·
The
Revised Version renders Gen. 3:5 “Ye
shall be as God knowing good and evil.” -
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rendered mighty, but very incorrectly. Let the
reader turn to this passage, and read it in the English; and then, if he can,
look into the original. The children of Heth did not
say to Abraham, “thou art a mighty prince among us”; but they said: “Hear us, Adoni, or my lord, a prince of Elohim art thou among us.” In Chapt. 30:8, it is rendered great. In 31:30,32; 35:2,4; and
many other places idols are termed elohim, not because they were really
anything of power, but were so esteemed by the idolater who styled them so. In
Exodus 21:6; 22:8,9, it is rendered judges.
In 1 Sam. 2:25, it is judge.1 In
1 Kings 11:5, it is translated goddess.”
In Jonah 3 :3, it is rendered exceeding;
and in Mal. 2: 15, it is rendered godly.
It is certainly
somewhat remarkable, that Eloahh, the singular
noun, should be so seldom, and the same word in the plural, so often, used
concerning God, in a book revealing Him to the student of the word. Grammarians
tell us that there is nothing in it : that it is only a poetical fancy, or a
peculiarity of style, that caused the singular to be used at all; and that the
plural is used as more becoming, being expressive of the majesty or excellency
of God. Referring to this Gesenius says “In unison
with Aramaean usage the form of the singular is
employed only in the poetic style and the later Hebrew; while the pluralis majestaticus ye! excellentioe is the common and very frequent form.
“Greatness,” he remarks, in his grammar,
“especially in a metaphorical sense, as associated with power and sovereignty, is
plurally expressed. Hence, there are several nouns
which are used in the plural as well as the singular, to denote Lord or God (Pluralis majestaticus
vel excellentioe) e.g. Eloahh. God is scarcely found in the singular, except
in poetry; in prose; commonly elohim; adon, lord, old form of the plural adonai, the Lord, kat exochen (God), shaddai, the Almighty. Often the idea of
greatness is no longer associated with the form, the mind having accustomed
itself to contemplate the powerful in
general as a plural. Another example of the plural~ majestatis is the use of we by Deity in speaking of Himself
(Gen. 1:26; 11:7; Isa. 6:8) and by kings. The German language has it not only
in this latter case, but in addressing a second person by Ihr and Sie. This plural is also found in modern
Arabic and Persian.”
“In regard to
number, the constructio ad sensum is
frequent. The pluralis majestatis is
construed with a singular adjective or verb. Conversely, the adjective takes
the plural form when it is used with reference to God (pro notione majestatis)
as eloah ossai,
+The Revised
Version translates “Elohim” as “God” in these three places quoted by Dr. Thomas
and rendered “judges” in the Authorized Version. (Publishers).
45
God created me, (Job 35:9).
We quote these learned observations, that the unlearned reader may see how grammarians get round, but do not explain the anomaly. The rules are that an adjective agrees with its substantive or noun in gender, number, and case; and that a verb agrees with its nominative in number and person. But in the case of Elohim, Adonai, Shaddai, Eloahh, etc., when applied in connection with Au or POWER INCREATE, commonly styled God, we find the rules of grammar disregarded. Gesenius tells us that it is a royal peculiarity of speech; granted: but what in relation to divine power is the ground of that peculiarity? This he does not, and cannot explain, because he does not know, “God and Jesus Anointed whom he has sent.” The peculiarity is, to coin a word, phanerosial and doctrinal. The peculiarity has diffused itself into other languages, and generated “a plural of majesty or excellence”; but is not originally a plural of that kind. As to Eloahh being poetical, and Elohim, its plural, prosaic, the contrary would appear the more correct opinion, seeing that the poetical Eloahh is only used four times in the Psalms; while in these songs of Zion the prosaic Elohim occurs three hundred and forty times at least!
The words examined are Ail, Elyon, Elyonin, Eloah, Shaddai, Adon, Adonai, and Elohim all of them rendered with little or scarcely any discrimination, by the Anglo-Saxon terms Lord and God. We have seen that power, might, sovereignty, are the ideas upon which the words are based; and as the ideas are absolute and underived in Him “out of whom, and on account of whom, and for whom, are all things” (ex autou kai di autou, kai eis autou ta panta) (Rom. 11:36; 1 Cor. 8:6). The Hebrew nouns expressive of power, might, sovereignty, are selected and appropriated by the Creator as representative signs or names of Himself, in revealing the knowledge of divine power in its manifestation to men.
The source or fountain of power in the universe is one. It is a unit. Therefore, everything which exists is ex autou out of Him. Hence the Creator did not “make all things out of nothing.” This is the teaching of theology, the “orthodox theology” of the
Old Man of the Flesh; and which leads many of his children
to affirm that “matter is God,” understanding by “matter” that which is cognizable by the five senses Hence the sun,
the moon, and the stars, and all the things they can see, taste, feel, smell,
and hear upon earth, are God. They confound that which “is of Him” with the
“Him” out of whom all things proceed. On the other hand, other children of the
Old Man affirm that “God is immaterial”; by
which they mean that He is not matter, or substance, or body; but an
inconceivable something they call “spirit,”
an incorporeal, insubstantial, immaterial spirit, which is as near to nothing
as words can express. Nothing making all
things out of nothing is the Old Man’s theology concerning God and the
fountain of all things, reduced to its simplest terms. But the Scripture
declares that pneuma ho Theos esti literally, Spirit
is the Theos. I say simply theos, because
we shall yet have to ascertain the New Testament sense of Theos. “Spirit,” then, is the Theos commonly called God. But more
than this, this Spirit is the Father; that is, the One ex autou, out of whom are all things.
This appears from what is affirmed of “Spirit” and of “Father.” Jesus says in
John 5:21: “The Father raises up the dead and quickeneth,” or makes the
grave-emergent dead incorruptibly living: and in chapt.
6:63, he says: “It is the Spirit that quickeneth,” or makes alive. The Father
and the Spirit are, therefore, the same; nevertheless, the word “spirit” is
often used in other senses. Et is the “Father-Spirit” that Paul refers to in 1
Tim. 6: 16, whom no man bath seen in His unveiled splendor. Veiled in flesh, “the Vail of the Covering” (Exodus 35: 12): he that discerneth
him Who spoke to Philip, “saw the Father” (John 14:9; 12:45). But, veiled or unveiled, the Father-Spirit is substantial.
Speaking of the Unveiled Father-Spirit, Paul says in Heb. 1:2, 3, that the Son
~ the Character of his Hypostasis, rendered, in the common version,
“express image of his person.” The Son is the character or exact representation, and the Father is the hypostasis. In reference to the former,
the Father says, in Zech 3:9: “Upon One Stone there shall be Seven Eyes; behold
I will engrave the graving thereof (that is, of the stone), saith He who shall
be hosts.” The graving engraved on
the stone is termed, in Greek, character,
an impress wrought into a substance after some archetype or pattern. The
archetype is the hypostasis, so that hypostasis is the basis or foundation
of character; wherefore the same
apostle in Col. 1: 15, styles the character
engraved the “Image” of Theos the
Invisible (eikon
tou Theou tou aoratou).
Seth was the image of Adam, and Adam, the image of Elohim (Gen. 1:26; 5:3). Like Seth, Jesus was an image of Adam, but only in relation to flesh. Adam the First was the image of Elohzm, and this was in relation to bodily form. Body and form
were the hypostasis of Adam and Seth; that is, they were the basis or foundation of the images so named. Where body and form do not exist, there can be no image; therefore, where image is predicated of hypostasis, that hypostasis must have both body and form. The Father-Spirit, unveiled, is, then, a bodily form; and as all things are “out of Him,” He is the focal centre of the universe, from which irradiates whatever exists.
The Father-Spirit is embodied power. Paternal power implies offspring or children, children or SONS OF POWER. Son power is also embodied power. It is power emanating from the Father, corporealized in one or a multitude, but never separated or detached from the focal centre. The Son-power is, therefore, the Father-power, multitudinously expressed, manifested through many bodies. This is illustrated in the science of arithmetic. Arithmetic is the science of numbers. The hypostasis or basis of this science is the multitudinous expression of one, a multiplication of number one. Let there be no numerical power called one, and there could be no five, fifty, or any other combination of one. One is the great power of the arithmetical universe; and all the other powers resulting from the multiplication of one combined, cannot exclude one therefrom, without annihilating themselves, and expunging the system. This is true of Son-power, individually or multitudinously expressed, in relation to the One Father-power. Hence Jesus was led to remark, “The Son can do nothing of himself,” and again, “I can of mine own self do nothing” (John 5: 19,30). “The flesh,” said he, “profits nothing.” As son of Mary, he pretended to no power, wisdom or superiority. Mary’s son was “the Vail of the Covering” to be rent. The Vail in which the Father-power was veiled, the Flesh-medium of Power-manifestation.
That which connects the Focal Power of the universe with the embodied sons of power, and indeed with all created things, is also “spirit” — styled in Scripture “free spirit” (Psalm 51:12). It is free or uncombined in space, and fills immensity as the water fills the basin of the seas. The atoms of all material things are elemental condensations of free spirit, connecting the orbs of heaven and all they contain, with the Great Central Focal power of the Universe. It is the principle of cohesion, attraction, form; penetrating and pervading everything. To this universality the Psalmist alludes, when he inquires of Yahweh, “Whither shall I go from Thy spirit? And whither from Thy face shall I flee? If I shall ascend the heavens, Thou art there: though I shall spread down in sheol (the grave) behold Thee! I will take the wings of the dawn; I will dwell in the utmost end of the sea moreover, there Thy hand (or power) shall lead me, and Thy right hand shall take hold of me. And I said, surely darkness
shall cover me; but the night was light about me. Moreover, darkness will not conceal from Thee; but the night as the day will shine; as the darkness so is the light” (139:7-12). All this is equivalent to saying that the Father-Power is omnipresent by His Spirit. Hence, He needs not to be locomotive to see what passes in the sun, moon, earth and stars. His all-pervading spirit places Him in contemporary juxtaposition with them all; so that at one and the same instant, He knows the fall of a sparrow on earth, and any other event, small or great, on the sun. In this way it is that, as Paul told the Athenian idolators: “He is not far from every one of us” (Acts 17:27). We are out of Him, and through Him, and in Him as physical beings. This is equally true of all flesh that breathes. Hence Moses styles the Father-Power Au Elohai haruchoth l’kol-bashar, power, powers of the spirits, for all flesh (Num. 16:22). Here is power as the cause of life, called Au!; and powers as distributed to each living thing, and therefore styled Elohim. A dozen creatures have life. This life is Ail’s spirit in them all. It is not, however, a dozen separate and independent Ailim; but one and the same Au multiplied by twelve. Ail is life absolute; for as Paul says: “He only hath deathlessness.” Life radiating from His hypostasis or substance, is spirit-life Eloahh ruach, power of spirit. Formative of a creature, and sustaining it in life, it is power of spirit, or spirit-power for that creature. Twelve such Eloahh ruach become Elohi,i, ruchoth, spirit-powers of the twelve. Hence, these Elohim are son-powers, or emanations from Au, the great “paternal power.” He is therefore the Au of all flesh, as well as Elohim for all flesh. “The ruach or spirit of All has made me, and the nishinath or breath of the Shaddai, or Mighty Ones, hath given me life” (Job. 33:4). Here is the Spirit of Au through the breath of Shaddai that gives life to men. This withdrawn and they die. Hence it is written: “If He gather unto himself His spirit and His breath, all flesh shall perish together, and man shall turn unto dust” (34:14).
In this elaboration, then, we have Father-Power, Son-Power, or emanation, and Free Spirit. Moses and the prophets teach this, as we have seen. The Father-Power is One; the Son-Power is the One Father-Power in plural manifestation; and the manifestation is developed by Free Spirit emanation from the Father Power. This is not only Scriptural but reasonable; and right reason and Scripture always go together.
We affirm then, that the Mosaic and prophetic revelation concerning Deity is that there is ONE POWER, multitudinously manifested; and that these manifestations constitute GOD. The One Power inquires of Job: “Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? Who laid the corner stone thereof;
when the stars of the morning sang together, and all the Sons of Elohim shouted for joy?” (Job 38:7). This inquiry teaches, that before the earth was fitted up Mosaically, or as Moses has described in Genesis; the Supreme Power existed in multitudinous manifestation. The plurality was composed of intelligences styled “Stars of the Morning” and “Sons of Elohim” the former kokvai voker, and the latter benai elohim. In Rev. 22:16, the glorified Jesus is styled “the bright and morning Star.” The inquiry put to Job showed that there were many such before Adam was created, and that these stars are sons of Elohim, even as Jesus is Son of Eloahh. The word bain, signifies a son, from banah, to build. A son is the thing built. The Stars of Morning Light were things built and made resplendent by Ail, whose spirit formed and illuminated them. His Spirit was their atomic nucleus, the organic principle that made them what they are. As intelligences created and made, they were “Sons of” or benai; and the Spirit of Ail, the Great Paternal Power, became Eloahh to each of them, and so constituting each of them bain eloahh, a Son of Power, and all of them collectively benai Elohiin, Sons of Power— the One Spirit of the Supreme paternal Power multitudinously organized.
Our proposition then, is that Moses and the Prophets teach, that there were One Primary Creating Power and a multitude of Secondary Powers, as intimately connected with and dependent on the First, as ten or a hundred are upon number one; and that this multiplication of the One Power in the relation of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, was in existence before the Mosaic Creation. Dr. de Lara’s Jew is, therefore, unnecessarily excited “when he is told that God has a Son.” The Supreme Power has not only a Son, but a multitude of sons, and all of them partaking of His nature, or spirit-substance, hypostasis. The Supreme Power, or Ail, is “the Godhead,” or source, fountain, or sole spring of Power. Moses and the prophets do not teach that “there are three persons, three essences, three somethings, or three anythings, in the Godhead; and that these three distinct units, or unities, constitute only one unit or one Unity and that that Tri-Unity is the God of Israel.” They do not teach this. This is the foolishness of the Old Man of the Flesh. They teach the absolute oneness of the Power-Head. “Before me,” as written in Isaiah 43:10, 11, “Ail” was not created, nor after me shall be: I, I shall be (anoke, anoke, Yahweh); and NONE WITHOUT ME A SAVIOUR. This is perfectly true, and quite compatible with Peter’s proclamation to Israel concerning Jesus, saying: “Him hath Theos exalted to His right hand, a Prince and SAVIOUR; to give enlightenment (metanoian) to Israel, and remission of sins” (Acts 5:31). The Jew objects that if Jesus be a Saviour, there is then another Saviour beside Ail. But this objection arises
50
from not knowing Ail, and Jesus Anointed whom He has sent. That born of Mary was bain Eloahh, Son of Power. Beside that power there is no Saviour. Apart from the Power the Son could not save; for he, as son of Mary, testifies, that “of himself he could do nothing.” That the Supreme Power would save by a Servant-Power, is manifest from Isaiah as well as Peter. In that prophet, the Only Potentate says to one He styles His servant: “Thou shalt be my servant, to raise up the tribes of Jacob, and to restore the desolation of Israel; I will also give thee for a Light to the nations, that thou mayest be my Yesua, salvation to the end of the earth” (49:6). The 1 and the Thee of this passage are but One Power. Power in servant-manifestation — I the First and I the Last, and independent of that I, there are no Elohim or powers (Isaiah 44: 6).
Our proposition is further illustrated in the first chapters of Genesis The first verse commences by informing us that “In the beginning Elohim fashioned the substance of the heavens and the substance of the earth.” Here Power is plurally presented in connection with a singular verb, bara Elohim “powers He created.” This looks and sounds very uncouth to the Anglo-Saxon mind; and as the grammar is bad, in order to save the grammatical reputation of Moses, and to get over what they can not explain, the grammarians have invented the plural of majesty or excellence, and tell us that the plural word Elohim must be regarded as singular. Their grammar teaches us that there was only One Person as well as One Power concerned in developing what exists on earth, out of nothing; but that, as this one person is very great, He is to be spoken of as if He were more than one; as if to resolve Him into two or three would add to His excellency. This notion is, however, sheer foolishness; for in those passages where the Creator asserts His supremacy, majesty or excellency, he speaks of Himself emphatically as anoke, anoke, Yahweh, that is, “I, I Yahweh”; not “We, We, Jehovah.”
The grammarians, having invented their rule, the theologians of the Old Man’s school, rush in to show why it must be so. They say, that in the Godhead there are Three Persons, God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost: three Gods in One Godhead; and that therefore, because of this, the Godhead which created all things is styled Gods in the Hebrew, that is Elohim. But we have shown that the Godhead, or Fountain of Power, is only one: and speaks of Himself as One only; we have seen also that there existed many Sons of Power before the earth Was fashioned. These are Elohim, of whom it is testified in Psalm 103 :20, “Bless Yahweh ye His angels, Mighty Ones of Power, doers of His word, hearkening to the voice of His command; bless ye Yahweh, all His hosts, His ministers who do His
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pleasure.” And in another place commanding their worshipful recognition of Messiah, he says: “Bow down to Him, all ye Elohim” (Psalm 97:7): which is quoted by Paul and applied to the glorified Jesus, in the words: “Let all the angels of God worship him” (Heb. 1:6). By these testimonies we are taught that the Elohim and the Angels are the same order of Divine Intelligences; and that they belong to, or are the property of Yahweh. Hence, they are styled “His angels,” “His Mighty Ones of Power,” “His hosts,” and “His servants,” or ministers; “who do His pleasure.” He is their Creator, Lord or Imperial Chief; and they are more ancient than the human race. Without Him, they can do nothing. It may be said of them, as Jesus said of himself, “Of myself I can do nothing.” Energized and authorized, however, by Him, nothing is too great or difficult for them to do. The Supreme Power, or Ail, has His pleasures; and whatever He is pleased to do, He commands its execution, and they perform it by His Spirit, whose material embodiments they are. They are, therefore, “Spirits” — public official spirits, as Paul styles them; “begotten of the Spirit,” and consequently spirit. They are therefore in Ail, and of Ail, and He through them all. To see them, is to see power in form and body: in common terms, to “see God”; and yet not to see All, “whom no man hath seen, or can see.”
This intimate relationship, so intimate as to constitute a Unity in plurality, but not a plurality in the absolute and primary Power the source of all — is expressed in Isaiah 45: 18 — “Thus saith Yahweh that created the heavens hu ha-Elohim, HE THE ELOHIM that formed the earth and made it; He hath established it, He created it not in vain, He formed it to be inhabited. I YAHWEH, and none without.” In this text Yahweh is twice repeated. This expresses one, being in the singular number; but Elohim is plural expressing two or a multitude; and this noun of multitude is prefaced, not by they as they the Elohim; but by “He,” as He the Elohim. This peculiarity is doctrinal not accidental, nor an arbitrary custom of language, but designed. It teaches that the creation was produced from one power cx ou, out of which, are all things, and that this one power operated through a plurality of agents, or Elohim, who are the spirit-embodiments of its rays.
THE MEMORIAL NAME
Now, when we turn to Genesis 1: 1, we do not find Moses
saying bara
Yahweh, Yahweh created, but bara elohim, ELOHIM created, nevertheless Moses and Isaiah are accordant in their accounts. Moses introduces Yahweh in the second verse, but without giving Him that name. His words are ruach Elohim, “the
‘Spirit’ of Elohim moved upon the face of the waters.” What spirit was this? The New Testament says, “there is One Spirit” (Eph. 4:4); and if we ask what is that one? Jesus replies “Spirit is Theos,” or “God” (John 4:24). Then it was Theos who moved on the face of the waters. But concerning Theos or Ail, Agur says: “Who hath ascended the heavens, or descended? Who hath gathered the wind in his fist? Who hath bound the waters in a garment? Who hath established all the ends of the earth? What is His name and what is the name of ‘His Son’ if thou canst tell?” (Prov. 30:4). What is the name of that “one spirit,” that moved upon the face of the waters? The answer is Yahweh. This was the “He” of the Elohim “that formed the earth and made it.” Hence, the nominative to created, is not a plural of majesty, but a singular noun understood — thus, “In the beginning (the spirit of) Elohim created the heavens and the earth”; and that spirit named himself Ehyeh, “I shall be,” at the bush (Exod. 3:14; 6:3). If then, the question be asked, by what power did they, the Elohim, create and make all mundane things? The answer is, by the spirit, self-named Yahweh or Yah, whose sons, messengers, and servants they are. Spirit radiant from the eternal centre of light and power embodied itself in them; and from them as secondary focal organizations, radiated into the substance of the earth and waters; by which radiation a collateral connection was established with “the free spirit” directly emanating from the Focal Centre of the Universe, permeating and pervading all atoms. Holding such a relation to all things, and energized by such a power, they could move heaven, earth and sea, and elaborated the six days’ work of power with all imaginable ease.
The name Yahweh does not occur in all the first chapter of Genesis. All the works it there narrates are affirmed of Elohim. The Spirit is presented there as the power; but in the second chapter the style is changed, and Moses, to whom the Spirit had Communicated His name at the bush, instead of saying “the Spirit of Elohim,” says “Yahweh Elohim made the earth and the heavens”; “Yahweh Elohim formed man.” A saying in Job 33: 4 shows that “Yahweh” is synonymous with “Spirit.” There Elihu says, “the Spirit of Ail! hath made me, and the breath of Shaddai hath given me life.” The nishmath Ail Shaddai is the atmosphere or firmament which was elaborated on the second day; and not to be confounded with the Spirit. The Spirit formed the air with its appearances called “heavens,” for the support of the vegetables and animal worlds He was about to form. That the nishinath Ail is the air, is clear from Job 37:10, which says: “By the breath of Au, frost is given; and the breadth of the waters is straightened,” or congealed.
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Now from the consideration adduced, it is evident that the
phrases, “and God said,” and “God made,” and “God created,” occurrent in the
first chapter, are equivalent to “Lord God”; or more properly, Elohim said, created, and made, are
equivalent to Yahweh Elohim doing thus, as brought out in the second chapter —
“One Spirit in a plurality of Agents”: not a single one in three, but One in hosts: and hence the title so
frequently in Scripture, “Yahweh of Hosts” — the Yahweh-Spirit in multitudinous manifestation.
The plurality of Elohim in the work of creation is manifest from Gen. 1:26 — “Let Us make man in ‘Our’ image after our likeness.” If the Yahweh-spirit had been solitary in the work, He would rather have said, if He said anything: “I will make man in my image, after my likeness.” What was said is recorded to reveal to the reader the true relation of things. The mandate issued from Yahweh that man be made in the Spirit-type, and so constituted, that divine intelligence and power should be displayed through his organism. That spirit-type was the angel elohim after whom Adam and Eve were made. In form and likeness the same, only in nature of inferior quality. This was Yahweh’s pleasure, and it was done by the fingers of His power. In reference to this, we read in Psalm 8:3, “When I consider the heavens, the work of Thy fingers, the moon and the stars, which thou hast ordained; what is man that thou art mindful of him? and the Son of Man that Thou visitest him? For Thou hast made him a little lower than the Elohim,”* etc. Quoted in the New Testament by Paul, the word mai-Elohim is rendered by “than angels,” (Heb. 2:9); because Elohim are the agents or
· The Revised Version renders Psalm 8:5 as “little lower than God.” This, as Dr. Thomas states above, is quoted by Paul in Hebrews 2:9 as “a little lower than the angels,” thus indicating that the word “Elohim” (rendered “God” in our version) is used in relation to the messengers of Deity. This explains the apparent anomaly of Scripture which in one place states that “no man hath seen God at any time” (John 1:18), whilst other places represent God as speaking with Adam or appearing to Moses. The former relates to the Deity who dwells “in unapproachable light” (1 Tim. 6:16), the latter to the “Elohim” or the Angels, “the ministers of Yahweh” (Ps. 103:21).
Confirmation of Brother Thomas’ statement is provided by the Revised Version which renders Psalm 8:5 as “little lower than God” Paul, in Hebrews 2:9 renders this as “a little lower than the ange1s,,” thus showing by this inspired comment that it is right and proper to identify “Elohim” with the “angels” of heaven. This explains the apparent anomaly of Scripture which, in one place states that “no man hath seen God at any time” (John 1:18), whilst in other places representing God as speaking with Adam, appearing to Moses, talking to Manoah and so forth. The former relates to the Deity who “dwells in unapproachable light” (1 Tim. 6:16); the latter to the “Elohim” or the angels, who are the
“ministers of Yahweh” (Ps. 103:21) — Publishers.
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executive fingers of the Spirit. “The Spirit of God” and “the fingers of God” are synonymous, as appears from Matt. 12:28; Luke 11:20; and Elohim are spirit, being out of Ail. What the fingers of the hand are to the brain, such are the hosts of Elohim to Ail; they are “Unity of Spirit,” which is “God.”
As we have seen, Moses and the prophets teach “One” self-existent, supreme fountain of Power, AlL who is Spirit, and self-named I SHALL BE, or Yahweh: that is ONE YAHWEH SPIRIT POWER is “God” in the highest sense, and constitutes the “Godhead,” or FATHER IN HEAVEN; and He is the Springhead of many streams, or rivers of spirit, which assume “organic forms,” according to the will of the Yahweh-Spirit Power, and that when formed after the model, archetype, or the pattern, presented in HIS OWN HYPOSTASIS, or Substance, they become SPIRIT-ELOHIM, or sons of God; and are Spirit, because “born of the Spirit” — Emanations of the formative Spirit being out of him. The Spirit-Elohim was also “God”; nevertheless they are created. They are formed and made out of and by that which is uncreated. They are Spirit-Forms, the substance of which (spirit) is eternal; while the forms are from a beginning. Each one is a God in the sense of partaking of THE DIVINE NATURE, and being therefore a Son of God.
Now, if we understand this, we shall be able to discern
the force and beauty of the expression Yahweh-Elohim,
which occurs so frequently in the Hebrew Scriptures. Yahweh is the name of Uncreated Power, Elohim, the organizations of that Power after its Image and
likeness, whether they belong to the sun, moon, and stars of the universe, or
to Israel. Hence also the beauty and the fulness of the phrase, “I am He the
Mighty Ones, that formed the earth and made it — I Yahweh and none without” — ani-hu ha-elohim; and Yahweh.
If we comprehend this multiplication and manifestation of Divne Unity, many obscure passages in the English version of Moses and the prophets are easy to be understood; and the mind is prepared to understand the otherwise abstruse teaching of Jesus and the apostles concerning “God.” And I would here remark that in making a new translation of the Scriptures into English, the original words, misrepresented in the common version by the Anglo-Saxon words Lord and God, or in combination Lord God, should be left untranslated, but printed in small capitals and italics; and at the beginning of the book a literal definition of the words be given, without regard to “theology,” or “plurals of majesty or excellence” The English reader might then be able to perceive how no man has seen God at any time; and yet that Jacob had a personal encounter and wrestle with God; and that Moses talked With Him face to face,
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When then we read “And God said, let us make man in our image, after our likeness,” we find Moses teaching the contemporary existence of a plurality of Gods before the creation of man but we do not therefore find him teaching a plurality of Eternities in One Eternity, or Three Gods in one Godhead. This is the notion, not of Moses and the prophets, who positively declare the contrary, but the crotchet of the Old Man of the Flesh, who, professing to be wise, became a fool, “and changed the truth concerning God into a lie.” Paul and Moses agree in this, as we have shown before, saying: “There be that are called Gods, whether in heaven or in earth, as there be Gods many and Lords many.” There is, consequently, no room for dispute on this point. Paul affirms the plurality of Gods, and Moses shows that they existed before the creation of man.
But then, both Paul and Moses teach that there is One who is supreme over them all. This is AlL, who created them, and who is alone to be an object of adoration, not with the blank amazement of superstition but of an adoration in an earnest belief of His promises, and willing and loving obedience to His commands. Of this supreme God it is that Paul and Jesus say: “There is none other God but one.” He is the only Head of the universe, who will permit none to take precedence of himself in the affection and adoration of His creatures. He does not, however, manifest Himself to all the intelligences who reside in the sun, moon, stars and earth, through the same medium. To us on earth, He presents Himself, not through Gabriel, but through Jesus as the medium of manifestation — incipient manifestation, for the manifestation is not yet complete — “To us there is but one God the Father out of whom are all things and we for Him; and one Lord Jesus Anointed, on account of whom are all things, and we through him.”
Down to the third verse of the second chapter of Genesis,
the creation of all things is affirmed of “God”,
that is of Elohim or Gods. But
from the fourth verse to the end of the third chapter, where the divine power
is mentioned, it is not simply “God”, but “Lord
God”, that is Yahweh Elohim. The
common version would merely indicate by prefixing Lord to God, that the Lord God
was the supreme God. But if this were admitted, we should be unable to
reconcile the saying of John, and Jesus, and Paul, who all declare that “no man hath seen God at any time” (John
1: 18; 6:46; 1 Tim. 6:16). Now Adam and Eve saw and conversed with the Lord
God; and multitudes saw Jesus. But we remark that “Lord God” is not used by
Moses to express POWER INCREATE UNVEILED, or Ail; but as a word-combination synonymous with “Spirit of God” of Gen. 1:2, or
literally Ruach Elohim. spirit of Gods
or mighty ones — the “One Spirit” veiled
Moses was commanded to return to Egypt, from which he had fled forty years before, and to go to his oppressed countrymen, and tell them that “the Elohim of their fathers” had sent him to deliver them from the power of the Pharaoh. Though they served the gods of the Egyptians, they had not forgotten their own history. They would remember the three Elohim that visited Abraham and partook of his hospitality (Gen. 18:1-5). and which is termed “Yahweh appearing to him.” They would not have forgotten about their departure to Sodom, and how Lot invited two of them to sojourn with him, saying: “My lords, turn in, I pray you”; and how they said: “Yahweh hath sent us to destroy Sodom.” The vision of Jacob’s Ladder was not forgotten, in which he saw angels of Elohim — messengers sent of Elohim — of their number, and above them all, at the top of the ladder, Yahweh; and He said: “I am the Elohim of Abraham, thy father, and the Elohim of Isaac” (Gen. 28: 13). They would remember this, and, consequently, not be ignorant of a plurality of Mighty Ones. But these Mighty Ones were not the Mighty Ones of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; they were only the official spirits who performed service for them as heirs of salvation; for He that stood at the top of the ladder, above all the ascending and descending Elohim, said ani Yahweh Flohai Avrahhahm, “I. Yahweh Elohim of Abraham.” Moses knew that they were acquainted with the many Mighty Ones of their history; and that, consequently, if he should present himself to them as a messenger of Elohim, they would say to him: “What is his name”? As if they should say: “We have heard of many gods; what is the name of him who sends you”? As Joshua says, they were worshippers of other gods than Yahweh at the time Moses went to them; Moses was aware of that, and, there
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fore, felt the importance of being made acquainted with the name of Him who sent him, that he might be able to answer their question should they ask it.
Under these circumstances, the Spirit imposed upon himself a name, and embodied it in a Memorial, by which he was to be known henceforth. Some 430 years before he had said to Abraham, ani Ail Shaddai, “I, the strength of the Mighty Ones” (Gen. 17:1), i.e., “All those Mighty Ones of whom you have heard, who were engaged in forming the heavens and the earth, and who recently confounded the speech of all the earth, and are about soon to overwhelm Sodom and Gomorrah — I AM THE POWER by whose spirit they did it all; therefore, walk before ME and be thou perfect.”
This was a great principle established in the minds of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and Moses — that it mattered not how many mighty ones they might see, or have interviews with, they were not objects of worship for them, but were, themselves, created powers, whose existence, glory, and might were all of Him —the “Uncreated and Eternal Spirit.” They, then, were not the Elohim of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The Spirit claimed this for His individual self. Not that there were one, two, three, or a multitude of Elohim of Abraham then actually existent in the Godhead; but, it was the pleasure of the Eternal Spirit that there should, at a future period, be a multitude of Abrahamic Elohim, who should constitute “a Divine Family,” and not a whit inferior to “the Stars of the Dawn, the Sons of God,” who shouted for joy when they beheld the results of the wonders of the creation-week. Hence, the Eternal Spirit, in imposing upon himself a name, selected a word which should point toward this wonderful future manifestation of spirit. There had been previous manifestations of spirit, and the then already-existent Elohim were its fruit. But now a new manifestation was pre-determined — a manifestation of Elohim, or Sons of God, out of human flesh and spirit.
With reference to this, “Elohim said to Moses,” i.e., they who delivered the words of
the spirit, the Eternal Spirit sent them to say for Him, “I WILL BE WHO I WILL
BE: tell Israel I WILL BE has sent me, Moses, unto you. I WILL BE, the Mighty Ones of your fathers, the Mighty Ones of Abraham, the Mighty Ones of Isaac, and the Mighty Ones of Jacob: that is MY
NAME for an Olahm (Aion or
Millennium) and this MY MEMORIAL for a generation of the race” (Exod. 3:14,15).
The memorial, in its simplest form, is ehyeh asher ehyeh, “I will be who I will be.” Asher, “who,” the relative pronoun in this memorial, is both singular and plural, masculine and femi
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nine. It will, therefore, stand for “ten thousand times ten thousand,” as well as for two or three persons. The other two words of the memorial are the first person singular, future tense of the verb hahyah, “to be.” In this memorial the Eternal Spirit is the “I”, and the Elohim of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, are the “who,” of whom it is memorialized they “shall be.” The reader will observe that it is not “I will be who tihyenah, they shall be”; but “who I will be”; for although “who” refers to a plurality, that plurality, when developed, is but the manifestation of the One Eternal Spirit.
When this Spirit-manifestation is developed, it contains the name for an Olahm. The word olahm signifies anything hidden. The name is, for a period, still hidden in the future; and, therefore, without defining the length of the period, termed simply olahm, hidden. The name is multitudinous, embracing “ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of thousands” (Dan. 7: 10; Rev. 5: 11), at the head of whom is He who is “altogether lovely” (Cant. 5: 16); nevertheless, all One Spirit out of whom, and for whom “they are manifested.”
This name was not apocalypsed or revealed in the Mosaic Olahm. It was verbally defined, and in that definition we find “Name” and “Glory” used synonymously. Moses said: “I beseech Thee show me Thy Glory”; and the Spirit replied: “I will make all my goodness pass before thee, and I will proclaim the Name of Ehyeh before thee; but thou canst not see my face; for there shall no man see me and live” (Exod. 33:18, 19, 20). 9Jo~y and Goodness in Spirit-organization constitute the Name of Ehyeh. It was verbally proclaimed in the words Ehyeh, or a Yahweh Ail, merciful and gracious, long-suffering and abundant in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression, and sin, and that will not clear (the disobedient); visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, and upon the children’s children, unto the third and fourth” (34:6). “Thou shalt worship for Ail no other; for Yahweh whose name is Jealous, a jealous Ail is He” (ver. 14). In passing, we would remark that this Jealous Name was presented in vision to Ezekiel, in whose writings it is styled “the Image of Jealousy”: “the Glory of the Elohim, of Israel” (chap. 8:3,4).
In Exod. 24: 10, Moses tells us — at least the Common Version does that he and seventy-three others “saw the God of Israel.” We should err, however, if we supposed that he meant they saw Ail, the Uncreated Spirit: “no man can see Him and live.” He says they saw “the Elohim of Israel” depositories and embodiments of the Eternal Spirit, who shone out in glory in the presence of the Elders. The appearance under the feet
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of the Elohim, whose feet were also the feet of the Spirit, and, therefore, styled “His feet, was, as it were, a paved work of sapphire stone, and as it were the body of heaven for clearness.” The whole was a Spirit-manifestation, and illustrative of what is yet to appear in the midst of Israel, when the Elohim of Abraham, constituting the name of Ehyeh, shall be apocalypsed on Mount Zion.
Let our Jewish readers make a note of this, that the Memorial Name exhibited in Moses’ writing, is not simply a word of four letters given to an abstraction for a name, as men give names to their children; but a name memorial of a future manifestation of the Eternal Spirit; which manifestation will not be of One through One Only; but of One in and through ten thousand times ten thousand, and thousands of thousands: that the name covers them all; and that consequently, the thousands of thousands are but “One Yahweh.”
This was precisely the relation of things before the formation of the Adams, first and second. Before Adam the first, there were thousands of Elohim, yet only one Eternal Spirit. The Name of those thousands was not Ehyeh, or “Shall be”; but, as implied elsewhere, Howeh we-Hahyah, “He is and He was” —the One Eternal Spirit in plural manifestation, by which, as a whole, the earth was “created and made.” And at the birth of the second Adam, “He is and He was,” as manifested in the “multitude of the Heavenly Host,” was praised in having glory ascribed to Him in the highest heavens (Luke 2:13, 14).
In regard to a name being representative of a multitude, we may refer the reader to the fact that the name of Ehyeh is even now comprehensive of all the saints living and dead; for everyone who believes the promises and the things concerning Jesus; and is immersed into the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, is “in God the Father and in the Lord Jesus Anointed” (1 Thess. 1: 1), and Christ is in Him by faith (Eph. 3: 17). He is thus “in the: Name” which is named upon him, and of the Elohim elect, “waiting for the adoption or redemption of the body,” which results in “the manifestation of the sons of God,” at the Olahm, for which they are prepared.
It has been well observed by some one whose name escapes me, that “there exists in the universe only One Generic Spiritual substance, the Sole Primary Cause, efficient, formative, and substantial, of all secondary causes, and of all appearances whatever, but indued in its highest degree with a supreme providential wisdom, and proceeding by ways incomprehensible to the spirits Which emanate from it, apart from revelation.” This is perfectly Scriptural, and therefore in harmony with the teaching of Moses
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and the prophets, among whom are included Jesus and the apostles. In another place we were treating of the Eternal Spirit in relation to His Name. We continue to remark here, that this name is not a mere tetregrammaton, which superstition forbids or fears to pronounce; nor is it a mere word bestowed by the Spirit upon himself, as a father affixes a word to a son, which we call a name, by which to distinguish him from his other sons; nor is it the name Father, and the name Son, and the name Holy Spirit, three names, into which those “who know not God, the Only True One, and Jesus Christ whom He has sent,” are immersed. AlL, the Eternal Spirit, has not “three names.” He did not say to Moses: “I will proclaim the names of Yahweh before Thee”; “I send an angel before Thee, . . . obey His voice, provoke Him not, for He will not pardon your transgressions, for my names are in Him”; nor did he say, “In all places where I record My names I will come unto Thee.” The Eternal Spirit did not speak after this fashion, but uniformly in the singular, having only One Name, and not three, as some very erroneously imagine and inculcate.
Elohim Developed from the Seed of Abraham The Divine Name
defines what the Eternal Spirit is in manifestation. “Yahweh whose name is
jealous is a jealous power.” Here “name” defines what exists. “The name of the
wicked shall rot,” that is, the glory, honour, power, substance, that exist,
constituting the wicked and their attributes, shall perish. Hence, when the
Eternal Spirit is fully manifested on earth according to His revealed purpose,
that manifestation is “His Name,” or the name of Ehyeh, the I-will-be manifestation of the Spirit.
This name was proclaimed to Israel by Moses in the formula
so often quoted by the Jews in their controversy with the friends* of Jesus,
and with the Demons also, who presume to cry out that they know that he is the
anointed Son of God. In Deut. 6:4, Moses says: Sh’ma Yisraail Yahweh Elohainu
Yahweh ekhad.
This is incorrectly rendered, both by Dr. de Lara in his letter and in the English version. The Doctor renders it “Hear, 0 Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is one!” In the English
· Jesus has left on record an infallible rule by which his friends may be distinguished from the Demons. The rule is expressed in his words, saying: “Ye are my friends if ye do whatsoever I command you.” “The Demons” is a phrase, in its application to men, that signifies those who believe that Jesus is the anointed Son of God, but “do not receive his words,” nor do what he commands. This is not the only sense of the word but the sense in which it is used in this place, because the possessed of old confessed, but did not obey the truth. (Dr. Thomas).
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version it reads: “Hear, 0 Israel, the Lord our God is one
Lord!” But neither of these is a translation. “Lord” and “God” do not express
the sense of the original. As we have shown already, the word Yahweh or Ehyeh, * * has not the
remotest affinity to the English word “Lord.” We must, therefore, reject the
above, which are mere paraphrases or transformations, and translate the formula
literally, that knowing what Moses really did say, we may be able to understand
what he said. And doubtless, it must be an important proclamation concerning
the Invisible One, or he would not have called the attention of the whole
nation of Israel to his words. The literal translation, then, is + “Hear, 0 Israel! I WILL BE our MIGHTIES is One I will be!
This is the proclamation in plain English. There is no word in it which is not perfectly intelligible. It announces a Person who shall be; and if you ask Moses who that Person is, he tells you in Exod. 3:14-16, and 6:3, that the person who shall be is that same One who, four hundred and thirty years before was known to Abraham as the Strength of the Mighty Ones who visited him from time to time, and whose messenger appeared to himself in the bush. This answer is equivalent to saying that the subject of the proclamation to Israel is “One who is, and who was, and who is to come, the Pantokrator,* or Strength of All.” He is while Moses makes the proclamation; He was in Abraham’s time, and from an antecedent eternity; and He shall be when He comes as the Prophet like unto Moses. Nothing short of this can be educed from the words of Moses. Had we lived in the days of Moses, speaking the Hebrew as our mother tongue, his proclamation would have created in us an expectation, that, at some future time, ‘He’, the Possessor of the Heavens and the Earth, the Most High, who admitted Abraham to His friendship, would appear in the midst of Israel; and that then, consequently, whatever His
* * “Yahweh or Ehyeh.” There is a distinction between Yahweh and Ehyeh. The former signifies “He who will be”; the latter simply “I will be.’ This distinction is recognized by Dr. Thomas in “Eureka,” Vol. 1, pp.99-100. In the latter place he writes: “The form of the name which subsequently prevailed over Ehyeh, is . . . . Yahweh . . . . Yahweh Signifying “He who will be” is the memorial name the Deity chooses to be known by among His people. It reminds them that He will be manifested in a multitude (Publishers).
Yahweh signifies “He who shall be.” In “Eureka,” Vol 1, p. 100, Dr. Thomas renders Dent. 6:4 as “Hear, 0 Israel, Yahweh our Elohim is the One Yahweh,” that is: “He who shall be our Mighty Ones is the One Who shall be.” (Publishers).
· The Greek word, “Pantokrator,” has been rendered Almighty in 2 Cor. 6:18, and frequently in the Apocalypse. It is derived from “pas,” ail, and “krateo” to hold, or to have strength; and thus signifies to exercise Power or strength over all others; therefore “Almighty.”
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name might be called, He would be imnia-nu-ail, “God with us.” Now for this result to be manifested, one of three things was necessary; either that “Ail,” the Eternal Spirit Himself, should descend from unapproachable light, and plant Himself in the midst of the Hebrew nation unveiled, or, that a portion of free spirit, emanating from His substance, should be embodied, constituting “Holy Spirit Nature,” or God veiled; or, that the Eternal Spirit should create a body from the material race of Adam, and fill it with His own power and wisdom without measure. In either of these events, it would have been God with Israel, dwelling in the midst of them. But the first alternative was impossible: for God unveiled in any nation would be its destruction, for Moses testified that Yahweh declared to him: “There shall no man see Me, and live”; and Paul, who taught the same doctrine as Moses, says: “No man hath seen, or can see Him”; and Jesus also bears the same witness, that “No one hath seen the Father, except he who is from Theos (Divine Power) : the same hath seen the Father.”
The purpose of the Eternal Spirit to become Elohim to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, through their seed, excludes the second supposition. Mighty Ones in Holy Spirit Nature often appeared in the midst of Israel, and were, for a time, God with them. There is a notable instance of this on record in Exodus 24:10. It is there recorded that “Moses, Aaron, Nadab, Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel, saw the Elohim, or Mighty Ones of Israel : and under HIS feet as it were a paved work of sapphire stone, and as it were the body of the heavens for clearness. And upon the nobles of the children of Israel HE laid not HIS hand; also they saw the Elohim, and did eat and drink. And YAHWEH said unto Moses, Come up to me in the mount, and be there and Moses rose up, and his minister Joshua; and Moses went up upon the mount of the Elohim. And he said unto the elders, ‘Tarry ye here for us, until we come unto you’.” In this narration the distinction is maintained between Yahweh and the Elohim; Yahweh referring to the Eternal and Invisible Spirit; the Elohim to the individualized, or embodied, manifestations of power. The Elohim were visible; for Moses says the nobles of Israel saw them, and ate and drank in their presence. The Elohim had spread for them an entertainment of good things, and welcomed them to eat and drink without alarm : for “upon the nobles of the children of Israel HE (the invisible Yahweh) laid not His hand.” Moses does not say that they saw Yahweh. He and Joshua alone were permitted to ascend to the mountain top; but even there, they did not see Yahweh; for “no man could see Him and live.” They heard, but saw not.
In this scene, Moses and Joshua are types of Messiah in his
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approach to the Father; while Aaron, Hur,
and their associates in company with the Elohim, are types of the saints, the
immortal nobles of Israel, in the setting up of the Gospel-Kingdom. The Elohim
were the representatives of the personages to be manifested from the seed of
Abraham in the Age of glory; the same Eternal Spirit being the substratum, or
hypostasis of the representatives, and of those whom they represented; for
which cause “He” and “His” are affirmed of them. The Elohim and the Devouring Fire
on the top of the mount were the typical manifestation of Yahweh’s glory;
which finds its antitype in glorious display of the things represented also in
Ezek. 1:10; 43:4; Rev. 4:5; 15:2.
All these displays are Mighty Ones in Holy Spirit Nature, and therefore God : and God with them in the midst of whom the manifestation is made. The purpose of Yahweh excludes the Elohim of Sinai from the Elohim of the proclamation. This purpose is the development of Elohim from the Human Race equal to the Elohim of Sinai; or, as it is expressed in the words of Jesus, isangeloi, “equal to angels.” The Scripture reveals the principle upon which the Elohim of the Universe are developed by the Eternal Spirit. They are immortals, but were not always so. The Eternal Spirit, dwelling in light, is alone essentially immortal, without beginning; but all the Mighty Ones, or Gods, He has created, have at some period of their history, been subject to evil even as we. Moses teaches this in Gen. 3:5, 22. The sagacious serpent, who had seen and heard the Elohim in Paradise —“the Stars of the Dawn and Sons of God” told Adam and Eve that if they ate of “the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, they should be as the Elohim (‘gods’) knowing good and evil.” The lie he told did not consist in saying this; for the Yahweh-Elohim admitted that, in the eating, and its consequence, they had become like one of them, to know good and evil. “Behold,” said He, “the man has become as ONE OF US, to know good and evil; and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of the Tree of the Lives, and eat and live for Olahm; therefore Yahweh-Elohim sent him forth from the Garden of Eden.” When this was affirmed of Adam and Eve, “the eyes of them both were opened, and they knew that they were naked,” and they were both ashamed and afraid. This was the form of the “evil” which they experienced at that crisis; and Yahweh-Elohim testifies, that it was an evil they themselves had been the subjects of. Those who were Elohim contemporary with Adam had once been the subjects of shame and fear; and as these are symptoms of an evil conscience, they had once been sinners; and as it is the law of the Eternal Spirit’s empire, that sin works death, so they must have been Once mortal : which is a conclusion in agreement with Paul’s testimony, that the Invisible One “only bath immortality.” Hence
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though in His universe there are multitudes of Immortal Sons of Deity, yet in all that universe there is but One whose immortality is underived and that august person is He who created them. Thus all immortals but Himself were once mortal — sinners subject to death; and while so subject as much in need of a remedial system as we.
But at the fitting up of earth as a new arena for the display of the power and wisdom of the Eternal Spirit, they who figure in the work, had attained to their eternal redemption; and had become “spirits” — Holy Spirit corporeal intelligences — because they had been born of the Eternal Spirit or Father. To what orb or planet of the universe they are indigenous, is not revealed; but as they are not
ab-original to an earth-born race, they are not sovereign here; but only,
as Paul says, “public official spirits, sent forth for service on account of
those thereafter to inherit salvation” (Heb. 1:14).
These, then, are not “‘our’ Elohim” they are not the Elohim of Abraham, nor the Elohim of Israel, to whom the “Sh’ma Yisraail” refers.* These Elohim or Sons of Power, are to be developed from the earth-born seed of Abraham, upon the great moral principle of the intellectual universe, expressed in the two words “faith” and “obedience” — an obedient faith, tested by trial. This principle necessitates the existence of evil in the system where the development of God is in progress; for there can be no trial where evil does not exist. The Eternal Spirit has, therefore, wisely created evil — first as the punishment of sin and secondly, to afford scope for the manifestation of the approved. Upon this principle, Abraham’s faith was tried and perfected; and upon the same principle, though not in the same way, the faith of all scripturally recognized as “his seed,” is tried and perfected to this day.
The Sh’ma proclaims a plurality of Elohim, but does not define the number. Moses tells us elsewhere that they should be as the stars of the heavens for multitude—”So, 0 Abraham, shall thy seed be.” To this agrees the testimony of the Apocalypse, where it is written “I beheld, and lo, a great multitude which no man could number, of all nations and kindreds, and peoples, and tongues, stood before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and with palms in their hands.” “These are they who came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb; therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve Him day and night in His temple; and He that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among
· The “Sh’ma Yisraail” is the proclamation made by God to Israel in Deut. 6:4 (see p.62). The words are rendered in our version as “Hear, 0 Israel.” (Publishers).
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them. They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun light on them, nor any heat. For the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and lead them unto living fountains of waters; and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes” (Rev. 7:9, 14, 17). These are they whom Ezekiel saw in a vision, moving onward in victorious career. “In their going,” says he, “I heard the noise of their wings like the noise of great waters, as the voice of Mighty Ones, or in Hebrew shaddai: the sound of the speech was as the sound of a host” (Ezek. 1:24). Daniel also saw them in vision. “I beheld,” says he, “until the thrones were cast down, and the Ancient of Days did sit, whose garment was white as snow, and the hair of his head like the pure wool: his throne the fiery flame, and his wheels burning fire. A fiery stream issued and came forth from before him; thousand thousands ministered unto him, and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him: the Judgment was set, and the books were opened” (Dan. 7:9-10). Whence came all these thousands of the fiery stream? They are all the Sons of Power: Spirits born of the Spirit; Israel’s Elohim, or Mighty Ones; who were once Jews and Gentiles in unprofitable flesh: sinners under sentence of death, but justified by an intelligent and obedient faith. These are the Elohim of the Shi’ma Yisraail, the hypostasis of whom is the ONE YAHWEH — the One Eternal Spirit multitudinously manifested in the Sons of Eternal Power. When these become apparent, “at THE ADOPTION, to wit, the redemption of the Body” (Rom. 8:23) — the “One Body” — then will be revealed the Mystical Christ — the seed of Abraham — the “Son of Man clothed with a garment down to the foot, and girt about the breasts with a golden girdle; his head and hairs like wool, as white as snow; and his eyes as a flame of fire; and his feet like unto fine brass, as if glowing in a furnace; and his voice as The sound of many waters” (Rev. 1: 13-15) — the voice of the redeemed of all kindreds, and nations, and peoples and tongues.
Such is the hidden mystery of the Sh’ma Yisraail, revealed in the Nazarene proclamation of the Moses-like prophet and his apostolic associates. Hear, 0 Israel, the Eternal Spirit, who has surnamed himself ‘Ehyeh,’ or Yahweh, because He will be for a Starry-Multitude of Sons of Power for Abraham, is nevertheless, but One Eternal Father, and they in Him are One! “To us,” then, ‘there is but one POWER, ‘the Father,’ out of whom are all, and we for Him; and one Lord Jesus Anointed, on account of whom are all, and we through him.” All this development of an earthborn family of Sons of God, who shall take their stand in the universe as Seraphim and Cherubim of Glory, is through and on account of Jesus Christ. He is the foundation, the chief and precious corner stone of this new manifestation of the Father-Spirit.
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Truly, as Moses says, it is a “Glorious and Terrible Name —Eth-Yahweh Elohekha — ‘the I shall be thy Mighty Ones, 0 Israel’.”
We think that by this time our readers will have comprehended the Mosaic teaching concerning God, which is the basis of the revelation which the Eternal Spirit hath given of Himself in the subsequent communications made to Israel through the prophets, Jesus and the apostles. We have seen that Moses did not teach three persons, three essences, or three anythings in One Godhead. By Godhead is meant the source, spring, or fountain of Deity — the Divine Nature in its original pre-existence before every created thing. He teaches that this Godhead was a Unit —a Homogeneous Unit, undivided into thirds, or fractions.
Yahweh Manifested In A Son
At this point of the inquiry, the true believer meets the Jew face to face in the approving presence of Moses and Jesus. They all agree on this point, and say in the words of the Sh’ma, “there is One Yahweh.” Compare Deut. 6:3 with Mark 12:29-32. By doing so, the reader will see that Jesus was as emphatic and precise in his teaching concerning God as Moses: and that those who heard him teach understood him in the Mosaic sense; for a Scribe (and all the Scribes were students of the law, and zealous for their interpretation of Moses) said to him: “Well, teacher, thou hast said the truth : for there is one God; and there is none other but He”: upon which Jesus remarked: “Thou art not far from the kingdom of God.”
But here the agreement ceases at the threshold; for not content with one Eternal Spirit named Yahweh, the rejecter of Jesus contends for only one eloahh. But Moses nowhere teaches that there is but one eloahh; nor does he use the phrase One Elohim — a singular numeral with a plural noun. On the contrary, he teaches the existence of a plurality of Elohim. The Sh’ma does not say “Yahweh our Eloahh is one Yahweh, or one Eloahh”; but “Yahweh our Elohim is one Yahweh.” Moses and Jesus are agreed in this also; for if either of them had taught that there was but one eloahh, they would have been in opposition, or of both of them had so taught, they would have left no room for a Messiah who should be called Yahweh-Tsidkainu, as in Jer. 23:6; 33:16, He shall be our righteousness; and Elohai kol-haretz, “Elohim (plural) of the whole earth,” as in Isaiah 54:5. To have taught the doctrine of only one Eloahh, as well as only one Yahweh, would have been to set aside the doctrine of a’ Messiah altogether, so that there would be neither a personal Christ, nor a multitudinous Christ, the latter being constituted of all in him, the personal.
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Well, then, Moses and Jesus both taught a plurality of Eloahhs. Jesus said: I am Eloahh, and my Father is Eloahh, and the children of God by resurrection, each one is Eloahh; and all together we are thy Elohim, 0 Israel, and yet but one Yahweh. But the Jews repudiate such a God-Name as this. It is incomprehensible to them; and in their opinion, nothing short of blasphemy. It was so repugnant to their notions of things that when Jesus taught it “they took up stones to stone him”; and declared that they did so because that he, being a man, made himself Eloahh in saying: I am the Son of Ail (John 10:33-36). Like Dr. de Lara, they objected to the idea of Yahweh having a son; and that son being a man; and that man consequently Eloahh or God. Hence, when Jesus asked them: “What think ye of Christ? Whose son is he?” They did not answer: “He is the Son of God”—to have done so would have been to admit that he would be equal to God, which they considered blasphemy. They, therefore, adhered to the fleshly view of the matter, and replied: “He is the Son of David.” This was equivalent to saying that he was equal with David only; and consequently, not equal with Deity. But this position was pregnable, and easily turned. Jesus saw their weakness, and immediately exposed it by inquiring: “How then doth David in spirit call him Adon (lord, superior, ruler, &c.,) saying: Yahweh said unto my A don, Sit thou at my right hand till I make thine enemies thy footstool? If David then call him Adon, how is he his son?” They could not answer this; “no man,” says Matthew, “was able to answer him a word” (Chapter 22:41-46).
The point in this argument is a question of equality; and therefore of Deity, or of mere humanity. If Messiah were to have been simply son of David, then he would be equal in natural descent, and inferior in rank. If equal in natural descent he would have been no more than a son of Jesse; and if simply David’s son, he would have been socially inferior, inasmuch as in Society, and especially in Hebrew society, fathers take precedence of sons. This being admitted as contained in their premiss,, upon what known principle could David speak of such a Messiah as his Adon or Sovereign Lord? Here is a notably weak point in the Jewish understanding of the doctrine concerning the Messiah. As in the days of their fathers, so to the present time, They judge after the flesh.” They can only see in Christ a son of David, having no higher origin than blood, or the impulse of the flesh, or the will of man. They have no conception of a Christ, who should be formed by the Eternal Spirit from the substance descended from David, as Adam was formed by the same Spirit from the dust; and therefore generated by the will and power of Ail, still less did they see that such a Son of Power should become a son of a spirit-generation from among the dead. The
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Jewish mind cannot penetrate “the veil of the covering”; so that all his reasonings begin and end in flesh, “which profits nothing.” It is not to be wondered at, then, that the Jews, as Dr. de Lara says, “reject with scorn and ridicule the idea of God having a son; of coming down from heaven and enacting with the Virgin Mary the scene related by Luke.” Their minds are so sensual and earthly that they cannot ascend to the contemplation of “heavenly things.” What they know naturally, as brute beasts, of these things they can speak; but higher than flesh they cannot rise until the Lord shall come and take away the veil.
But, as we are taught in the Old and New Scriptures that a remnant of Israel shall be saved, we would, in the hope of our writings meeting the eyes of one or more of that remnant, reason with them concerning the Christ. We would invite them again to the question Jesus put to their fathers, saying, “What think ye of the Christ? Whose son is he?”
But no one, Jew or Gentile, can give a reasonable answer to this question who is ignorant of Moses and the prophets. And the reason of this will be obvious to every intelligent person from the consideration of the facts that “Christ,” as the subject matter of a system of knowledge, is peculiar to their writings. Moses’ writings may be said to have started the subject. It is true that the Christ-idea was in the world before Moses lived. Adam and Eve received the first promise of his appearing in listening to the sentence upon the serpent in Gen. 3:15. Enoch, the seventh from Adam, predicted his coming with his ten thousand saints: and Abraham saw his day, and was glad. Still the convictions and hopes of these ancients would have been lost but for Moses, who was caused by Yahweh to put them on record, and to commit the writings to the custody of the Hebrew nation. It is,. therefore, exact enough to say that as far as we are concerned the—Christ-idea and the Christ Doctrine originated with Moses. He treats of it at large in his five books . After him the Christ-idea was dramatized, not related, but represented by Joshua at the head of Yahweh’s hosts in the conquest of the Holy Land from the Gentiles. It was also dramatized in the history of David and Solomon, and the Mosaic doctrine concerning Christ, amplified by Samuel, David, Solomon, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Daniel, and all the prophets. The idea and teaching, then, concerning Christ being a special system of inspired knowledge peculiar, exclusively peculiar, to the prophetic writings, how can a man rationally answer the question: “What is the truth concerning the Christ? Whose son is he?” in ignorance of what they testify? It is impossible. We must study Moses and the prophets, or we can know nothing as we ought to know it concerning the “Wonderful One,” through whom the knowledge of the “Eternal Spirit Name,” or God, is
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revealed. It is impossible to know God apart from the Christ-doctrine of Moses and the prophets: for the knowledge of Christ is the knowledge of God-manifestation to man. Let us put it in another form, thus: blot out from the oracles of God the instruction concerning Messiah, and there would remain no revelation of God behind. The Christ-doctrine is the key to the Sh’ma; to the Memorial Name for a generation of the race; to “the glorious and Fearful Name,” and to all the remarkable combinations of words, grouped together without regard to grammatical rules, and so thickly distributed upon the sacred page. Let us then, hear Moses and the prophets: “for they wrote of me,” says Jesus: and “if ye believe not their writings, how can ye believe my words?” (John 5:47). Jesus had no hope of a man, in a scriptural sense, believing his doctrine, who did not believe Moses, and if he and Moses were not credited, the ignorance of the unbeliever alienated him from the life and blessedness of God; for, he says, “this is Aion-life, that they might know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom Thou hast sent” (John17:3).
What Moses Taught us Concerning The Christ The first idea, then, that Moses gives. of the Christ is that—
1. He was to be born of Adam’s race;
2. He was to be the seed of the Woman and
Son of God;
3. He was to be killed;
4. He was to rise from the dead; and
5. He was to destroy the power that killed
him.
All this is expressed or implied in Gen. 3: 15. It
teaches us by implication that he was not to be begotten of the impulse of the
flesh, nor of the will of man; so that in being born of the human nature, he
would be directly Son of Woman, and only indirectly Son of Man. But, if he were
not directly Son of Man, he must have been directly Son of Power as Adam was,
who had no human father. Adam’s father was the Eternal Spirit, self-named
Yahweh, who formed him from the dust. Eve seems to have understood that the
Seed of the Woman was to be somehow related to the Spirit, afterwards named
Yahweh; for when, in her inexperience, Cain, her first-born son, came into the
world, she said: “I have gotten (a
play upon his name Cain) a man eth-Yahweh” (Gen. 4:1). In the English
version, the text reads: “I have gotten a man from the Lord.” But “from” is not in the Hebrew. There it reads ish-eth Yahweh, a man the Yahweh. But was
Eve acquainted with “Yahweh” as the name of the Spirit? Abraham was not. If she
were not, the words would seem to imply that she regarded Cain as the promised
acquisition; or she may have considered that she acquired him of the Spirit,
whom Moses, in the record, styles eth-Yahweh,
in which case ish
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would be in construction, and signify man of. If she said a man of the Spirit, then she regarded Cain as begotten of the Spirit; but if she said a man the Spirit, in both cases Moses substituting Yahweh for Spirit, she regarded him as the seed of the woman promised; and still from the Spirit, rather than from Adam. Be this as it may, the event proved that he was neither “of the spirit,” or a Spirit-man, but of the flesh, in the rebelliousness thereof, and therefore earthly, sensual, and demoniac.
Abraham seems to have been taught representatively, that the son of the woman was to be in his origin a son of power, that is, of God, and not of the will of man; he was taught this representatively by the case of Isaac. Isaac was as much a Son of Power as Adam and Jesus, in relation to the flesh. Had there been no preternatural interposition of Spirit power, there would have been no Adam, Isaac, nor Jesus. Now Isaac was a type of Christ; for Moses writes that Ail-Shaddai said to Abraham, “in Isaac shall be chosen for thee a seed.” Isaac in his generation, or circumstance of his begettal; and in his figurative sacrifice and resurrection, was the representative of the Christ to his father Abraham; by which he was taught
1. That Christ the Son of Woman, was to be of preternatural
paternity; and therefore, Son of Power or God; and to descend from Isaac;
2. That he was to be killed as a
sacrifice; and
3. That he was to be raised from the dead.
These things were expressed, and implied in the
representation; so that, had the question been put to Abraham, “What thinketh thou of the Christ? Whose Son is he?” He would
have replied: “He shall be Son of God.”
But this, perhaps, may be objected to as only
inferred, and not positively declared — that Moses does not say in so many
words, that the Seed of the Woman was to be Son of God. But it may be replied,
that the doctrine of Sonship to God is
a peculiarity of the Christianity taught by Moses. What is the idea of ish eth-Yahweh but that of a Son of God,
whether we read it, “a man the Yahweh,” “a man of Yahweh,” “a man of the
Spirit,” or a “man the Spirit”? It is a man of preternatural paternity in the
estimation of the speaker. The Jews regarded Adam as the Son of God, and the
idea came to them from Moses, who gives him the paternity. See Luke 3:38.
It is truly absurd for Jews to talk of “shrinking
back and standing sternly aloof, the moment they are told that God has a
Son”! Were Moses in their midst he would
certainly be ashamed of them. If they will not hear Jesus, do they not hear Moses
deliver God’s message to Pharaoh, and say: “Thus saith Yahweh, Israel is my
Son, my first-born. And I say unto thee, Let my
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Son go that he may serve Me; and if thou refuse to let him go, behold I will slay thy son, thy first-born” (Exod. 4:22-23). Upon what principle was the Hebrew nation Yahweh’s Son? Upon precisely the same principle that the Son of Mary claimed to be Son of God — upon that of Spirit-paternity. Isaac was the father of the nation, and his begettal was miraculous. The nation descended from him was a “miraculous conception”; and Jews consider those who believe that God has a Son, and in the miraculous conception, of that Son, “should be set down as demented, and only entitled to pity, and to a cell in an asylum.” All that the Jews say against the narrative of Matthew and Luke concerning the birth of Jesus, might be turned with equal force against Moses’ account of the birth of Isaac. Matthew says, that “Mary was found with child of the Holy Spirit”; and Moses clearly shows that if the Holy Spirit had not affected Sarah, there would have been no Isaac, and consequently no Hebrew nation. The peculiarity of Isaac’s paternity is the ground of Yahweh’s claim upon Israel as His son. “When Israel was a child, I loved him, and called My son out of Egypt” (Hos. 11: 1). These are the words of Yahweh by Hosea; and though spoken of a multitude, in that multitude is included the Messiah, who federally speaking, was in the loins of Nahshon at the Exodus: and personally, came out of Egypt at Herod’s death.
David’s Expectations Of The Messiah. The idea, then of God having a son is Mosaic, and not of Nazarene origin. But we are not left to inference and implication in relation to the Christ being the Son of God. That he should be both Son of Man and Son of God “of man,” by his mother, and “of God,” by his Father — is expressly stated in 2 Sam. 7:14; 1 Chron. 17:13. En the Berith Olahm, or Covenant of the Aion, recorded there, Yahweh informed David that he should have a Seed or Descendant, who should be resurrected to sit upon the throne of the House of Israel; and that Yahweh would be his Father, and he, the Seed, should be His Son. Hence, David expected that the Son of the Woman who is to bruise the Serpent’s Head, would descend from himself, and therefore be Son of Man; but that he would be begotten in one of his female descendants by the Spirit of Yahweh, and therefore be Son of God. This was the kind of Christ expected by David; and therefore in Psalm 110 he styles him “Lord,” although His son.
The bent/i or covenant, that promised this, was ever present to the mind of David. The truth of this is apparent abundantly in the Psalms; besides that, he would constantly have before his mind, what he tells us was “all his salvation, and all his de-
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light.” He understood that the subject of this covenant was the Second Adam; for when it was delivered to him, he exclaimed: “Who am I, Yahweh Elohim; and what is my house, that Thou hast brought me thus far? And yet this was a small thing in Thine eyes, Elohim; for Thou hast spoken concerning the house of Thy servant to a far distant time; and Thou hast regarded me according to the oracle of the ascending Adam, Yahweh Elohim” (1 Chron. 17:17). And in 2 Sam. 7:19, he says of the covenant: “This is the oracle of the Adam, Yahweh Elohim.”
David’s mind then, was full of this remarkable idea, that the Son of God was to descend from his loins. No Jew can refute this proposition. They are as dumb in its presence as when Jesus silenced their fathers that they could not answer him a word. To the carnal mind the idea is no doubt absurd and incomprehensible, because it judges according to the flesh. How could the Son of God be born of a woman? This is “a great mystery,” says Paul, “God manifested in flesh”; and with all the love of mystery, and acuteness of the human mind, Jews nor Gentiles can make nothing of it apart from Moses and the prophets.
Now look at a few sentences from David’s pen, as illustrative of his views of things in connection with the Son of God, who was to descend from him. “The truth to David Yahweh swore; He will not turn from it; saying, from the fruit of thy body I will set for thee on the throne. If thy sons will keep my covenant (berith) and my testimony which I will teach them: even their sons shall sit on the throne for thee until AD adai-ad. Because Yahweh has chosen (to be) in Zion; he has desired it for a dwelling for Him. This, saith He, is My rest until AD; here will F dwell, for I have desired it. There I will make a Horn to bud forth for David. His enemies will I clothe with shame: and upon Him shall his crown flourish” (Psalm 132:11-18).
From this we learn:
1. That the Davidian Son of God is to be a King upon a throne
in Zion, where David’s sons have already reigned.
2. That the throne on which they sat is to
have existence until AD.
3. That it should continue from David’s time until AD, on
condition of his sons keeping the covenant and the testimony.
4. That the Son of God Yahweh would consequently be the Ascending
Adam, Yahweh Elohim, whom in Psalm 110 David in Spirit sees at the right hand
of power.
We may remark here that ad is a remoter period than olahm.
Ad does not arrive till olahm has
passed away. It is an indefinite series of ages beyond the thousand years of Messiah’s Aion. David’s throne is for
this period, styled in Daniel, “a season and a time.” Olahm ends where Ad begins; so that “until Ad” is to the end of
Olahm. Paul refers to this when he says, in 1 Cor. 15:24: “Then cometh the END
when he, Christ, shall have delivered up the kingdom to God even the Father .
. . . that God
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may be all things in all men” (Ta Panta en pasin). This is what obtains beyond olahm, or in Ad. When the end of Olahm touches the beginning of Ad, a change in mundane affairs again ensues. It is the epoch of the crushing of the serpent’s head, which occurs 1,000 years after his being bound. “The Son of God reigns until He (the Eternal Spirit) hath put all enemies under his feet.” This is Paul’s testimony; and that “until” is the “until Ad” of Psalm 132:12,14. When “all enemies” are destroyed, there will be no occasion for any more reigning; for to continue a reign after the last enemy is destroyed, and God is “all things in all,” would be for God to reign over Himself, which is absurd.
Now David’s throne would have continued from David’s time
until Ad, without interruption, if his sons had kept Yahweh’s covenant and
testimony; even that testimony which should be delivered to them after David
wrote — “which,” says he, “I shall teach them.” This testimony was the Gospel
of the Kingdom, which the Eternal Spirit had sent Jesus of Nazareth to proclaim
to Israel — the Spirit’s words put into the mouth of the prophet like unto
Moses, which a man can reject only at the hazard of damnation (Deut. 18:15-19).
But they despised the Covenant of Promise, and therefore the sons of David were
excluded from the throne at the Babylonish captivity; and the throne itself
abolished until the Son of God should come as “The Repairer of the Breach: the
Restorer of the paths to dwell in” (Isaiah 58:12).
But David saw that the Son of God would not be allowed by the kings of the earth and their partisans to enter peaceably upon the possession of his throne: in fact that they would do their best to prevent it. In his last words he styles them “a thornbush to be thrust away, and consumed”: and though they should fill the Son of God with iron and the shaft of a spear, he should nevertheless smite them (2 Sam. 23:5-7), and by the power of the Eternal Spirit, be established in Zion as King over the nations to the utmost bounds of the earth, as testified in the second Psalm. Will a Jew read this, and persist in denying that Yahweh has a Son? In that testimony he will find predicted a conspiracy to murder “Yahweh’s Anointed,” and so get quit of his yoke. But that it is only temporarily successful, because of the interposition of Divine Power. Yahweh laughs their impotence to scorn, and tells them that notwithstanding all efforts against it, He will set His King on Zion, after He has raised him from the dead, according to the words, “Thou art My Son, this day have I begotten thee: and I will give thee the nations for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession. Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron: thou shalt dash them to pieces as a potter’s vessel” (Psalm 2).
In two places David refers to the Mother of the Son of God.
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In his last words, he tells us “that Yahweh’s Spirit spoke by him, and that his word was upon his tongue.” He spoke then, by inspiration. The Spirit, then, afterwards, incarnate in the Son of God, says in Psalm 116:16: “Yahweh, truly I am Thy servant; I am Thy servant, the Son of Thine Handmaid; Thou hast loosed my bonds.” This deliverance is in answer to his prayer in Psalm 86:16: “0 turn unto me, and have mercy on me; give Thy strength unto Thy servant, and save the Son of Thine Handmaid. Show me a token for good; that they which hate me may see, and be ashamed; because Thou, Yahweh, hast helped me, and comforted me.” The person here styled Yahweh’s Handmaid, is the woman of Gen. 3: 15, and, as Christians believe, the Mother of Jesus, whom Elizabeth, her cousin, styled “the Mother of our Lord”; and Gabriel, “the highly favored of the Lord,” whose handmaiden she averred herself to be. “The Holy Spirit shall come upon thee,” said Gabriel, “and the power of the Highest One shall overshadow thee; therefore also, that Holy One that shall be born of thee, shall be called ‘the Son of God’.” Creative power was to be preternaturally exerted as in the formation of the first Adam and of Isaac; and therefore the product was the Son of Power, that is of God.
We see, then, from Moses and David, that Christ was the Son of Woman and the Son of Yahweh; will the Jews, who object to Jesus on the ground of what they call his illegitimacy, which if proved, would make him unholy or unclean, show us how such a Christ could be born upon any other principle than that narrated by Luke? But we must conclude for this time, with the remark for further elucidation hereafter, that that which is born of Deity is Deity, as Jesus has declared.
In previous pages, expository of Scripture revelation which the Eternal Spirit has given concerning “God,” we have shown
I. That Moses, the prophets, and Jesus all teach that the
Godhead is one AlL, or Power and that
this unity is absolute;
2. That they teach, that the ONE SELF-EXISTENT ETERNAL AlL hath
never been seen by any mortal man — that He is an undivded
and invisible unity, pre-existent before the beginning of all things,
intelligent and material;
3. That they teach, that He dwells in
unapproachable light;
4. That they teach, that SPIRIT emanates from His substance;
and the SPACE, which is unbounded, or infinite, is filled with this SPIRIT —
Spirit which is seen in the lightning; and heard in the thunder, “the voice of
God”;
5. That they teach, that all created things are ex ou out of
this Spirit, and by it; and therefore
out of and by the Eternal Power; who
is consequently “the Father” of whatever exists;
6. That they teach, that ‘there be Gods many and Lords many,”
which are called Elohim, Shaddai, Adonai,
and so forth; and that
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these are created intelligences corporeal manifestations of the Spirit of the light-inhabiting ETERNAL INCREATE;
7. That they teach expressly or by implication, that these
created deities have all been originally subject to evil even as we; and that
they have become Immortal Gods after the moral and physical type exhibited in
the biography of Jesus of Nazareth;
8. That they teach, that all immortals are “the sons of God” — of Him who only hath immortality as an
essential quality of His self-existing and uncreated substance;
9. That they teach, that in seeing God, men saw embodiments of
the Spirit of the Eternal Increate, not the Eternal Himself, “whom no man can
see and live”; and that these embodiments are Sons of Power, i.e., of Deity;
10. That they all teach, that the doctrine concerning God reveals the multitudinous manifestations of the ONE
ETERNAL IN-CREATE by His Spirit; which
is styled “the Manifestation of the Sons of Deity”;
11. We have shown, that these Sons of Power (“sown in weakness,
raised in power”) in the aggregate constitute THE NAME OF YAHWEH — a Name of
Multitude; a myriad- manifestation of
THE SPIRIT OF THE INVISIBLE GOD — THE ONE I SHALL
BE: “God
manifested in flesh”; which is a grand mystery, but apostolically revealed;
12. We have shown, that Sonship to the
Eternal One is an Old Testament element of this great mystery; and that an
individual son was as necessary to the development of the “Many Sons,” as an
Isaac was to “Israelites indeed”; we
through Jesus.”
These things having been demonstrated: much rubbish
has been cleared away. Trinitarianism and Unitarianism have both received a
quietus. There are not three Gods in the Godhead; nor are there but three in
manifestation; nevertheless, the Father is God and Jesus is God; and we may
add, so are all the brethren of Jesus gods; and “a multitude which no man can
number.” The Godhead is the homogeneous fountain of the Deity; these other gods
are the many streams which form this fountain flow. The springhead of Deity is
one, not many; the streams as numerous as the orbs of the universe, in which a
manifestation of Deity may have hitherto occurred.
Belief The Basis of God-Manifestation “God,” said Jesus “is spirit “ —. pneuina ho Theos. Heathen Greek writers, •whether poets or orators, generally meant by Theoi, the plural of Theos, nothing more than supernatural beings of a higher order than men.* The word, in itself, had attached to it none of those more metaphysical conceptions which belong to our term Divine as
· In quotations from the Old Testament, Elohim (plural) is rendered by the Greek word Theos (singular). The reason for this we have discussed in the Index to the Name and Titles of Deity. (Publishers).
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significant of the uncreated and eternal. The great teacher, Jesus of Nazareth, did not use the word Theos at all, inasmuch as he discoursed not in Greek. The probability is that he used the word All; and that John, who wrote in Greek, selected Theos in the singular number, and appropriated it to a Hebrew signification, which the teaching of Jesus would explain. “There shall not be there other Elohim before Me.” This was said by Yahweh to Israel. When Jesus, therefore, spoke about God in relation to bowing down, and serving or worshipping Him, he had doubtless referred to Ail-Shaddai, who afterwards named himself Yahweh, commonly pronounced Jehovah. “Theos is Spirit,” then, is equivalent to saying AlL or Yahweh is Spirit. But the proposition of Jesus is not limited to individual unity; its scope is multitudinous. Spirit is Theos; that is, whatever is Spirit is Theos — is of a higher nature than that of mortal men. Hence he declared to Nicodemus, “that which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit.” Here are two natures —the Man-nature and the God-nature. We all know by experience what flesh is. It is a wind that passeth away. It is vanity and “profiteth nothing.” We do not, however, know experimentally what the God-nature is : all we can at present know is what is testified concerning it in the teaching and experience of Jesus and the word. He was flesh, having been born of the flesh, though not by the will of man; and he is now Spirit, having been born of the Spirit from the grave to incorruption. Jesus then is Spirit. Paul styles him “a life-imparting Spirit,” and “the Lord the Spirit.” Being Spirit, he is therefore Theos or God. He is now no longer flesh and blood; but HOLY SPIRIT NATURE a flesh and bones embodiment of Spirit; and therefore of the One Yahweh.
Jesus is the type, or pattern, in whom is illustrated the plural manifestation of divine and multitudinous unity — ONE in many, and yet that many ONE, as symbolized in the Mosaic Sh’ma Yisraail. This idea was the basis of the doctrine, which Jesus said was not his, but the teaching of Him that sent him — that is, of the Eternal Spirit or Father. “My doctrine is not mine,” says he, “but His that sent me. If any man will do His will, he shall know of the teaching whether it be of God, or whether I speak of myself” (John 7: 16, 17). His doctrine consisted of “the words” which Moses predicted in Deut. 18:18, the Eternal Spirit, Yahweh, would put into his mouth; and to which, if anyone will not hearken, “he shall be destroyed from among the people” (Acts 3 :23). We hope all who contend for the sufficiency of the faith of the demonized in the divine Sonship of Jesus will defer to this. We repeat, for the illumination of such speculators in Old Man theology:
That justification unto life and glory in the kingdom of God,
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is predicated upon three things:—
I. Upon believing the testimony
concerning Jesus Christ;
2. Upon receiving the doctrine of the
Eternal Spirit he delivered to the world; and
3. Upon one so believing, yielding an
assured and affectionate obedience to the precepts he enjoins.
“Thou hast,” said Peter to him, “the words of
eternal life; and we believe and are sure that thou art the Christ, the Son of
the living God” (John 6:68). In this Peter connects the words and the personality of
Jesus as the subject-matter of faith. This is to “believe on Jesus” — to accept him according to his claims; and to
receive his words as reported by them whom he commissioned to preach them. And
“this is the work (ordained) of God, that ye believe into him whom, (eis hon),
He hath apostatized,” or sent forth. “As my Father hath taught me,”
continues Jesus, “I speak these things”; and “if ye continue in my word ye are
my disciples indeed; and ye shall know the truth which / have heard of God, and ‘the truth’ shall make you free”
(John 8:28, 31, 32, 40). Hear also what he said on another occasion, in regard
to this matter. “He that believeth on me, believeth not on me, but on Him that
sent me”; which is equivalent to saying he
believes the doctrine I am sent to teach — doctrine which originates not
from me as Son of Mary; but from the Eternal Spirit who sent me, and, by His
effluence, dwells in me, speaking through me, and working by me. Therefore, he
said, “If any man hear my words, and believe
not (those words), I (the son of Mary) judge him not.” Who shall judge him
then? God, certainly; and because God’s doctrine is not believed; for says
Jesus, “He that rejecteth me, ‘and’ receiveth
not my words, hath that which judgeth him; ‘the word which I speak,’ that
shall judge him in the last day. For I have not spoken of myself; but the
Father who sent me. He gave me a commandment what I should make known and what
I should treat of” (John 12:48-49). Nothing can be plainer, more intelligible,
or emphatic than this. We may confess that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God,
as did the demonized of ancient and, still do, of modern times, but this will
give us no right to the things comprised in “the great salvation”; we must not
only believe this, but we must also intelligently believe the doctrine which
that Son was sent to teach the Jews. If we are ignorant or ashamed of this, we
shall be condemned, though we may make the loudest professions of faith in, and
of love and devotion to, Jesus. What can be more to the point than these
sayings of Christ — “If a man love me, he
will keep my words; he that loveth me not, keepeth not my sayings; and the word ye hear, is not mine, but the
Father’s who sent me” (John 14:23-24). A man cannot keep the words of another
if he be ignorant of those words, neither can he believe them : hence, no one
scrip-
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turally loves Jesus who is ignorant or faithless of his teaching. A man ignorant of the truth taught by Jesus, though ever so sincere in his belief of error, is in his sins, and under sentence of death; for it is only that truth believed and obeyed that frees from sin and its consequences. “Sanctify them through thy truth, 0 Father; thy word is truth” (John 17: 17). This is the sanctifying element of Christianity: and that truth is the word of the kingdom hearkened to and understood by the honest and the good of heart (Matt. 12:19, 23; Luke 8:15). But they who, in the face of these plain statements of Jesus persist in averring that a man is justified, and becomes one of the saints of God, and obtains a right to the life, honour, glory, power and riches of the kingdom, by acknowledging the paternity of Jesus, while he is ignorant of the doctrine he received from the Father, and delivered to the apostles, are neither honest nor good of heart, in the Scripture sense of the expression. They are the Ecclesiastical Know -Nothings, of whom Paul writes in 1 Tim. 6:3, 4, saying: “if any man teach otherwise, and consent not to wholesome words, ‘the words of our Lord Jesus Christ’, and to the teaching which is according to godliness, he is smoky, knowing nothing — destitute of the truth,” and so forth. This is the condition of the clergy, ministers and scribes of universal “Christendom,” as it is called; and of the leaders of the people whom they cause to err. The wholesome words of the Lord Jesus are ignored by them all; for if they do not in so many words declare that he lied, they, practically convert his teaching into falsehood by their abominable traditions. He declared, that if a man did not believe the gospel of the kingdom he and his apostles preached, that man should be condemned; but they in word or deed say: “No; a man may be saved though totally ignorant of the whole matter.” For what else is the language of the religion-gettings and “consolations of religion” ministered by the clergy to their ignorant dupes on every side? They make void the doctrine of Jesus by their traditions and practice, and speak evil of the truth they pretend to preach. And it is but pretension; for of that truth they are obstinately ignorant in all its details, knowing neither the Father, nor Jesus Christ whom He has sent; and treating with contempt or indifference and neglect the words he delivered, if by any chance or accident any of them happen to come before them. But of such the Lord bath said: “Whosoever shall be ashamed of me ‘and of my words’, of him shalt the Son of Man be ashamed when he shall come in his own glory, and in the Father’s, and of the holy angels” (Luke 9:26).
The Anointed Cherub. But to return from this digression penned for the especial benefit of those who pay but little regard
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to the doctrine taught by the prophet like unto Moses; who are willing to honour Jesus with empty words of piety and love, but are positively averse from being troubled with his hard and inconvenient instructions; we proceed to remark that in the words of eternal life which he delivered, he declared the principle that “the flesh profits nothing.” When, therefore, he said, “He that seeth me, seeth Him that sent me”; and elsewhere, “He that hath seen me hath seen the Father,” he excludes the idea, that the Flesh born of Mary’s substance was the Father. This was not the Father, but simple* fleshy for “that which is born of the flesh,” said he, “is flesh.”
He that seeth the Spirit, then seeth the Father; for it was the Spirit that uttered the words through Jesus, as clearly appears from his saying: “The words that 1 speak unto you I speak not of myself; but the Father that dwelleth in me, He performs the works,” or miracles. The Flesh, or Mary’s Son, was the earthen vessel, the Cherub, hidden as a polished arrow in the quiver, or shadow of the power of the Eternal Spirit; in other words: “The Spirit of Yahweh rested upon him” after his anointing. He was filled with the Effluence* * of the Eternal Substance, and covered with it as with a halo of power, so that he was hidden, covered, or protected from the machinations of evil doers, and from evil influences, which could not harm him until the protecting effluence was withdrawn. This resting upon, indwelling and covering, was the sealing and anointing of the Father, foretold in Dan. 9:24 — “Sealing the vision and prophet, and anointing the Holy One of the holy ones.” And John the Baptist bears record of this saying: “I saw the Spirit descending from heaven like a dove, and it abode (or rested) upon him.” The Spirit Dove was the seal or mark of the Father; the form or shape assumed by the Divine Effluence in the anointing of Jesus. John saw this Spirit Dove, and so did all the surrounding multitude; for Jesus said to them: “Have ye not at any time heard the Father’s voice, or have ye not seen His form? Or have ye not his declaration abiding in you; that him whom he hath sent, to this one ye should not give credit”? In these inquiries, he referred to what was well-known to all who attended John’s proclamation. The Father’s symbol was the Dove, and “the voice,” the declaration, “This is my beloved Son, in whom 1 am well pleased,” They had seen and heard this, the sealing and acknowledging the prophet — the Father bearing witness to the Son — yet did they not give credit to the doctrine he set forth.
· We think this must have been a misprint from the original copy, and that it should appear as sinful flesh (Publishers).
* * By effluence we mean that which flows from, or out of the substance of the Eternal Father. We use it in the sense of the phrase Spirit of. (Dr. Thomas).
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This sealing and anointing of the Cherub, was the subject of the following testimonies. “And the Spirit of Yahweh shall rest upon him, the Spirit of wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of the reverence of Yahweh, and shall make him of quick understanding in the reverence of Yahweh; and he shall not judge after the sight of his eyes, neither reprove after the hearing of his ears, but with righteousness shall he judge the poor, and contend with equity for the meek of the earth; and he shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his lips shall he slay the wicked. And righteousness shall be the girdle of his loins, and faithfulness the girdle of his reins” (Isa. 11:2-5). But this was only partially accomplished at the epoch of the anointing. The judging of the poor, the contending with equity, the smiting of the earth, or nations, and the slaying of the wicked, are events hereafter to be developed in the day of the power of the Son of Man. The testimonies of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, abundantly illustrate the former, or inceptive part of Isaiah’s prophecy which, in its fulfillment, became the earnest of the certain and literal accomplishment of the rest.
In Isaiah 49:2, the effect of the anointing is thus foretold: “Yahweh bath chosen me from the womb; from the bowels of my mother (Mary) hath He made mention of my name (by Gabriel). And He hath made my mouth like a sharp sword; in the shadow of His hand (or power) hath He hid me, and made me a polished shaft; in His quiver hath He hid me; and said unto me, thou art My servant, 0 Israel, in whom 1 will be glorified.” Here the Cherub of the Spirit bears the name of his ancestor Jacob, whose name was changed to Israel, which signifies “Prince of Power,” i.e., of God, in our vernacular. His mouth was truly like a sharp sword, for it cut deeply into the hearts of the self-righteous hypocrites of his day, who gnashed upon him with malice and dislike. When he opened his mouth to speak, the “word of power” uttered wisdom, counsel and knowledge; and of this word, Paul says in Heb. 4: 12, “It is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.” In Eph. 6: 17, he exhorts the saints to take it as the weapon of their warfare against all crotchets and imaginations that exalt themselves against “the knowledge of God” — the knowledge revealed by Him. “Take,” says he, “the Sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God”; and with this “stand against the devil’s wiles” (verse 11).
But the Cherub of the Eternal Spirit in the days of his flesh and blood did not wholly fill up the idea presented in the phrase “made my mouth as a sharp sword.” In his future manifestation,
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he is represented in the Book of Symbols as having “a sharp two-edged sword issuing forth from his mouth.” We refer to Apoc.16, and 19: 15. In the latter place, the use he is to make of the sword is stated in these words: “that with it he should smite the nations.” The interpretation is, that at his approaching advent, he will assume the position indicated in the chapter in relation to his associate Cherubim, on the one hand, and the hostile nations on the other. Being the Commander-in-Chief, or “Captain of Salvation,” the Word of Power goes forth from his mouth. He commands that the nations he smitten, and his orders are obeyed; and though they make great resistance, they are finally overcome by the energy whereby he is able to subdue to himself (Phil. 3:21).
When we contemplate the Cherub before his sealing and anointing, we see only the Son of Mary — “the Seed of the Woman,” in the words of Moses; and Son of God, in the same sense that Adam was. The New Testament writers give us very little information concerning Jesus during thirty years of his sojourn in the covenanted land. All we learn concerning him after his return from Egypt is, that he dwelt in Nazareth, and was subject to Mary and Joseph; and worked at the trade of his mother’s husband. He knew his real paternity was not of Joseph; he never went to school; yet was he wiser than those who assumed to be his teachers, being filled with wisdom, the grace of God being upon him; and was the beloved of all who knew him (Matt. 1:23; Luke 2:40, 46-52; Mark 6:3; John 8:15; Psalm 119:97-104). He was clearly in an intellectual and moral condition parallel with Adam’s before he transgressed. The “grace of God” was upon Adam, and imparted to him much wisdom and knowledge; but still left him free to obey the impulses of his flesh if he preferred it, rather than the Divine Law. This was the case also with Jesus, who, in his discourses, always maintained the distinction between what he called “,mine own self,” and ‘the Father Himself,” who dwelt in him by His effluence. “The Son,” said he, “can do nothing of himself”; and this he repeated in the same discourse, saying, “T can of mine own self do nothing.” He refers all the doctrine taught, and all the miracles performed to the Father, whose effluence rested upon and filled him, if this be remembered, it will make the “hard sayings” of his teaching easy to be understood.
Thus, in John 6:38, Jesus says: “1 came down from heaven”; “1 am the bread that came down from heaven — the bread of life; if any man shall eat of this bread, he shall live in the Aion, and the bread that I will give is my flesh.” These sayings caused the Jews who heard them to inquire: How can this man have come down from heaven whose father and mother we know? And, how can he give us his flesh to eat? These inquiries were
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prompted by their rule of interpretation, which has been the rule of their posterity through all ages to this day. They interpreted the discourses of Jesus by the principles of the flesh. “Ye cannot tell whence I come,” said Jesus, “and whither I go. Ye judge after the flesh.” They only conceived of the flesh born of Mary coming down from heaven, and of their eating that flesh as they would eat meat. They did not recognize the voice of the Father in the words that came from the mouth of Jesus. If they had, they would have understood that it was the Spirit that had come down, and was to “ascend where he was before”; that the Spirit claimed the Cherub born of Mary as “His flesh,” because it was prepared for Him (Psalm 40:6; Heb. 10:5); and that he gave this flesh, which he calls “my flesh,” for the life of the world; which flesh Paul says, “through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without fault to God.” Judging according to the principles of flesh-thinking, they did not understand that it was an intellectual eating and drinking of the Spirit-and-life words, or teaching, that came down from heaven concerning the Christ and him crucified. “Thy words were found, and I did eat them,” says Jeremiah (Ch. 15:16); but the contemporaries of Jesus had almost as little taste for such eating as ours. When a man marks, reads, and inwardly digests the subject-matter of the Father’s doctrine, he eats and drinks it, and is “taught of God,” (John 6:45), as all must be who would be saved. That doctrine sets forth the things of the kingdom of God, and the things concerning Jesus Anointed, among which is the sanctifying of those who believe the promises covenanted, through the offering of the body of Jesus once. They who understand the doctrine of the Father and believe it unto obedience, eat the flesh and drink the blood of the Son of Man; for, saith he, “He that eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me, and / in him” (John 6:56). This in-dwelling is by faith of the words which are spirit and life, as appears from Paul’s exhortation to us, saying: “Let Christ dwell in your hearts by faith” (Eph. 3:17). When the words or doctrine, of the Eternal Spirit concerning the kingdom and name are the subject matter of our faith, we dwell in Christ and Christ dwells in us. The Jews did not see into this, because they judged after the flesh, which, in this great matter of God and salvation, is altogether ignored as unprofitable. “It is the Spirit that quickeneth:
the flesh profits nothing; the words that I speak unto you are spirit and life” (John 6:63); therefore, if these words dwell in us, “Spirit and life” dwell in us, otherwise not.
We must judge then, after the Spirit, for “the deep things of God,” which are “the things of the Spirit of God are spiritually discerned.” There is a sense then, attached to the spirit-and-life words of Jesus enunciated by him, in preaching the gospel of the
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kingdom, which the natural man, judging after the flesh, cannot receive. It is evident that the son of Mary, the body laid in the sepulchre, was never in heaven till his ascent thither after his resurrection: how then, says the man who thinks only after the flesh, can “the Son of Man ascend* where he was before”? This is as incomprehensible to him as the eating of the flesh and the drinking of the blood of a slain man imparting life to the eater; and he exclaims with Nicodemus: “How can these things be”?
To this question, the answer, in principle, is, that “that which has been born ek, of, from, or out of, spirit, is spirit”; and as “God is Spirit,” is therefore Deity. “The Spirit breathes where he pleases, and thou, Nicodemus, hearest his voice; but thou perceivest not how he is come, and in what he goes away; thus is everyone who has been born of the Spirit.” Nicodemus and his contemporaries heard the voice of the Spirit, breathed forth in the words of spirit and life, uttered by Mary’s Son, who they knew was a teacher come from God . But they did not perceive that this teacher was the Eternal Spirit, nor did they comprehend how he came. Judging by flesh-appearances, they only saw Mary’s son, as they saw Isaiah or one of the prophets, as teachers from God. They did not perceive that Jesus was “a body prepared” by special Spirit-creation, the Cherub upon which the effluent power of the Eternal Substance rested; and that upon him, and through him, he walked through the country breathing forth his voice in the doctrine taught, and his power in the miracles performed: not perceiving this, still less did they comprehend that the Effluent Power would so thoroughly change the constitution of the “Body Prepared,” that it should be no longer corruptible flesh perpetuated in life by blood and air, but should be transformed into spirit-flesh and spirit-bones, constituting a Spirit-Body — a material, corporeal substance — essentially incorruptible, glorious, powerful, deathless, and quickening; and that in this, as corporealized spirit, the Effluent Power that had “come down from heaven” — from the abode of the Eternal Substance, “which no man can approach unto” would “ascend where he was before.” They did not see into this any more than our Trinitarian, Arian, or Sabellian contemporaries do. These accept symbols created by the controversies of past ages, but can explain nothing, having no scriptural understanding of the “heavenly things.” The Son of Man born out of the flesh was flesh — mortal blood and flesh, but he is no longer so. The same Son of Man has been transformed into incorruptible spirit-substance, and is therefore spirit; and as spirit (not as flesh) is “where he was before.” He is “Yahweh the Spirit,” the fleshly element being an accretion to
· See Appendix.
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the Effluent Power, which does not change the constitution of the Spirit, but is spiritualized thereby.
Between the two living manifestations, was interposed the death-state. In this state, the Cherubic Flesh was deserted by the Eternal Substance. The effluent spirit forsook Jesus when he exclaimed upon the cross, “My AlL, my AlL, why hast Thou forsaken me?” The effluent power by which he had taught and worked was withdrawn from him for some time before he died. The Spirit no longer rested upon the Cherub, yet that Cherub continued to live as other men. in process of time he expired. He was now, like the Cherubic Veil of the Temple, “rent in twain.” It was no longer affirmable that “1 and the Father are one”; but that “I and the Father are twain”; for the Father was no longer in him, nor he in the Father. In the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea, the body was in the condition predicted in Psalm 38: “Yahweh’s arrows stuck fast in it, and His hand pressed it sore. There was no soundness in the flesh; its wounds stank; and its loins were filled with a loathsome disease; feeble and sore broken, his lovers and friends stood aloof from His stroke, which had consumed him, and laid him low in a horrible pit.” This was the death state of the Cherub. Will any one affirm that that dead body was the Father? That it had lived in the world before the world was? That it was the Creator of all things? Nay, it was the flesh only in which sin was condemned and had it been left there, it would have crumbled into unprofitable dust (Psalm 30:9).
But, in the wisdom of the Eternal Substance, this could not he permitted. This flesh must he born again, and its ears must he opened (Psalm 40:6; Heb. 10:5). The Eternal sent forth His spirit, and “healed his soul” of that “evil disease,” which his enemies said, “cleaved fast unto him, that lying down, he should rise up no more” (Psalm 41:4, 8). But the Eternal Power defeated their machinations, and proved them to be liars; for He turned the body into Spirit, and made it “one in nature” with Himself — the Spirit-Son of the Eternal Spirit, equal in power and glory — GOD.
In this Holy Spirit Nature, the effluence of the Eternal went away. “In what he goes away, Nicodemus, thou dost not perceive.” He did not comprehend that the emanation of the Father’s substance, converged and focalized, and rendered visible in the Spirit-Dove — that the Spirit which had thus come, would go away corporealized in a body born from the grave, to the place in which he was before, and there rejoice in the glory possessed before the world was.
These things being understood, it is not difficult to understand the import of the sentence; “thus is every one that has been born of the Spirit.” He is first in the flesh, subject to disease and
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death. This, however, is to be superseded; and those who are “taught of God,” and by that teaching are enlightened by the spirit-and-life words of the truth, which brings them to “the obedience of faith,” are transformed or “fashioned like unto the body of His glory.” This occurs at the epoch of the resurrection, termed by Paul, “the redemption of the body” — the One Body —“the manifestation of the Sons of God,” who all become “like him” in body, as they have been in faith and practice — Spirit, because born of the Spirit, and therefore God, because, “Spirit is God.”
Well may the apostle exhort believers to “walk worthy of God, who has called them to His kingdom and glory.” It is indeed “a high calling,” and a great manifestation of divine love, bestowed upon men by the Father, that He should invite them to become His sons, and when manifested in the divine nature, be in them “all things for all.” When we contemplate such a destiny, that we are to be elements of the Spirit-glory, the Cherubic manifestation of the Eternal Spirit, which is to fill the earth as waters cover the sea, we ought, indeed, to “purify ourselves, even as He is pure,” and to live superior to the mean and petty considerations of time and sense. “Walk worthy of God” — worthy of a position in which we shall be isangeloi, equal to the angels, “the sons of God being the children of the resurrection.” But here we must leave the matter for the present. We shall now resume the consideration of the Cherubic manifestation of the Spirit.
Yahweh Manifested In Cherubim :The subject of this section. in relation to the Old and New Testament revelation of “God,” is the Effluent Manifestation of the Eternal Father in the Cherubim.
‘The first place where “Cherubim” occurs, is in Gen. 3:24, which we translate thus: “And He caused to dwell at the east of the Garden of Eden the Cherubim, and the flame of destruction (lit, of the sword) turning itself to guard the way of the tree of the lives.” From this and the context, we learn, that the dwelling place of the Cherubim was eastward in Paradise and contiguous to the tree of lives, to which none could approach who were unfaithful and disobedient. This is the teaching of Moses, who though acquainted with the Egyptian dogma of “immortal souls” in the mortal bodies of all men, women, and babes, taught there was no immortality for faithless and wicked men. In this, Moses and all the prophets, Jesus and the apostles, are all agreed. Men must become Cherubim, they must dwell in Paradise and there eat of the tree of life, as the condition of an interminable existence. All others are obnoxious to “the flame of destruction.” styled by Daniel “a fiery stream that issues and comes forth from
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before the Ancient of Days; in whose presence minister thousand thousands, and ten thousand times ten thousand stand.” In this, Daniel exhibits the allegorical signification of the Mosaic narrative respecting the devouring flame. It issues and comes forth from before the Ancient of Days and his thousands, at which time, Daniel testifies, “the judgment sits, and the books are opened.” The Eden Cherubim, and Daniel’s Ancient of Days and company, are doubtless allegorical, the former of the latter; for Moses wrote not only of the literal, but of that in such a way that he intended something else than is contained in the words literally taken, His writings are therefore both literal and allegorical; and to understand them in their allegorical sense we must pay strict attention to their literal significance, which is “the form of the knowledge and the truth.” The literal narrative is “the form”; the “knowledge and the truth” the allegorical signification of that form.
Daniel’s Ancient of Days and the ten thousands that surround him in judgment, are equivalent to “the holy messengers and the Lamb,” in Rev. 14: 10, where we find fire and brimstone before them tormenting their enemies — the full allegorical development of the Eden Cherubic flame that guarded against all approach to the “tree of lives” by the unfaithful and disobedient. “Whosoever was not found written in the Book of Life, was cast into the lake of fire burning with brimstone” (Rev. 19:20).
The etymology of the word “Cherubim” is said by Gesenius to be obscure; and he suggests what he calls “a new derivation.” He says “if the word be of Semitic origin, perhaps we may take the root charav as having a meaning like kharam “to prohibit from a common use.” Hence, to consecrate, etc. “So that ‘cherub’, would be keeper, warden, guard, that is, of the Deity, to guard against all approach.” Hyde, in his Religion of the Ancient Persians, page 263, supposes that “‘cherub’ may be the same as Kerub, the first letter being koph, instead of caph, and signifying one near to God. His minister — one admitted to His presence.” Both these derivations are in accordance with the truth concerning the Cherubim — nevertheless, not satisfactory to our mind. We believe that the word is derived from the root rachav, “to ride” whether on an animal or in a vehicle, By transposing the first two letters and heemantively inserting way before the last, we have “cherub” or that which is ridden — in the plural. “cherubim.” This convertibility of the verb rachav into the noun “cherub” is illustrated in Psalms 18:10, thus:
WY-YIRCHAV CHERUB-AL WI-YOPH
And-he-rode upon-a-cherub and flew
In Psalm 104:3, the clouds are styled Yahweh’s r’ chuv or chariot, which is “ch’rub,” with the first two letters transposed.
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The “Cherubim,” then, constitute a vehicle, in and upon which the Eternal Power self-styled “Ehyeh” or “Yahweh,” otherwise “Jehovah,” rides as in a chariot. Hence, David, in speaking of them in I Chron. 28: 18, terms them ham-merchavah hak-cheruvim,” “the chariot of the Cherubim” which, he says, “spread out and covered the ark of covenant of Yahweh.” The Spirit is the rider, and the Cherubim the “clouds,” the “horses,” the “chariots,” the “living creatures,” the “wheels,” the “great waters,” the “winged host,” upon which He rides. Hence, of the Eternal Spirit it is said: “Behold, He cometh with clouds” — the clouds of His witnesses, of whom the present evil aion, or course of things, is not worthy (Rev. 1:7; Heb. 12:1; 1 Thess. 4:17); and again: “Was Thy wrath against the sea that Thou didst ride upon Thine horses, Thy chariots of salvation? Thou didst march through the sea with Thine horses, through the heap of great waters” (Hab. 3:8, 15); also, “Whither the Spirit was to go the living creatures went . . . . and they ran and returned as the appearance of a flash of lightning. And the noise of their wings was like the noise of great waters, as the voice of the Almighty, as the noise of a host” (Ezek. 1:12, 14, 24; Rev. 1:15; 19:14). In this last citation, wings, great waters, Almighty, and host, all refer to the same company — a multitudinous embodiment of the Effluence of the Eternal Father, who soars on these wings of the Spirit. Wy-yaide-al chanphai ruach (Ps. 18: 10).
But the Eternal Spirit not only “rides upon,” “soars upon,” and “flies upon,” but the Father by that Spirit also “inhabits the Cherubim.” David, in Psalm 80, and Hezekiah in Isaiah 37:16, say in their address to Yahweh, “0 Yahweh of Hosts, Elohim of Israel, inhabiting the Cherubim, shine forth, Thou, He, the Mighty Ones (athtah-hu ha-Elohim). Thou alone of all the kingdoms of the earth; Thou didst make the heavens and the earth.” In this passage is a remarkable combination of titles and pronouns in the singular and plural numbers. Yahweh or Jehovah is singular; Elohim, plural; athta-hu, two pronouns in the singular joined to hah-Elohim in the plural: athtah signifies thou, and hu, he in the third person, which in the original text are connected by a hyphen, thus Thou-He. The common version has it “thou art he” in many places, but in the text before us they have omitted the “he” altogether, and instead of the literal rendering, “Thou-He, the Mighty Ones,” they have substituted what was not written, namely, “Thou art the God.”
The words of Hezekiah literally translated into English are: “0 who shall-be hosts, Mighty Ones of Israel, inhabiting ,the cherubs, Thou-He, the Mighty Ones, Thou alone of all the kingdoms of the earth: Thou didst make the heavens and the earth.’ This affirms that the Eternal Spirit is the sole creator of all that
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exists. He is one, and that unity is expressed by the singular verbal noun, Yahweh, “He who Shall-be,” and the pronouns, athtah, “thou,” and 1w, “he.” The Eternal Spirit (Heb. 9:14) as Creator, is necessarily before all things, and is, therefore, the Theos,” and the Logos” of John 1: 3, where it is testified that “all things were made on account of Him; and without Him was made not one thing which exists.” This same Eternal Spirit was affluently in Noah, in Moses, in David, and all the prophets, in Jesus and the apostles. One Spirit in these many persons. In the Mosaic system the Effluence of the Eternal Power was represented by “an oil of holy ointment,” or “a holy anointing oil” an unction that was not to be commonly used upon pain of death (Exod. 30:25; 1 John 2:20, 27). It was compounded of myrrh, sweet cinnamon, sweet calamus, casia, and olive oil, after the art of the perfumer. The tabernacle with all it contained, with the altar of burnt offering and all its vessels, the layer and its foot, were all anointed with it, and thereby became most holy, so that whatsoever touched them became holy. Aaron and his sons were also consecrated with it when “the diadem of the anointing oil of his Elohim” was said to he “Upon him” (Lev. 21: 12). The holy anointing oil was not to he used apart from these, for “upon man’s flesh,” saith the Law, “it shall not be poured.”
The Cherubim were anointed with the most holy unction, by which also they became most holy. It was one holy anointing oil for many things, which in and of themselves differed nothing from that which was common. This principle of “One in Many” is thus foreshadowed in the law and the prophets One Eternal Spirit-Power which “shall he” in the “mighty ones of Israel” as it was and is in Jesus of Nazareth “Thou,” Eternal and Anointing Spirit, art “He” in “the Mighty Ones of Israel,” the ‘Theos and the Logos creator of the heavens and the earth.”
The “Holy Anointing Spirit-Oil,” is styled by Peter in I Peter 11, “the Spirit of Christ which was in the prophets”; because “Christ” signifies “Anointed,” and the Spirit that was poured out upon Jesus and constituted him anointed also, anointed them; hence it was said of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. “touch not Mine anointed, and do My prophets no harm” (I Chron. 16:22). Speaking of the same Spirit, Nehemiah says: “Thou gayest Israel thy good Spirit to instruct them; and many years didst thou forbear them, and testifiedst against them by thy Spirit in thy prophets; yet would they not give ear: therefore gayest thou them into the power of the peoples of the lands” as at this day (Neh. 9:20, 30).
By this Spirit-Effluence the Eternal Power inhabits the Cherubim. The common version makes David and Hezekiah say that Yahweh “dwells between the Cherubim.” But the preposition
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“between” is not in the original text. The words there are these: yoshaiv hak-cheruvirn, “inhabiting the Cherubim.” Hence, whatever the cherubs may prove to be, the Eternal Spirit, self-styled Yahweh, dwells in them. Thus Yahweh will dwell (in the holy land) for ever. The chariots of mighty ones (are) two ten thousands, thousands of glorified ones. The Adonai among them in Sinai, the holy. “Thou hast ascended on high; thou hast led captive captivity; thou hast received gifts for ‘the Man’; yea, even for ‘Yah’ Elohim to inhabit rebellious ones” (Psalm 68:16,18). This testifies the future presence of Yahweh or Yah-Elohim, as Adonai or Lords in the holy mount, in the midst of thousands of mighty and glorified ones, as in the days of Moses. These are the chariots of the Spirit — the Intelligences prefigured in the Cherubs. It testifies also that the Lord “from all eternity” (the Father) and the lords “for all eternity” (the Man), having as “Yah,” the Spirit, first, necessarily, descended, afterwards, as the Man ascended on high; that, in ascending, the “Yah-Adam” led captive Death, which made a captive of him, as it does of all mankind, and therefore, styled “captivity”; and that then “as the Man,” styled by Paul, who spoke the same things as David, “the last Adam,” and “the Second Man,” he received gifts — “spirits” or spiritual gifts; to the end that “Yah”-Elohim — the Spirit of the Mighty Ones “might dwell in the rebellious”; that is, in Gentiles, “by nature sinners,” hut enlightened by the Gospel of the kingdom, and subjected to “the obedience of faith.”
To such, that is, to once rebellious, but now obedient men and women, Paul, speaking of this indwelling, says that “the One Father-Power has decreed the subjection of all things to the last Adam, except Himself; and that when this subjugation is perfected, the Adam shall himself be ranked under the Eternal Power who subdues all things to the Adam that Theos, the Eternal Father, may be “all things in all men.” This is Moses and David’s teaching of One in Many the effluence of the Eternal inhabiting men, and being “over all, and through all, and with all of them”; as it is also written: “T will dwell in them, and walk in them, and will be a father unto them, and they shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty”: and again, “He that sitteth upon the throne shall dwell among them” (1 Cor. 15:27; 2 Cor. 6:16, 18; Eph. 4:6; Rev. 7:15; 21:3).
Here then are the Old and New Testament writers all teaching one and the same doctrine concerning the terrestrial manifestation of the Eternal Power — one central power over, through, and with many persons by its effluence, each person being eternal power incarnate, and these in their glorified aggregate represented by the Cherubim; the cherub-chariots of the Spirit.
Now that a cherub is representative of an exalted Power is
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evident from Adonai-Yahweh’s address to the Tyrian Royalty, in Ezek. 28:12-19; as:
12. “Thus
said Adonai-Yahweh:— As a signet of curious engraving;
Full of wisdom and perfect
in splendour art thou.
13. Thou
hast been in Eden, the garden of Elohim.
Every precious stone thy
covering;
The ruby, the topaz, and the
diamond,
The beryl, the onyx, and the
jasper,
The sapphire, the emerald,
and the carbuncle.
And the workmanship of thy tabrets and
thy pipes was of gold in thee:
In the day of thy being
created they were prepared.
14. Thou ‘Anointed Cherub’,
even 1 constitute thee a protector; On the holy mountain of the Elohim: thou
hast been;
In sparkling gems, thou
didst walk to and fro.
15. Thou host been upright
in thy dealings from the day of thy being created, until iniquity hath been
found in thee.
16. Through
the greatness of thy traffic they have filled thy midst (with) extortion;
And thou hast sinned; therefore, I will break thee out of the
mountain of Elohim.
And 1 will destroy thee, 0
protecting cherub, from amidst the sparkling gems.
17. Thine
heart was lifted up because of thy splendour:
Thou hast corrupted thy
wisdom because of thy brilliancy:
1 will prostrate thee upon
the earth.
1 will lay thee before kings
to rejoice over thee.
18. From
the greatness of thine iniquities through the unrighteousness of
thy traffic.
Thou hast polluted their
holy places;
Therefore, I will cause to
come forth a fire from thy midst:
It shall devour thee, and 1
will give thee for aches upon the earth,
In the eyes of all
observers.
19. All
that know thee among the peoples were confounded because of thee;
Thou shalt be calamities (to
them), and nothing of thee till the Olahm.”*
In this quotation, more correctly and, therefore,
more intelligibly translated than in the common version, a political power,
headed up in the King of Tyre is styled an Anointed Cherub; and the reason
appears to have been because Yahweh had “constituted it a Protector” of
people, which function is signified by outspread wings, which are an important
element of the Cherubic symbol. The Tyrian Power was
an “anointed” Cherub in the same sense in which the Pagan Cyrus, King of
Persia, was “Yahweh’s Anointed,” or Messiah, who was surnamed of Yahweh before
his birth, and 176 years before he appeared upon the page
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· That is, Nothing of thee in Eden till “the time of the end,” which immediately precedes and terminates in Olahm, or the Millennium. (Dr. Thomas).
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of Bible history (Isaiah 45: 1-4). The Eternal Spirit created and rode the Tyrian Power, as in a chariot; and developed it as an element of that system of powers, whose relations to Israel in the days of Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Daniel were allegorical of “the powers that be” in their relations to the Hebrew nation, when the Russian Nebuchadnezzar shall make war upon the Anglo-Syrian protector of the Jews in “the holy mountain of the Elohim,” and cast it out in the epoch of the thief-like apocalypse of the Ancient of Days and his company of glorified myriads.
The Cherubim stationed as guards at the east of Eden’s garden
were certain Elohim or powerful Ones, detailed by the Eternal Spirit for the
protection of the Life-Imparting Tree, and “the Way,” that led thereto. Hence,
all communications from the Eternal throne for the instruction of mankind would
pass through them. Themselves corporeal focalizations of Spirit, they were
vehicles in and by which were conveyed “the mysteries of the faith,” into which
they desired to look, but were not able (1 Pet. 1:12; Mark 13:32). These
“conveying vehicles” or chariots of the Eternal Spirit, were “public official
spirits sent forth for service on account of those hereafter to inherit
salvation” (Heb. 1: 14). Hence, they are styled Malachim Yahweh, angels or messengers of the Eternal Power, self-styled Ehyeh
or Yahweh. David, addressing these Angel-Elohim, says: “Bless ye Yahweh, ye
His angels, mighty of power, executing his command, hearkening to the voice of
His word. Bless ye, Yahweh, all ye His hosts, His attendants, executing His
pleasure”; and elsewhere “0 Yahweh, my Elohim”! — 0 Eternal One, my Mighties “Thou art very great, covering Thyself with light
as a garment, spreading out the heavens as a curtain; who makest
dark clouds His chariot; who goes on the wings of spirit, making His messengers
spirits, His attendants a flaming fire. He established the earth upon its foundations,
that nothing shall be moved during the age and beyond” olahm wah-ed (Psalm 103:20; 104:1-5).
The angelo-elohal cherubic executors of the mandates of the Eternal Power, through His effluence, created our terrestrial system, which is subjected to their secondary administration in all its relations, until “a New Order of Cherubim” shall have been manifested to supersede them. Until then, all things pertaining to this present “evil world,” aion, or course of things, are under their supervision and control. They cause all things to work together for good to them who love the “Eternal All,” and are called according to His purpose (Rom. 8:28). That purpose is the polar star of their administration; so that nothing among the kingdoms and empires of the world is permitted to prosper that would contravene it. “The powers that be” are subordinated to divine power; for “there is no power but of God; the powers that be
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have been placed under the Theos” (Rom. 13:1) that is, no power is permitted to exist contrary to and independent of His will. In this sense they are apo Theou “of God”; and that the powers may not run riot in trying to develop their own policy, they are subjected to the guardianship of invisible potentates, which is expressed in Paul’s words by the phrase “have been placed under the Theos.” The truth of this is amply illustrated in Scripture. Is anything to be accomplished in relation to “Yahweh’s” purpose in respect to individuals? He sends three Elohal-Men to Abraham and two to Lot; Jacob saw an encampment of them at Mahanaim, and wrestled with one, who put his thigh out of joint, and surnamed him Israel, at Peniel. He called the place of this contest Peniel, because he had seen penai “the faces of” Au, power; “for,” said he, “1 have seen Elohim faces to faces, and my soul escaped” (Gen. 32:30) that is, his life was not taken away. It is unnecessary to cite any more instances. The reader’s recollection will suggest many.
In relation to national affairs, the Eternal Power employees armies of them. When He gave Israel the law, He descended to the top of Sinai in fire, amid thunders and lightnings, and thick darkness. Clouds of Elohim attended, sounding trumpets long and loud. Moses spake, and the Elohim answered him by a Voice. The words of that voice were written in a book, called the “Book of the Covenant,” and are set forth in Exod. 20 to 23 inclusive. When he had dedicated the book with sprinkled blood, Moses and Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu, and seventy of the Elders of Israel ascended Sinai, and saw the Mighty Ones of Israel, and did eat and drink. None of these were permitted to approach the top of Sinai, but Moses and Joshua, his attendant. All the remaining seventy-two stayed at a lower elevation of the mountain with the Mighty Ones, or Elohim, eating and drinking, and “worshipping afar off.” The order was that “Moses alone shall come near YAHWEH,” with his attendant. The reader will perceive the distinction here between the Elohim and YAHWEH. The nobles of the children of Israel came nigh to the Elohim, and saw them: and did not see Him. Even Moses, who did come near to the Eternal* did not see His face; for said he, “there shall no man see me, and live; thou shalt see my back parts, Moses, but my face shall not be seen” (Exod. 33:20). Paul testified the same
· The glory of Yahweh was manifested to Moses through the medium of the One from whom, he received the Law (see Exod.. 33:18-23; 34:4-8; 24:12-18). This was the work of an angel as Paul and Stephen reveal (Gal. 3:19; Acts 7:53). Moses saw in him “the similitude of Yahweh” (Num. 12-8). Yahweh’s Name was named upon him (Exod. 23:20-23) so that he exercised greater authority than the other Elohim, as Christ will exercise greater authority than his glorified brethren. — Publishers.
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thing in 1 Tim. 6:16, saying: “the blessed and only Potentate, the King of kings and Lord of lords only hath immortality, dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto; whom no man hath seen, nor can see.” The Hebrew nation saw the symbol of YAHWEH’S presence on the mountain top — “The glory of Yahweh like devouring fire,” the original Eden-Cherubic glory
but neither they, Moses, nor their nobles, saw the face of the Eternal Substance himself.
Here, then, are two grand occasions upon which Yahweh visited the earth in His Cherubic-Chariot — first: “when He laid the foundations of the earth; when the Stars of the Morning sang together, and all the Sons of God shouted for joy”; and, secondly, when He descended to Sinai’s top and proclaimed the law. These myriads of attending Elohim are “the wings” of His celestial forces, “full of eyes,” with which, as the Great Charioteer of the universe, He “wheels” through the infinitude of space “as the appearance of the lightning’s flash.” If the necessity of one of His prophets in the execution of His mission demand the succor of Omnipotence, He is near with His cherubic legions — His “twelve legions of angels” — to afford it, as in the case of Elisha at Dothan, who was surrounded by horses and chariots of fire, more than all the cavalry and war-chariots of Syria, dispatched to seize him (2 Kings 6:17).
Angelic Supervision Of World Events The elohal superintendence of the affairs of the “thrones, dominions, principalities, a n d powers” o f t h e world, is clearly revealed in the book of Daniel. In the fourth chapter of this prophet it is declared that the matter set forth therein was revealed to teach “the living that the Highest One is the ruler in the kingdom of men, and that He giveth it to him whom He shall please, and sets up over it the lowest of men.” Besides this it shows, that though the ruler or Lord, He does not administer the government alone, but associates with Himself others, styled inn “watchers,” who are, like Himself, kaddishin, “Holy Ones.” These Holy Sentinels — such as kept guard in the Garden of Eden over the tree of the two lives —are the rulers, or “lords” and “kings,” alluded to by Paul in I Tim. 6:15, and John, in Rev. 17:14; 19:16, in the name that no man knows but He whose it is — “KING of Kings, and LORD of Lords.” The temporary dethronement of Nebuchadnezzar, when he was driven from the society of men, and was compelled to dwell with the beasts of the field, to eat grass as oxen, and to be drenched with the dew of heaven, until seven times, or years, had passed over him — allegorical of the fate that awaits the representative of His image-power in our latter day future — the dethronement, I say, of this Chaldean potentate was, by the deci
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sion of the Sentinels, whose report caused the Holy One to decree the punishment of his pride.
These Holy Ones and Elohal Sentinels associated with the Most High and Holy One — the Eternal Power Yahweh — in the government of the world, are aggregately styled shemaiyah, “the heavens,” in Dan 4:26, as “thy kingdom shall be continued to thee from (the time) that thou shalt know that shallitin, THE RULERS (are) shetnaiyah, THE HEAVENS.” This class of watchers and holy ones is the heavens to which David refers in Psalm 50, saying “AlL, ELOHIM, YAHWEH (Power, the Mighties, He who shall be), spake, and made proclamation to the earth, from the rising of the sun to its going down. Out of Zion, the perfection of splendor, ELOHIM (the Mighty Ones are) caused to shine forth. Our Elohim shall come and not keep silence; a fire before His (Yahweh’s) faces (the Elohim) shall devour; and around Him it is very tempestuous. He will make proclamation to the Heavens (the Holy ones and Sentinels, styled in Matt. 24:31, “His Angels with trumpet of great sound” —compare Deut. 30:3-10) — from above, and to the earth, in vindicating his people, saying, Gather ye to me, my saints, who cut up my meat for eating in a sacrifice.* Thus He showed THE HEAVENS His righteousness; for Elohim (the Spirit-Powers, “born of the Spirit, and, therefore, Spirit” — the Eternal in many) is Himself the Judge, Selah!” i.e., weigh, or consider!
Among the Elohal Sentinels of the kingdoms are Gabriel and Michael, “lords” and “princes” of the heavens. Gabriel was employed as a messenger of the Eternal Spirit, symbolized in Dan. 10:5-9, to give the prophet skill and understanding (8:15-18; 9:20-23). He communicated to him the prophecy of the Seventy Weeks, in which he fixed the time of the covenanting, or “cutting off, of Messiah the Prince”; and it was that same Gabriel (or Man of Power, as his name imports) who appeared to Zachariah, the priest of the course of Abia, and declared to him that his
· This is the literal rendering of the words of the Spirit of David, ehiorthai berithai ali-zahvach, in the English version expressed by the sentence “those that have made a covenant with me by sacrifice.” The literal expresses what was done in the institution and confirmation of promises. The promises to be fulfilled were stated; animals were then slain and divided, or “cut up”, and separated into two parcels, between which the parties concerned passed. The words of the promise were then sworn to, and the parties of the first and second parts, sitting down together, “cut up the meat provided, or eat it in a sacrifice; not as a priestly offering, but as an immolation by private persons, at their own cost.” Thus the victim slain and the promise made and confirmed being elements of the same transaction, came each of them to be styled berith, “an eating,” or covenant. In illustration of this exposition, see Gen. 15:9-18; 21:22-32; 26:26-30; 3 1:43-54 (Dr. Thomas.)
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wife Elizabeth, one of the posterity of Aaron, should become the mother of John, who should “go before Yahweh their Elohim,” to prepare a people to receive him; and who also afterwards appeared to a virgin of the house of David, and informed her that she should become the mother of Yah Elohim, i.e., “He who shall be Mighty Ones” (Ps. 68:18), or as he is named in Jer. 23:6, Yahweh tzidkainu, “He who shall be our righteousness”; or as the latter occurs in the Greek le-sous, which is a corruption of Yahoshaia, contracted Yeshua. “He shall be salvation.” “Thou, Mary, shalt call his name Jesus; for he shall save his people from their sins”; in which Joseph, her husband, acquiesced.
Now when Gabriel appeared to the old people of Aaron’s house, he said, “I am Gabriel, who stand in the presence of AlL”— the Supreme Power of the heavens. Upwards of five hundred and thirty years before, he appeared to Daniel with an answer to his supplication; and on that occasion told him that he had been sent with an answer to his supplications concerning the “desolations” of the Holy Land, and of “the city where Eloah’s name was proclaimed”; and that he had come to show (for he was greatly beloved) that he might understand “the word,” and comprehend “the vision” set forth before him at Shushan, the palace in Elam, by the river Ulai, as in chapter 8.
This seems to have ended Gabriel’s mission to Daniel; for, after delivering to him the prophecy of the restoration of the City and Commonwealth from the Chaldean overthrow; and the subsequent appearance and CUTTING OFF, or covenanting of the guiltless Messiah; and the after-destruction of the City and Commonwealth again by the Romans, which was to be succeeded by a long desolation — we read no more of Gabriel in the book. But, though he disappears from the theatre of events till the nine months preceding the birth of YAH ELOHIM, or Jesus, another Revelation appears to Daniel, as described in chapter 10.
In this chapter he records a vision of very remarkable character, which he saw while in company with certain persons on the banks of Hiddekel or Tigris. The basis of what he saw was ish-echahd, THE MAN OF THE ONE, rendered in the English version, “a certain man.” It was not a real man, but “the appearance of a man” (ch. 10:18), or “like the similitude of the sons of Adam” (ch. 10:16). Hence, it was a symbolical representation.*
· A symbol is a form of comprehending divers parts. As a whole it is a compendious abstract of something else than itself — much in a condensed forms A symbolical representation is the act of showing by forms or types the real thing intended—it is the shadowy form of a true substance; and in the chapter before us that substance so potentially foreshadowed is Christ personal and corporate. (Dr. Thomas).
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It was the shadowy representation of “the Man of the One” ETERNAL SPIRIT. It was, therefore, truly “a certain man,” not an uncertain one. The son of the old age of Zachariah and Elizabeth “saw the Spirit descending from heaven like a Dove” (John 1:32); and Daniel saw the same Spirit, “like the similitude of the sons of Adam”. Now, the description he gives us of this SPIRIT-FORM is, that he was clothed in linen, having also his loins girded with fine gold of Uphaz; his body was like the beryl and his face as the appearance of lightning, and his eyes as lamps of fire, and his arms and his feet like in colour to polished brass, and the voice of his words like the voice of a multitude.” He saw this in Eden, by “the third” of its rivers, “the Hiddekel,” where “the Cherubim and the devouring fire” were originally located (Gen. 2:14; 3:24). This that he saw there was the same that Moses and the Israelites beheld on Sinai’s top; and the effect of the sight on Daniel and his companions was the same as upon them — “all the people in the camp trembled” — so also, though Daniel only saw the vision, “a great quaking fell upon them that were with him, so that they fled to hide themselves”; and as for Daniel when left alone, he says, “there remained no strength in me, for my brightness was changed within me into corruption. and I retained no strength . . . Neither was there breath left in me” (Vv. 8, 18).
Here, then, was a symbolic man blazing in glory and power: and representative of the Eternal Spirit hereafter to be manifested in a NEW ORDER OF ELOHIM — aggregately ONE MAN —the One Man of the One Spirit, whom the true believers shall all come unto . . . . A PERFECT MAN — into the measure of the full age of the fulness of the Christ: who is THE HEAD, from whom the whole Body, fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint (heir) supplieth, according to the effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the Body unto the edifying of itself in love” (Eph. 4:3,4, 13, 15, 16). Daniel saw the “perfect man” — the Eternal manifested in the glorified flesh of a multitude — symbolically represented in the measure of his full age.
The “thing” that was revealed to the prophet at the Tigris was also seen of John in Patmos. “I saw,” saith he, “in the midst of the Seven Lampstands a thing like (homoion) to a Son of Man, having been clothed to the foot, and girt around the breast with a golden girdle; also his head and the hairs white, as it were wool white as snow, and his eyes as a flame of fire; and his feet resembled transparent brass, as if they had been burning in a furnace; and his voice as the sound of many waters; and having in his right hand Seven Stars; and proceeding forth out of his mouth a two-edged broadsword; and his face as the sun shines in his
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strength.” This represents the One Body, of which Jesus is the head, prepared “to execute the judgment written.” It is that One Body in its post-resurrectional development invested with omnipotence — the apocalyptic Spirit-Form, symbolical of the saints glorified in power.
The linen and the gold are associated both by Daniel and John. The Spirit-Man symbolized to Daniel was “girded with fine gold of Uphaz.” This Uphaz is the Ophir of other passages. In the times of the prophets it was the gold region of the earth, whence the most abundant supplies of the finest gold were obtained. The fitting up of the temple, which in its places and furniture was “the patterns of things in the heavens” — figures of the true heavenly things themselves — were all of gold, or of precious woods overlaid with gold; to wit, the Cherubim, the Ark of the Testimony, the Mercy-Seat, the Altar of Incense, the Seven Branched Lampstands, the Table of Shew Bread; spoons, tongs, censers, hinges, staves, and so forth. And besides all this, the
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“holy garments for glory and beauty,” worn by the High Priest, who officiated in this golden temple, were brilliant with gold and precious stones; such as, the breastplate of righteousness, the ephod, the mitre, or “helmet of salvation,” etc. This was chosen as the most precious of all known metals, to represent the most precious of “heavenly things” before the Eternal Spirit—FAITH PERFECTED BY TRIAL, which is “much more precious than of gold that perisheth, though it be refined by fire,” and “without which it is impossible to please God” (Heb. 11:6; James 2:22; 1 Peter 1:7; 2 Peter 1:1). It is the basis of righteousness unto life eternal; for “we are justified by faith” — the fine linen of righteousness is girded about the saints by the golden girdle of a tried faith. “When God bath tried me,” saith Job, “I shall come forth as gold.” Thus David, in celebrating the future glory of the New Order of Elohim, consisting of the King and his Brethren, styles the latter “the Queen” in Psalm 45 :9, saying to his Majesty, “the Queen bath been placed at thy right hand in fine gold of Ophir.” He then addresses the Consort of the Great King, who being the Eternal Spirit manifested in David’s son, is both Father and Husband to the Bride (“thy Maker is thine Husband; Yahweh Tz’vaoth is His name; the Elohim of the whole earth shall be called” — Isaiah 54:5) — saying: “Hear, 0 Daughter and consider and incline thine ear; and forget thy nation, and the house of thy father; and the King shall greatly desire thy beauty; for He is thy Lord, therefore do thou homage unto Him. So the Daughter of Tyre with tribute, the rich of the people, shall supplicate thy favour. The Daughter of the King is all glorious within; her clothing is of interweavings of gold; in embroideries shall she be conducted to Thee; the Virgins her companions, following her, shall be brought to Thee. They shall be conducted with joyous shouts and exultation; they shall enter into the palace of the King” (Psalm 45: 10-Il).
Thus David sings of “the Spirit and the Bride,” clothed in the holy garments of righteousness and faith, for glory and for beauty. They are apocalyptically represented as “a Great City,” styled “the Holy City, New Jerusalem, having been prepared as a Bride adorned for her husband” — “a city of pure gold like to transparent crystal”; “the precious sons of Zion,” saith the prophet, “are comparable to fine gold” (Lam. 4:2), for in their glory they are the spirit-incarnations of a tried and precious faith.
Daniel next informs us concerning the Spirit-man — “the Man of the One” — that “His body was like the beryl.” The “body” here is the “One Body” of which Paul speaks in his epistles; as, “the Ecclesia which is His body, the fulness of Him
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(the Spirit) who perfects all things in all” saints. When the fulness is brought in the body will be complete (Rom. 11:25; Eph. 1:23); and it will then be “like a beryl.” The original word in Daniel for this precious stone is Tarshish. It is said to have been so called because it was brought from Tarshish; but the learned are not agreed as to what particular gem is meant. The Greeks called it beryllos; hence the word in the English version beryl; arid Pliny says, it was rarely found elsewhere than in India, the Tarshish of the Bible. The prevailing opinion is that its colour is a bluish or sea-green. But the interpretation of the original depends upon the teaching in connection with the word, not upon the colour of the gem.
“His body was like a Tarshish.” This word occurs in six other places in the original. In the first two it designates one of the three precious stones in the fourth row of the Aaronic breastplate of righteousness, and answered to the tribe of Dan which signifies “judge”; and of Dan’s career in the latter days, Jacob prophesied, saying “Dan, as one of the tribes of Israel, shall avenge his nation. There shall be a Judge, a serpent in the way. an adder in the path, biting the heels of the horse, so that its rider shall fall backward. I have laid in wait for Thy salvation, O Yahweh”! (Gen. 49: 16-18; Heb. 2:7). That is, Jacob, who was about to die whom he uttered these words, foresaw that he would sleep in the dust until Dan, as a lion’s whelp, should leap from Bashan (Deut. 33:22); that then, “in the latter days,” would be the era of deliverance, when he would himself be saved, and all the tribes would do valiantly, and the Judge of Israel would avenge his nation, to the overthrow of their oppressors (Deut.32:29-43).
Here, then, is a destroying and conquering power associated with the tarshish or beryl in the breastplate of judgment. It is similarly associated by Ezekiel with the wheels of the Cherubic chariot. He says, “the appearance of the wheels and their work was as the aspect of the tarshish”; and their felloes were full of eyes, and so lofty, “that they were dreadful.” And “the Spirit of the Living One was in the wheels.” Hence they are styled, in Dan. 7:9, “The wheels of the Ancient of Days,” whose description identifies him with “the Man of the One,” and the apocalyptic “Son of Man” — “His garment white as snow, and the hair of his head as pure wool; his throne flames of fire, his wheels a consuming fire.” The eighth foundation gem (answering to the priestly tribe of Levi) of the wall of the golden city on which the name of an apostle is engraved, is a tarshish or beryl (Rev. 21:20, cp with Rev. 7:7). We conclude then, from these premisses, that the tarshish-like body of the Spirit-Man seen by Daniel, is a priestly body or community, in which is incarnated the spirit of
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the Eternal; and that in the latter days, it will eventuate the great salvation in concert with the tribes of Israel, as a destroying and conquering power. This God-manifestation “is a consuming fire.”
Such is the doctrinal interpretation of tarshish as a representative precious stone.
The root from which it is derived, is also in harmony with the exposition; for tarshish is derived from rahshash, “to break in pieces to destroy,” which is the mission of the
“Stone” Power, when the time comes to
smite the Babylonian Image upon the feet (Dan. 2:34, 35, 44, 45).
When Yahweh is angry (and “He is angry with the wicked” and therefore with the clergy “every day”) and when the time arrives for the manifestation of His wrath, His anger flashes up into “His Faces,” and they become “as the appearance of lightning.” Now lightnings shooting forth from a divine countenance, are not indications of favour and kind affection. They express the contrary. They represent great fury and consuming indignation against them “that know not God, and obey not the gospel
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of the Lord, the Anointed Jesus”; the Aion Destruction — from the face (Hebrew faces) of the Lord, and from the glory of His might, when He is apocalypsed from heaven, with the messengers of His power, (the other faces associated with Him) in devouring fire (2 Thess. 1:7-9).
The nature of symbolical lightning may be readily deducted from the use of the word in Scripture. Thus, in that grand description of Messiah’s advent to punish the sons of Belial with won-destruction, David in spirit says: “The earth shall shake and tremble; and the foundations of the mountains shall be troubled and shaken, because there was wrath with Him. In His anger a smoke ascended, and fire from His mouth shall devour; lightnings kindled from it. And He shall bow the heavens and descend, and darkness under His feet. And He shall ride upon the cherub and fly; and He shall soar on the wings of the spirit. He will make darkness His hiding place : the circuits of His pavilion the darkness of waters, thick clouds of the skies. Because of the brightness before Him, His thick clouds passed away; hail and lightnings of the fire. Yahweh also will thunder in the heavens, and the Most High will give forth His voice; hail and lightnings of the fire. Yea, He will shoot His arrows and scatter them: yea, He flashed forth lightnings and will put them to the rout. Then the channels of the waters shall be seen; and the foundations of the habitable shall he laid bare, because of Thy rebuke, 0 Yahweh, because of the blast of the spirit of Thy nostrils” (Ps. 18:8-16).
The reader will have no difficulty in perceiving that this passage is descriptive of a great break-up of the foundation of the political organization of the world; for the wrath of Yahweh expends itself, not upon inanimate and unoffending nature, but upon the unrighteous and rebellious. These are “the earth,” and its civil and ecclesiastical organization, “the mountains,” “the heavens,” “the channels,” and “foundations of the habitable”; while that which is to overthrow, destroy, lay bare, and abolish, is the smoking fire of His indignation, flashing forth its lightnings and crashing thunders through Israel and their kings — the lightning-faced Elohim of all the earth.
“The lightnings of the fire” are flashings kindled by the avenging wrath of Yahweh. The fiery abyss from which they shoot forth is said to be “His mouth,” because it is by His command His mighty ones go forth against the enemy as a storm of lightning, thunder and hail. The fire typifies the Eternal Spirit in wrath. “Our God,” saith Paul, “is a consuming fire.” Hence, the flashing fires are “the lightnings of the fire.”
“Bow Thine heavens,” saith David in another place, “and
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come down, 0 Yahweh, touch upon the mountains, and they shall smoke; flash forth lightning, and Thou shalt scatter them; shoot Thine arrows, and Thou shalt put them to the rout” (Psalm 144:6). Isaiah puts an interpretation upon this in the exclamation: “Oh, that Thou wouldst rend the heavens, that Thou wouldst come down, that the mountains (or kingdoms) might flow down before Thy faces as the burning of liquid fire — the fire shall cause the waters to boil — to make known Thy Name to Thine adversaries: Before Thy Faces the nations shall tremble. At Thy doing of terrible deeds we shall not confide in, Thou descendest; before Thy Faces the mountains were poured out, and from the age u-mai-olahm, (from the beginning of the Mosaic Economy) men have not heard, they have not given ear to, the eye hath not seen besides Thee, 0 Elohini (mighty ones) what He shall prepare for him that is waiting diligently for Him” (chap. 64:1-4). Paul quotes this in I Cor. 2:9, in such a way as to show that the “Elohim” apostrophized by Isaiah, as the many in one who alone hath given ear to the things that shall be prepared, are the saints in Christ; for he saith to this class of persons, “God bath revealed them to u.s by His Spirit . . . that we might know the things that are freely given to us of God. For all things are ours and for our sakes” (chap. 3:21: 2 Cor. 4:15). The Elohim only have heard and given ear to, and seen by the eye of faith, the all things to be inherited. Thus saith Isaiah. But Paul also saith, that he and his brethren discerned them; therefore, admitting Paul to be a competent witness in the premises, “the saints in Christ Jesus” who are finally approved, and the Elohim of Isaiah in the text before us are the same.
The “lightnings” and “arrows” of the Eternal Spirit are to scatter and put the armies of the nations to the rout. “Yahweh’s arrows shall go forth as the lightning” (Zech. 9:14). An arrow is an instrument of death, and requires a how for its projection, strong and well strung, to give the arrow the velocity and deadliness of lightning. Now, the prophets tell us that Judah, Ephraim, and the resurrected Sons of Zion, are Yahweh’s bow and arrow, battle-ax and sword. But before they are developed in this character, they are “prisoners of hope in the pit where no water is” of life, physical or national. They must, therefore, become the subject of a personal and political resurrection; those who are dead in the grave, of a personal; and Judah and Ephraim dispersed among the nations, politically dead and buried there, of a national resurrection, “standing upon their feet an exceedingly great army” ready for action as the result (Ezek. 37: 10).
With reference to this crisis the Spirit of Christ in the prophet saith, “Fear not thou worm Jacob, ye men of Israel; I will
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help thee, saith Yahweh, even thy near kinsman,* the Holy One of Israel. Behold I will make thee a new sharp threshing instrument, having teeth; thou shalt thresh the mountains, and beat them small, and shalt make the hills as chaff. Thou shalt fan them and the wind shall carry them away, and the whirlwind shall scatter them; and thou shalt rejoice in YAHWEH (He who shall be), and shalt glory in the Holy One of Israel — i.e., Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews” (Isaiah 41:14-16).
Again, the spirit in another prophet, in addressing Israel, the rod of Yahweh’s inheritance, saith “Thou art my battle-axe and weapons of war; for by thee will I break in pieces the nations, and by thee will I destroy kingdoms; and by thee will I break in pieces the horse and his rider; . . . and by thee will I break in pieces captains and rulers. And I will render unto Babylon, and all the inhabitants of Chaldea, all their evil that they have done in Zion, in your sight, saith Yahweh” (Jer. 51:20). But Israel has never been the conquering power indicated in this testimony since it was delivered. From that time to this they have been
· The word is Goail from Gahal to redeem. Now the interpretation of Goail, rendered in the English version, redeemer, must be sought for in the Mosaic law of redemption. According to this, all the first-borns of man and beast in Israel are Yahweh’s, and were all to be sacrificed to Him, except the first-born of an ass, and the first-born children, being males (Exod. 13:1, 13-15; 34:20); fields, houses, cities and servants (Lev. 25:25-34): all these, when sold were returnable to their original owners, because these, as Yahweh’s representatives, had the fee simple right in them, and could therefore not convey an unlimited right. The absolute fee simple right was in Yahweh; first, because He brought Israel’s firstborn out of Egypt while he slew those of the Egyptians (Exod. 13:14); and secondly, because He claimed the Holy Land as absolutely His, the Israelites being only strangers and sojourners with Him (Lev. 25:23). The firstling of a cow, of a sheep and of a goat, were not redeemable from death; they were to be sacrificed to Yahweh. being typical of Messiah the prince in his cutting off (Num. 18:17).
The redemption of redeemable things was to he effected by a blood relation of the nearest kin. Hence, GOAIL stands for the nearest relative, a blood relation, the next of kin or a redeemer in this sense. It was his duty in redeeming to pay a stipulated price, so that the near kinsman became a purchaser, and the first-borns and so forth, a purchased people, and purchased things. Under the law, the price was blood and money. Now all this was a pattern of heavenly things. It was an illustration of the substance expressed in the text words: “Yahweh, Goail of Israel”; that is, “He shall be the nearest kinsman of Israel.” This necessitates that the Effluence of the Eternal should become an Israelite, or as Paul expresses it, “He,” the Spirit, “took upon himself of the nature of Abraham; for in all things it behoved him to be made like his brethren.” The Spirit becoming thus a blood relation, and by resurrection Son of Power and first-born, he is the one of right to redeem the Holy Land and Israel by a blood-price out of the hand of strangers, who desolate and oppress them. They are the Eternal’s, and His near kinsman is Jesus the Holy One of Israel. (Dr. Thomas).
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oppressed, and in a state of punishment. Therefore, as Jesus truly taught, seeing that “the Scripture can not be broken,” it yet remains to be accomplished when the Faces of the Spirit shall shine upon them, and scatter their enemies with the lightnings of His fury.
Again also the Spirit of Christ in yet another prophet, predicts that the king of Zion and Jerusalem, who, at one period of his history, was to come to them in humility, “riding upon an ass, even upon a colt, the foal of an ass,” “should speak peace to the nations,” and have universal dominion. Having declared this, the Spirit, addressing the just and lowly Monarch of Israel, saith, “As to thee, through the blood of thy cutting off, I will call forth thy captives out of the pit wherein are no waters.” Then apostrophizing the captives, He saith “return to the stronghold (Zion) ye prisoners of the hope; this day itself he causes to announce that I will cause to restore double unto thee.” Having announced this redemption at the price of the king’s blood, the Spirit characterizes the day of redemption, or “year of his redeemed,” as a “day of vengeance,” “when I have bent Judah for Me, have filled the bow with Ephraim, and raised up thy Sons, 0 Zion, against thy sons, 0 Greece, and made thee as the Sword of the Mighty One. And Yahweh shall be seen over them, and His arrow shall go forth as the lightning, and the Adonai Yahweh (the Faces of the Spirit) shall blow with the trumpet, and go with the whirlwinds of Teman. And Yahweh T7’vaott, shall protect them, and they shall devour and conquer the slingers of stones ... And in that day Yahweh Elohim shall save them as the flock of his people: for THE GEMS OF THE DIADEM are exalting themselves upon His land” (Zech. 9:9-16). And, illustrative of these last words, the testimony may he added that in that day shall Yahweh Tz’vaoth be “for a crown of glory and for a diadem of beauty unto the residue of His people, and for a spirit of judgment to him that sitteth in judgment, and for strength to them who turn the battle to the gate” (Isaiah 28:5-6). “Thou, 0 Zion, shalt he a crown of glory in the hands of Yahweh, and a royal diadem in the palm of thine Elohim” (Isa.
62:3).
From these premises we learn, that on the day of the manifestation of Daniel’s great vision of the Spirit-man. Judah will be the battle-bow; that Ephraim, or the Ten Tribes of Israel, will be His arrow; and that with the Judah-bow in one hand, and the Ephraim arrow in the other, strung to the utmost bent, the tribes will shoot forth from His faces with the velocity and destructiveness of lightning against the nations. The Man of the One Spirit is Yahweh, Goail and Holy One of Israel; styled in many passages Yahweh-Tz’vaoth, which signifies “He shall be hosts”; that is “He shall be Captain of the armies of Israel”; for Moses says:
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“Yahweh is a man of war” (Exod. 15:3). Thus, in “the great day of the war of the Almighty Power” (Rev. 16:14) upon the kingdoms of the world, wherever there is a section of the Jewish captivity — prisoners in their Gentile houses of death — there will be an army of the Yahweh-Man, styled by Paul, “the man, the anointed Jesus”; the Man of Multitude, ‘in whom” are all the saints a constituency attained through the blood of his covenant or cutting off. In the day of approaching vengeance, the sons of Zion, according to the flesh, will be a sharp two-edged broadsword, proceeding forth from the mouth of this mighty Man of War, the Sons of Zion according to the Spirit. Thus commanded, their armies shall be among the Gentiles as a lion among the beasts of the forest, and as a young lion among flocks of goats, who, going through, treads down and tears in pieces, and none can deliver (Mic. 5:8). “The slingers of stones,” or as we term them in modern technique, the gunners, cannoniers, or artillerists, whose ordinance is the glory and strength of the armies of the world —the fire and brimstone of their warfare — shall be conquered; “they shall conquer the slingers of stones” (Zech. 9:15 — R.V.), and scatter their hosts as chaff before the whirlwinds of Teman.
Having said enough in illustration of the facial similitude of the Yahweh Man, we proceed to the contemplation of
The symbolical number of these flaming orbs is revealed in Zechariah. In chapter 3, the Eternal saith, “Behold, I will bring forth my servant, the Branch”; or Messiah. “For, behold, the stone which I have placed before the Faces of Joshua (or Jesus, in Greek), upon the same stone shall be SEVEN EYES” (verses 8, 9) : and “they shall rejoice and see the stone of separation in the hands of Zerubbabel, even those Seven. They are the eyes of YAHWEH scourging in all the earth” (chap. 4:10). In this testimony and its context, the Eternal Spirit sets before us several representative men — Joshua and his brethren, and Zerubbabel; the former, the High Priest and his household at the time of the restoration from Babylon, and the latter, governor of Judah and of the house of David at the same crisis. They were constituted
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a symbolical group, and were so regarded by their contemporaries in Jerusalem; as it is written “they are men wondered at,” or anshai mophaith, “Men of Sign,” that is, men representing others besides themselves.
But as the things to be represented by them required other symbols than those furnished by the human form, priests, and governors, the deficiencies are supplied from other sources. Joshua and his brethren represented Messiah and his brethren in name and office; as did also Zerubbabel as a governor of the house of David; and as a group of sign-men, they symbolized the kings and priests of the Eternal Power of the house of David, occupying their places over Israel in Messiah’s times, commonly styled “the millennium.” But it was required also to represent that the Spirit’s servant, “the man whose name is the Branch,” styled in the New Testament “Jesus Christ,” was the same who had been styled by Jacob, David, Isaiah and Daniel, “the Stone”; that the precious gem in its brightness and splendor was to blaze forth in the glory of the Spirit; that, as a consuming fire, he and his companions were to scourge the wicked; in short, that Israel was not to expect redemption by their own prowess, apart from the Man of the Eternal Power, according to “the word of Yahweh to Zerubbahel, saying: Not by multitude nor by strength, but rather by my Spirit, saith Yahweh Tz-vaoth” (chapter 4:6). To represent these requirements, a stone was placed before Joshua, by which action a relation between them was established. It is afterwards seen in the hand of Zerubbabel, by which also he becomes identified with it. Hence the stone comes to represent at once the High Priest and Governor of Judah — “a Priest upon the throne” of the house of David, which indicated a change in the constitution of the kingdom of Israel. In the hand of Zerubbabel it is styled the “Stone of Separation,” by which we are taught that “the Shepherd, the Stone of Israel” will he a purifier of his nation from all alloy; for “He is like a refiner’s fire, and like fuller’s soap. And he shall sit as a refiner and purifier of silver; and He shall purify the sons of Levi, and purge them as gold and silver, that they may offer unto Yahweh an offering in righteousness. Afterwards shall the offering of Judah and Jerusalem be pleasant unto Yahweh, as in the days of old, and as in ancient years” (Mal. 3:2-4).
But the nature of the case demanded that inte1li~ence and multitudinousness should be symbolized in the Stone. To answer this, “Seven Eyes” are placed upon it with the inscription: “I will remove the iniquity of that land in one day.” These eyes, we are told, are “the eyes of Yahweh”; that is, the eyes of the Spirit, self-styled Yahweh.
Now, John in Patmos saw the same vision; and in his descrip
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tion of what he saw, uses the
words of Daniel and Zechariah, which he blends together. He says there were
“Seven lamps of fire burning before the throne.” He then tells what they represent,
saying, “which are the Seven Spirits of power,” or of God. “Grace and peace”
were sent through John to the Seven Ecclesias from these Seven Spirits in
concert with Jesus Anointed (Rev. 1:4-5); who, in chapter 5:6, is symbolized “by a lamb that had been slain.” Now, the
description of this lamb identifies it with the Stone of Joshua and Zerubbabel;
and with the Eyes of Daniel’s Man of the One Spirit. The slain Iamb had “seven
horns and seven eyes, which (Horns and eyes) are,” or represent, “the Seven
Spirits of Power, sent forth into all the earth” (chapter 5:6).
The symbolical number is “seven.” This is a sign-number, signifying more or less. That it does not signify less than seven, is evident from other symbols of the Spirit. The Four living Ones of Ezekiel and John are symbols of the Spirit, multitudinously manifested; for “whither the Spirit was to go, they went,” “as the appearance of a flash of lightning” (Ezek. 1:14,20; Rev. 4:6). Their actions are identical; therefore the Spirit and the Living Ones are the same — “that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.” Ezekiel tells us that what he describes was “the appearance of the likeness of the glory of Yahweh,” or of the Eternal Spirit. It was not the thing itself, but its similitude : the reality pertaining to the New Order of Elohim, to Jesus and his brethren. Now, Paul teaches that we are invited to the glory of God through the gospel; and Peter, that “He hath called us to His Eternal Glory.” Hence, the Four Living Ones that John saw, are represented as celebrating in song their redemption by the Lamb, that they might reign as God’s kings and priests upon the earth. The Living Ones are, therefore, spirit symbols of the Sons of God in glorious manifestation. Their Eyes, however, are not limited to “seven,” but are numberless; for “their whole body, their backs, and their hands, and their wings, and their wheels were full of Eyes roundabout” (Ezek. 10:12). This is also John’s testimony who says: “the Four Living Ones were full of eyes before and behind . and within; and they had six wings,” which identifies them with Isaiah’s Seraphim.
We conclude, then, that the symbolical number “seven” in the case before us, is representative of a great and innumerable multitude — “a multitude which no man can number,” because its amount is not revealed. The eyes of Daniel’s symbol are identical with the eyes of the cherubim : each eye being the representative of an individual saint. In the aggregate they are “as lamps of fire,” whose mission is to slay the beast, and to destroy his body, and to give it to the burning flame (Dan. 7:11); and to take away the dominion of the rest of the beasts (v.12) : or as
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John expresses it, to burn Babylon utterly with fire; to torment her adherents and the kings of the earth with fire and brimstone, and the sword; to bind the Dragon, and take possession of the kingdoms of the nations in all the earth (Rev. 18:8; 14:8-11; 17:14; 20:2; 11:15); all of which is implied in the words of Zechariah, that the Seven Eyes as lamps of fire, “are the Eyes of Yahweh scourging in all the earth.”
From these passages and many others that might be produced, it is evident that “arms,” in a symbolical use of the word, signifies power, forces, sovereign authority; and when outstretched, power in energetic and furious operation. “The arms of the Olahm,” referred to by Moses in his song, and termed “the everlasting arms” in the English version, are in the highest sense, the armies of Israel, of which the Eternal Spirit our Messiah and his Brethren is, in that manifestation, Yahweh. Hence the name of that spirit-incorporated community, Yahweh Tz’vaoth; an enigmatical title, signifying HE SHALL BE COMMANDERS OF THE ARMIES of Israel. These Spirit Commanders are each focalisations of the One Eternal Power. Hence the ungrammatical expression, HE the Commanders. These are the Arms of the Olahm— the arms to be outstretched in “the Hour of Judgment”; and which are to break the Bow of Brass (Ps. 18:34). Moses styles these Arms in his song Elohai kedem, “Mighty Ones of the East,” in the English version rendered “the Eternal God.” But John, in Rev. 16:12, justifies our translation. He there styles them hai hasileiai hai apo anatolon heliou, “the Kings from risings of a Sun”; but in the English version “the Kings of the East.” The kedem of Moses is the apo anatolon hehiou, of John. John paraphrases Moses. The Helios or Sun, is the “Sun of Righteousness” spoken of in Mal. 4:2, who is to heal, and afterwards to send
forth the sparkling gems of the Eternal, to tread down the
wicked as ashes under the soles of their feet, in the day that Yahweh shall do
it. The Jewels of Malachi, and the Elohim of Moses are the Kings of John, and the Arms
of Daniel’s vision. Each individual King is a rising of the healing Sun, in the sense of being brought from the
grave and quickened by his vitalising beams.
Collectively, the Kings of Power or of God, are the “risings of a Sun”; and
that Sun is He who proclaimed himself “the Resurrection and the Life,” even
the Eternal Father, who raises up the dead by the anointed Son of Mary (2 Cor.
4:14); styled by her royal ancestor, “the Handmaid of Yahweh” (Ps. 86:16;
116:16); and so recognized by Gabriel, Zechariah, Elizabeth, Simeon and Anna,
all instructed and proficients in the law. When their
mission is accomplished, they also will sing the song of Moses, “and of the
Lamb,” the prophet like to him (Exod. 15;
Rev. 15).
These “Arms” of Daniel’s vision, are represented by John in battle array in the train of their Commander-in-Chief, “the King of the Jews” (Rev. 19: 14; Isaiah 55:4). John styles them “the forces of the heaven, following the Faithful and True One upon white horses, arrayed in fine linen, white and clean.” Collectively, they are the Four Chariots of the heavens seen by Zechariah emerging from between the Two Mountains of Brass, which it is their mission to reduce to a molten furnace, glowing with intense heat. In the symbol of “the Lamb slain,” the “Arms” are equivalent to the “Seven Horns,” or Spirit Powers, which are as innumerable, but equal in number, whatever its amount may be to the “Seven Eyes.”
AND
AT HIS FEET AS THE ASPECT OF GLOWING
BRASS
The history of Israel is not only as strictly literal as any other histories, and truer too than those of the nations contemporary with their prophetic times, but is also allegorical, which theirs are not. Joshua and his Captains were like Joshua, the High Priest, and his companions, “men of sign”; and represented Messiah and his Captains in their future wars with “the Kings of the Earth, and of the whole Habitable (Rev. 16) whom they are to “tread down as ashes under the soles of their feet.”
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In Psalm 18:32, the Spirit inquires: “Who is Eloah beside Yahweh? And who a Rock except our Elohim — the AlL girding me with might? Even He will make my way complete. He causes my feet to be like hinds, and He will make me stand upon my high places. He is training my hands for the war; so that the Bow of Brass might be broken by my arms. Thou wilt cause my going to extend under me; and my ankle joints have not wavered. I will pursue my enemies, and shall overtake them, and I will not return till they be destroyed; I will wound them so that they shall not be able to rise; they shall fall under my feet. Thou wilt gird me with might for the war. Thou wilt subdue under me those who rise up against me. And Thou hast given to me the neck of my enemies; and those who hate me, I will cut them off. They will cry for help, but there is none to save them — unto Yahweh, but He answered them not. Then will I grind them fine as dust before the Faces of the Spirit; as the mire of the streets will I pour them out. Thou wilt deliver me from the contentions of the nations; Thou hast appointed me for Prince of the nations. A nation which I know not shall serve me. At the hearing of the ear they shall obey; the sons of the foreigner shall submit to me; and the sons of the foreigner shall fall, and tremble from their strongholds.”
47.—”Yahweh lives, and blessed be my rock; and He shall raise the Elohim of my salvation. The AlL that giveth avengements to me, even He will subdue the nations under me.”
49.—”Thou wilt exalt me: from the Man of Violence (Paul’s ‘Man of Sin’, the Lawless One) thou wilt deliver me. Therefore, O Yahweh, I will give Thee thanks among the Gentiles, and sing psalms unto Thy name, magnifying the deliverances of HIS KING and performing the promise to HIS MESSIAH, to David, and to his seed for the Olahm.”
In this passage, the Eternal Spirit through his prophet, speaks of Messiah in the crisis of his controversy for Zion, in which, as the representative and chief of Daniel’s “Man of the One Spirit,” he puts his feet upon the necks of the kings of the earth, scatters their armies like dust before the wind, and becomes Prince or Head of the nations in their stead. But this is true also of all the individual members of this NEW MAN (Eph. 2:15; 4:24; 2 Cor. 5:17; Gal. 6:15). If the New Adam himself thus make war upon, and trample in the mire the kings and armies of the Old Adam nature, He has promised that all true believers “in Him” — all who are Abraham’s seed by being Christ’s — that is, all the Saints, shall do the same; and shall share with Him in the fruits of his and their victory.
In proof of this we refer the reader to the following passages:
“The righteous shall rejoice when he sees the vengeance; he shall
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wash his feet in the blood of the wicked. So that a man shall say, Verily, there is a reward for the righteous: verily, there are Elohim ruling in the earth” (Ps. 58:10, II).
All the horns of the wicked I will cut off; but the horns of the righteous shall be exalted (Ps.75:10). He shall put off the spirit of princes; He is terrible to the kings of the earth (76:12). Arise, 0 Elohim, judge the earth; for Thou shalt acquire possession in all the nations (Ps. 82:8). He will exalt the horn of His nation; the glory of all His saints; of the sons of Israel, a people near to Him (Ps. 148:14). Israel shall rejoice in Him that made him; the sons of Zion shall exult in their king . The saints shall exult in glory; they shall shout with joy upon their couches. The high things of AlL shall be in their mouths; and a two-edged sword in their hands, to execute vengeance upon the nations and punishment upon the peoples; to bind their kings with chains, and their honored ones with fetters of iron, to execute upon them the judgment written; this honour have ALL HIS SAINTS (Ps. 149).
Now the phrase all His saints is comprehensive of Messiah and his brethren, who collectively form “the Man of the one Spirit,” or Paul’s “New Man.” Hence, the same things are affirmed of them that are predicated concerning Him. Their feet will be like hinds — swift in the pursuit of their enemies, whom they will overtake and destroy. These will fall before their power; and as Malachi says, they will trample them as ashes under the soles of their feet; and, when they have got the victory, they will rule with Messiah as “princes in all the earth” (Ps. 45:16). The resurrected “Elohim ruling in the earth.” The Elohim of “Messiah’s salvation.”
This is the teaching of the Old Testament, with which the New Testament is in exact conformity; for they harmonize upon every subject, as might be expected from the declaration of its writers, that they taught none other things than Moses and other prophets had predicted.
Now the apostles have proved beyond all confutation that Jesus is the Messiah or Christ of Yahweh promised to Abraham, David and Judah. Hence, all that is said about the Christ in the Old Testament must, sooner or later, be fulfilled in Jesus. But the prophets exhibit the Christ, not as a solitary man only, but also as a man of Multitude, as we have abundantly shown. Therefore, Jesus and his apostles preached the Christ in the same form —as One Person, and a Multitude in that One, in and through all of whom the Eternal Spirit would dwell and manifest His power. “I and the Father,” said Jesus, “are One” — ONE YAHWEH; and concerning his apostles, and all Jews and Gentiles believing
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into him through the apostles’ testimony, he also said, “I pray that they all may be one; ‘as’ Thou Father art in me and / in Thee, that they also may be ONE IN US — that they may be one even as we are one; I in them and Thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one” (John 17:21) — in One YAHWEH; that is, in the one perfect Man of the Spirit, styled Jehovah, Yahweh, or Yah, because HE SHALL BE. “Hear, 0 Israel, Yahweh, our Mighty Ones is One Yahweh.” This is the “incommunicable name” as ye term it—a Name of Multitude, which Isaiah saith, “is coming from afar, His anger burning, and the violence of a conflagration; His lips are full of indignation, and His tongue as a devouring fire, and His breath as an overflowing stream shall reach to the neck for the scattering of the nations with the fan of destruction” (ch 30:27). It is the Name of Multitude expressed in the formula or symbol, into which the believers are baptized — “The Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit”; every such believer when so immersed, being a constituent of that name; and therefore addressed by Paul as “in God the Father, and the Lord Jesus Anointed” (1 Thess. 1: 1). This is that “glorious and fearful Name — Yahweh Eloahaikha,” 0 Israel, which your fathers would not enter into by obeying; and on account of which, as Moses forewarned you in Deut. 28:58, the Eternal Power has made thy plagues wonderful to this day.
Daniel’s “great vision” was of this consuming Name — the mystical or multitudinous Christ — to every accepted member of which “One Body” it is said by the Spirit, “that which ye have, hold fast till I come. And he that overcometh and keepeth my works to the end, to him will I give dominion over the nations; and he shall rule them with a rod of iron; as the earthen vessels they shall be broken to pieces; even as I also received of my Father” (Rev. 2:25). And again, “He that overcometh, I will make him a pillar in the temple of my God, and he shall go no more out; and I will write upon him the name of my God, and the name of the city of my God, the New Jerusalem descending out of the heaven from my God, even my new name” (ch. 3:12). “He that overcometh, I will give to him to sit with me on my throne, even as I also overcame, and sit with my Father on His throne” (ch. 3:21). To write upon one who has gained a victory over himself and the world, the name of Deity, and the name of the city of Deity, is to declare him a constituent of the name inscribed upon him. Messiah and his brethren are “joint heirs”— the eyes, and ears, and arms, and feet of Daniel’s Spirit-Man, whose name is YAHWEH-ELOHIM.
John says that the feet of this Man, whom he also saw in vision, are “like unto incandescent brass, as if they had been glowing in a furnace” (Rev. 1:15). The arms and the feet are sym
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bolized in brass to connect them with the temple-pattern of heavenly things. The altar of burnt-offering and the layer, and the two pillars of the temple-porch, and many other things pertaining to the Court of the Priests, were all of brass, or overlaid therewith. The brass pertaining to the temple was all holy. The Brazen Altar was “most holy,” so that whoever touched it was holy (Exod. 29:37; cp. Math. 23:19); no Israelite, however, was permitted to touch it unless he belonged to the seed of Aaron; and even they were not permitted to approach the altar till they had first washed their hands and feet in the Brazen Sea.
The Altar of Burnt-Offering prefigured the Messiah’s Body in sacrificial manifestation. The idea of an altar of sacrifice representing a personal and divine plurality is frequent in Scripture. Thus, Jacob erected an altar at Shalem, in the land of Canaan, and called it AIL-ELOHAI YISRAAIL, that is, the “Strength of the Mighty Ones of Israel” (Gen. 33 :20); and Moses, before the law was given, and in memory of the victory of Joshua over Amalek, “built an altar, and called the name of it YAHWEHNISSI”; that is, He shall be my Ensign—He who was symbolized by the altar (Exod. 17:15; Isa. 11:10, 12; 18:3; 31:9; Zech. 9:16).
This Yahwe/,-nissi-altar was superseded by an altar overlaid with plates of brass. These plates represented “the flesh of sin” purified by fiery-trial. “Gold, silver, brass, iron, tin and lead, everything,” said Moses, “that may abide the fire, ye shall make go through the fire, and it shall be clean; nevertheless, it shall be purified with the water of separation; ‘and all that abideth not the fire, ye shall make go through the water” (Num. 31:23). The connection of the plates with sin’s flesh, is established by their history. They were the “censers of those sinners against their own souls,” Korah, Dathan, Abiram and their company, two hundred and fifty of them, who rebelled against the Strength of Israel. He commanded Eleazar, Aaron’s son, to melt them, and roll them into broad plates, for “a covering of the Altar,” and “a sign to the children of Israel” (Num. 16:38). The Brazen Altar, which was four-square, had four Horns of Brass, one at each corner; and in sacrifice the blood was applied to the Horns by the Priest’s fingers; and the rest was all poured beside the bottom of the altar (Exod. 29:12). These Horns represent the same things as the Four Cherubims, the Four Carpenters, and the Four Living Ones, of Ezekiel, Zechariah, and John; only in the Brazen State which precedes the Golden Olahm, or Millennium. As Horns of Brass, they “execute the judgment written” as a consuming fire; for brass and offering by fire are the association of things in the type.
The Brazen Altar and its Horns of Brass, then, are symbolical of AlL, the Eternal power in Elohal, or sacrificial and judicial manifestation in flesh. “Eloah will come from Teman,” saith the prophet, “the Holy One from Mount Paran: consider!
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His glory covers the heavens, and His praise fills the earth: and the splendor shall be as the light; He has Horns out of His hand; and there is the covering of His Strong Ones. Before His faces shall go pestilence, and from his feet lightnings shall proceed. He stood, and measured the earth; He beheld and caused the nations to tremble; and the mountains of antiquity were dispersed; and the hills of the Olahm did bow; the goings of the Olahm are His” (Hab. 3:3-6).
The Horns of the Brazen and Golden Altars are His Eternal Spirit’s strong ones, who disperse the empires of antiquity, and subjugate the kingdoms of the latter days to Him and His Anointed; so that the current of the world’s affairs will be directed by His Elohim, in the ensuing thousand years, or Daniel’s “season and a time.”
The saints, then, are the brazen arms and feet of the Man of the One Spirit, who have all passed through the fire, and the water of separation, and been consecrated by the blood of the covenant; and “are partakers with the Altar,” even Jesus (I Cor. 9:13; 10:18; Heb. 13:10, 12); and those of them who have been slain, have been poured out “beside the bottom,” or “under the altar,” from whence the cry ascends to the Father, “How long, 0 Lord, holy and true, dost Thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell upon the earth?” (Rev. 6:10; 11:1). Hence, those who dwell upon the earth, being like Israel of old, grievous revolters, brass and iron, corrupters all (icr. 6:28), are to be cast into a furnace glowing with the heat of Yahweh’s indignation. Israel has been passing through the process for ages. They have been trampled under foot of the Gentiles in a great furnace of affliction; for punishment was to begin first at the Jew; and afterwards to be visited upon the brass and iron of the Gentiles. Ezekiel’s description of Israel’s punishment by Gentile agency will illustrate that of the Gentiles by the agency of Israel. under the direction of the men “whose feet are like incandescent brass, glowing in a furnace”; and will furnish an obvious interpretation of the text. “The word of Yahweh,” says the prophet. “came unto me, saying, Son of Man, the house of Israel is to me become dross; they are all brass, and tin, and iron, and lead, in the midst of the furnace; they are the dross of silver. Therefore, thus saith Yahweh Elohim, because ye are all become dross, behold, therefore, I will gather you into the midst of Jerusalem. As they gather silver, and brass, and iron, and lead, and tin, into the midst of the furnace, to blow the fire upon it to melt it, so will I gather you in my anger and in my fury! and I will leave you, and blow upon you in the fire of my wrath, and ye shall be melted in the midst thereof. As silver is melted in the midst of the furnace, so shall ye be melted in the midst thereof; and ye shall know
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that I, Yahweh, have poured out my fury upon you” (ch. 22: 18-20). Israel in the flesh are here compared to brass and other metals, full of dross. This drossy nature of the brass is the characteristic by which they are distinguished from “the fine” or “incandescent brass” of the Man of the One Spirit, or Israel in the Spirit, in glowing or burning operation upon the subjects of Yahweh’s fiery indignation.
Israel as dross is exemplified in the denunciations of the prophets. Their drossiness is seen in the abominations they practised in burning incense to reptiles and filthy beasts, and idols of every sort; in their women weeping for Tammuz, the Adonis of the Greeks; and in their worshipping the sun between the porch and the altar with their backs toward the temple of Yahweh (Ezek. 8:7, 8). They are still in the drossy state with the curse of Moses on them. With the exception of circumcision (which, however, was not from Moses, but from Abraham) they do nothing he commanded them to do; and, therefore, disregarding him, they necessarily reject Jesus, of whom he wrote. “Cursed is every one,” says Moses, “that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the law to do them.” Israel lives in the perpetual violation of the law, and yet seeks justification by that law, which only thunders the curses of mount Ebal in their ears. “Cursed be he,” saith Moses, “that taketh reward to slay an innocent person.” This Israel did in paying Judas thirty pieces of silver for the betraying of Jesus, and in their priests taking the price of blood returned to them, and purchasing therewith the Potter’s Field. The Pagan judge pronounced him faultless; and in this declaration convicts the Jewish nation of the crime of
“TAKING THE REWARD OF TREACHERY PAID TO EFFECT THE DEATH OF AN INNOCENT PERSON.” And the crime being committed, the people shouted the “Amen,” saying:
“Let his blood be upon us, and upon our children!” These
children, or posterity, are with us at this day — “the dross of silver in the
midst of the furnace of affliction, ‘left’
of Yahweh, and ‘melted’.’’
But, if Israel be the dross of silver, the Gentiles are the dross of brass, iron, lead, and tin. The Gentile dross is no purer than Israel’s. Israel boasts in Moses, and pays no regard to what he prescribes; and the Gentiles bepraise Jesus while their eyes are closed and their hearts steeled against his doctrine and commands; so that Jews and Gentiles are all guilty before God — they only excepted who believe the Gospel of the kingdom and obey it. They have all, therefore, to be gathered into a furnace glowing with intense combustion, before they attain to the blessedness that is to come upon all nations through Abraham and his seed. Jews and Gentiles must be “melted in the fire of Yahweh’s
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wrath,” which fire will burn through the operations of the arms and feet of the Man of the One — “the saints executing the judgment written,” and “treading the wicked as ashes under the soles of their feet.”
The furnace in which Israel will become molten brass is “the wilderness of the peoples,” where Yahweh saith He will plead with them face to face; rule over them with fury poured out, and purge out from among them the rebellious, whom He will not permit to enter into the Holy Land to live there in His sight under the government of His King—the Christ (Ezek. 20:33-44). When thus purged, the Jewish nation will be brass and silver well refined (Mal. 3:2-3). The rebellious dross will be cleaned out, and Anti-Mosaic-Judaism, by which they are now caused to wander out of the way, will have been destroyed from the earth. The refining furnace is the “time of Jacob’s trouble,” out of which he is to be delivered (Jer. 30:7); and though they are now “prostrate among the cattle pens,” they will be “the wings of the Dove covered with silver and her feathers with the brightness of fine gold” (Ps. 68:13).
But the Gentiles are to become molten brass as well as Israel. Their brass, therefore, is also to be gathered into the furnace, that it may be melted and refined in the fire of Yahweh’s wrath. The place of the furnace is also “the wilderness of the people,” that wilderness inhabited by the peoples, multitudes, nations, and tongues — the “many waters upon which the Great Harlot sitteth” — that John of Patmos refers to in Rev. 17: 1,15 - Portugal. Spain, France, Germany, Italy, Greece, Egypt: and, in short, all being the Mediterranean and Euphratean countries, being the territories of the four beasts of Daniel, constitute the furnace in which the Nebuchadnezzar gold, silver and brass, and iron, and clay----are made to glow with torrid heat of seven-fold intensity; and in which the four men of God — the Cherubim — walk to and fro, without hurt, “the fire having no power upon their bodies”: as symbolized by Nebuchadnezzar’s furnace, and by John’s mystical Son of Man, in Rev. 1:15: Dan. 3:19-27. The melting and refining the Gentile brass in this Babylonian furnace, incandescent with the wrath of Deity, is Daniel’s “time of trouble, such as never was, since there was a nation to that same time” (12:1). It is “the day that shall burn as an oven” (or furnace) which shall consume the proud and all that do wickedness, with their anti-Christian Gentilism, by which the peoples are deceived; but which shall have no power for evil against the people represented by Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego, and the one like the Son of God; they shall come forth unharmed, unsinged, unchanged and inodorous of the fire, For these are the daughters of Zion, to whom the Spirit saith: “Arise and thresh; for 11 will make thine horn iron,
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and I will make thy hoofs brass; and thou shalt beat in pieces many peoples; and I will consecrate their spoil to Yahweh, and their wealth to the Adon of the whole earth” (Mic. 4:13). So that while Israel is passing through the furnace under the conduct of the saints, and are themselves being purged from dross, they are also made use of by their commanders as a torch of fire among the sheaves, or a lion among flocks of goats (Mic. 5:8; Zech 12:6), to destroy the power and kingdoms of the world, after the allegorical example of their transit out of Egypt into the land of their inheritance; for though passing under the rod themselves, they became also a rod of iron in the hand of Yahweh for the destruction of the nations, whose iniquity was full.
“AND THE VOICE OF HIS WORDS AS THE VOICE
OF A MULTITUDE”
This is the last characteristic of the symbolic Man of the One Spirit, noted by the prophet Daniel. In John’s vision of the Mystic Christ, it is testified that “His voice was as the sound of many waters.” These “many waters” are Daniel’s “multitude”; for “many waters” signify, as apocalyptically explained, a multitude of people. In Ezekiel’s “visions of Elohim,” the voice of Daniel and John’s symbolic man comes from the wings of the cherubim. “I heard,” saith he, “the noise of their wings, like the noise of many waters, as the voice of Shaddai (Mighty Ones) in their goings, the voice of speech, as the noise of a camp; in standing, they let down their wings” (ch. 1:24). The meaning of this is, that Ezekiel heard the voice of a multitude of Mighty Ones, speaking as the warriors of a camp in motion against an enemy; and that when they were not in progress, their voice was not heard“in standing they let down their wings,” and, consequently, there was no sound of war. But the voice of Daniel and John’s symbolic man was heard as the roar of a multitude — the roaring of many waters; by which we are to understand that their Man of Multitude was in progress, leading on the body and wings of his brazen-footed battalions against the Fourth Beast, or the Apocalyptic Beast and False Prophet, and the kings of the earth and their armies; the former consumed in the furnace, or “lake of fire, burning with sulphur; and the kings and their armies slain with the sword of the resurrected and glorified Mystic Man” (Rev.19:19, 20).
Now, Daniel, as the representative of his people, saw the Spirit Man, while those who are no constituent part thereof see him not, but tremble before him, and flee, as the Old Adam did, “to hide themselves.”
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DANIEL’S SYMBOLICAL DEATH AND
The vision being apparent, Daniel is alone, after his companions have fled. At this crisis, the relation between the prophet and the man is peculiar. Daniel occupies the position of one dead — his vigor was turned into corruption, and he retained no strength; he was in a deep sleep on his face, and his face toward the ground, and destitute of breath (ch. 10:8, 9, 17). While in this symbolic death, the symbolical man, the symbolical associate of which is “Michael, one of the chief princes,” was near him. The man uttered his voice a voice to be responded to by the dead (John 5:25-29; Dan. 12:2), and Daniel heard it: “When I heard the voice of his words,” saith he, “then was I in a deep sleep on my face.” After the voice had awoke him to consciousness, the power of the Man raised him from his prostrate condition — “a hand touched me,” said he, “which raised me upon my knees, and the palms of my hands.” This is the attitude of a man in the act of rising up from sleep on or in the ground after he had awoke. He was then told to stand upright, for that the Man of the vision was sent unto him — He was sent of the Spirit to communicate to him certain things after his symbolical resurrection; for the things communicated in their crisis are to be accomplished after the literal resurrection of Daniel and his people by “Michael the Great Prince,” at the end of the 1335 days (ch. 12:1,2, 12, 13). Hearing the command to stand upright, he obeyed, and says “I stood trembling.” He was now alone in the presence of the august vision from which his attendants fled to hide themselves. He trembled; for though raised and erect upon his feet, he was not yet “in power.” But the Man who had raised him from the ground came again to him, and touched him, and said to him: “0 man, greatly beloved, fear not; peace be unto thee; be strong, yea, he strong.” Then Daniel no longer feared and trembled, but became symbolically incorruptible, immortal, strong; for when the Man of the One Spirit had spoken to him thus, he says, “1 was strengthened, and said, let my Adon (Lord) speak, for thou hast strengthened me.”
Here, then, was Daniel’s Lord in vision, seen also by Moses, Joshua, Isaiah, and Ezekiel. They all saw him as a man. The Spirit assumed this appearance in vision; and to represent to Daniel his future manifestation through the son of David as Prince of Israel, he, the Spirit, associates himself with the archangel Michael, whom he styles Daniel’s Prince. “Michael, one of the chief princes, came to help me.” saith the Spirit, “and I remained there on the side of the kings of Persia. I will shew that which is noted in the Scripture of truth; and there is none that holdeth with me in these things, but Michael, your prince.”
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But this Michael was not a son of man. He did not belong to the race of Adam, to which the dominion of the earth was originally and for ever given (Gen. 1:26). His viceregency therefore, could only be provisional. He had dominion over Israel as their prince until another personage should appear to assume the reins of government, who should be both Son of Man, Son of Abraham, and Son of David, to whom dominion over Israel and all other nations inhabiting the earth to its utmost hounds, has been decreed (Ps. 2:6-9; 8:6). Thus, as Jesus taught, “the Father hath committed all judgment to the Son, that all should honour the Son, even as they honour the Father, who hath given him authority to execute judgment, because he is a Son of Man” (John 5:22-27).
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pears from Jewish
history. But when the Son of the Eternal Spirit, born of a Jewess of the house
of David, was begotten from among the dead, the decree proclaims “Let all Elohim bow down to Hun.” This
was the person of whom it was said to Moses at the bush, Yahweh, that is, HE SHALL BE; and, concerning Him, David saith, in
the same Psalm, “Thou art Yahweh, Most High above all the earth; greatly hast
thou been exalted above all Elohim” (97:7, 9). This Yahweh was exalted by the
Father Spirit. He was the Eternal Form, and, therefore, “thought it no robbery
the being as God” saying “that God was his Father” (John 5:18). “He made
himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made
in men’s likeness; and being found in habit as a man, he humbled himself, and
became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross. Wherefore God also
hath highly exalted him, and even him a name which is above every name; that to
the name of Jesus every knee of heavenly ones and earthly ones, and
subterranean ones should how: and that every tongue should confess that the
anointed Jesus is Lord to the glory of God the Father” (Phil. 2:6-li). This
high exaltation of Yahweh by the Eternal Au placed him above the prince whom
Joshua saw, whose viceregency over Israel terminated
when the handwriting of the ordinances was nailed to the cross, and the principalities
and authorities it established were spoiled, and made a spectacle of publicly (Col. 2:14, 15), the mission of the
Mosaic Michael was consummated. Israel had “provoked Him”, and “He would not
pardon the transgressions.” He had expelled the ten tribes from Palestine,
where He had planted them, because of idolatry and its abominations; and now
because Judah, Benjamin, and their priests had crucified one to whom he hid
bowed, and would not accept pardon in His exalted name, He stirred up the Roman
Horn of the Goat against them, and would deliver them no more.
Such has been the
condition of Israel from that day to this. They have been abandoned by the Eternal’s Archangel Michael, “the Angel of His presence,
who saved them” (Isa. 63:9) in the days of antiquity; and they are repudiated
by the Second Michael, whom they crucified and pierced. So that now they are
“without a king, without a prince, without a sacrifice, without an erection,
without ephod and teraphim” (Hos. 3 :4), in short, without any “caphporeth”, or
covering for sin, and, therefore, under sentence of death, “being alienated
from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them.” What a pitiable
condition for a people, formerly Yahweh’s, to be in; a people, because
abandoned of God for a time, styled Lo-ruhahmah and Lo-ammi. Such are Israel’s names “till the times of the
Gentiles are fulfilled,” the nation that
has not obtained mercy: the nation that is not my people saith
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Yahweh (Hos. 1:6,
8,9). And how blind must be their Rabbis and Scribes, and the multitude led by
them, who “whatever may be the real character of the Christianity of the not
more enlightened Gentiles around them,” cannot see that Israel and Judah are
not the people of the Lord. The Eternal and “Michael their Prince” have turned
their backs upon them, and as their royal prophet predicted, “their sorrows
have been increased,” because “they have hasted after another” than he whom
they crucified, and God raised from the dead. As for him, the Nazarene, to whom
the angel of the Eternal’s presence bowed, he says
concerning them in their Lo-ammi state, “I will not
pour out their drink offerings of blood, nor will I take their names upon my
lips” (Psalm 16:4).
Well, then, the Mosaic
Aion, which was subject to angels, has long since vanished away; and the times
of the Gentiles also subjected to God or Elohim, are verging upon their close,
and a New Aion or Course of Time, and the new oikonomia or administration
of the oikoumene or habitable,
all constituting what Paul in Heb. 2:5, styles he oikeu,nene he mellousa,
“the Future Habitable,” rendered in the English version, “The World to Come,” concerning which,
he writes in the 1St and 2nd chapters, are about soon to
be revealed. This administration of the Habitable in the approaching Aion, is
the true CHRTSTIAN DISPENSATION, and is styled by the prophet Isaiah, “Zion’s
times,” in which “Yahweh is Israel’s judge, lawgiver, and king” (chap. 33 :6,
22). This dispensation, which is divided from the Mosaic by the long dreary,
intermediate night of Gentile and Jewish superstition, wickedness, and folly,
“is not subjected,” says Paul, “to the angels” to Michael, Gabriel, and other
“chief princes” (Heb. 2:5); but,
according to the teaching of Moses, David, Daniel, Jesus, and the apostles, to
the Son of Man and his associates —MESSIAH AND THE SAINTS. These, in
resurrected and glorious manifestation, are the Eternal Spirit manifested in
flesh in Spirit-flesh, or HOLY SPIRIT NATURE; and are styled by Paul in Rom. 8:
19, 23, “the manifestation of the Sons of God,” “the adoption, to wit, the
redemption of our body” — that, “one body of many members,” the ecciesia, which
is Christ’s body, the fulness of Him who filleth up
all things in all the saints (Eph.1:22, 23).
The germ of this one
body symbolized to Daniel. Ezekiel, and John, is Jesus of Nazareth, or “Michael
the Great Prince,” to whom “Michael one of the chief princes,” has done
obeisance, and “on account of whom are all things — dia hou ta pauta, and through whom are we” the saints kia hemeis dia autou (1 Cor. 8:6). Thus,
all things are “out of God,” and “for Him,” “on account of the Anointed Jesus,”
and “through Him.” If there
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had been no Jesus, Son
of David, and Son of God; or if, like Adam the first, he had been, but had
become a transgressor. there would have been no “One Body,” composed of saints
resurrected or otherwise. These are all IN HIM; but, if in his development,
he had not proved, like the brazen altar, most holy, he would not have imparted
holiness to all that touch him by laying hold upon him through the faith. But
becoming “partakers of the altar” by being “in
him,” they are holies or saints; and “through
Him” become “kings and priests for
God,” who has made him heir of all things (and they joint-heirs with him),
and therefore all things are “on account
of him,” and also “for their sakes.”
The anointed Jesus (not the dead body lying
in the sepulchre of the Arimathean Joseph) is eternal
power manifested in flesh; and, therefore, AlL, or in Saxon “God.” Now Mi-c/ia-Jo?— WHO-LIKE-TO-HIM among the
sons of the mighty? (Psalm 89:6). Therefore, because there is none to compare
with him the “child born” and the
“son given” to Judah, is styled in
Isaiah 9:6, AlL givbor, “the Mighty Power.” Hence, when he
appears in power and great glory to put a hook into the jaws of the leviathan,
to slay the dragon in the sea, and to raise the dead, it will be said of him, Mj-cha-el? Who like to God? to “Yahweh the
Man of War”? Who will contend with him? (Isaiah 50:8), with Jesus, the Eternal’s king of the Jews?
Jesus, then, the Son
of David and Son of the Eternal Power by David’s daughter, is Michael the great
Prince of Israel, who comes to redeem his kinsmen and their inheritance, and to
break in pieces their oppressors. But as he is not only a single individual,
but also one containing many — a
manifold man — whose symbolical number is 144,000; the many “in him” are
constituents of “Michael the Great Prince,” who delivers Israel in the time of
trouble which transcends all the calamitous periods of human history since the
Flood.
The Son of Man, then,
whom John of Patmos beheld in vision, was the Michael of Dan. 12: I — “the
.Alpha (or Eternal Spirit) and the Omega (Jesus and the saints) the Beginning
and the Ending, the ONE YAHWEH, who is and who was, and who is to come, the
Almighty.” “Yahweh,” says Moses, “is a Man of War.” Hence out of this manifold
Yahweh-Man mouth, John saw a sharp two-edged broad-sword going forth, that with it he should smite the nations (chap. 1:16;
19:15, 21). And when they are smitten, it is by a coup de soleil, for “his countenance is
as the sun shining in his strength,” not only dispelling the darkness, however,
but “enlightening the earth with his glory” (Rev. 18:1).
Now when John saw this
ALMIGHTY BODY POLITIC he became as dead at his feet — like Daniel, symbolically
dead;
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which represents that
what he saw is fulfilled at the termination of the death state; for he is
brought out of that state to write the things which shall be. When the things
signified by what he saw, shall be complete, the united voice of the many
waters will be, “I am the First and the Last! he that liveth and was dead; and
behold I am living for the cycles of the cycles; amen: I have the keys of the
invisible and of death” (Rev. 1: 18), and will there-for abolish death at the
end of the Millennium (Rev. 21:4).
SUMMARY
·
R.R.
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APPENDIX
In doing so, we again
direct attention to the comment of the late
J.W. Thirtle
(himself a Hebrew Scholar of no mean ability), published in The Christadeiphian
for May, 1881, reference to which is made in our Foreword. He declared:
“Some people, with
nothing better than a vague notion as to what Dr. Thomas’s writings on this
subject really amount to, have adjudged him in error on some points; and most
frequently a little examination has shown that the points of difference have
involved a difficult criticism or an investigation of matters beyond the
compass of those who have not seen their way to be content with dealing with
things which are within their reach. Others, however, convinced of the
impregnability of Dr. Thomas’s position, have been thankful for the plainly
expressed results of his labor and study, and grateful for the light he shed
upon the doctrine of God-manifestation and its many revealed phases; and this,
notwithstanding their individual inability to follow him in every stage of his
reasoning, owing to their own lack of the qualifications necessary to support
them in an adventure on the field of Biblical criticism - . . It will be patent
to any reader of Dr. Thomas’s works that he did not find his problems ready
worked out, neither were the difficulties he encountered already solved and
only waiting to be ‘re-hashed up.’... It is also clear to anyone having only a
slight acquaintance with current and recent literature on the subjects dealt
with by the Doctor, that hard study and careful investigation were required
before he could, in the lucid way he did, ‘open up the Scriptures’ to inquirers
after the way of life. Bringing to bear upon the subject of Cod-manifestation,
a knowledge of the revealed purpose of the Deity, he was well equipped for his
task of examining both the Old and New Testaments, and the position he
eventually assumed was so strong that we might reasonably believe that, in some
aspects and on some paints, at least, his deductions have been corroborated by
other, differently disposed or less enlightened, students of the Bible . .
We agree that a
slavish deference should not be given to Brother Thomas, but rather that his
expositions should be carefully considered in the light of Scripture. When that
is done fairly and without bias, readers will be thankful for the instruction
received, and will be drawn more closely to the Word itself.
Plural Titles Of God (see p.51)
The Hebrew words Elohim (God), Shaddai (Almighty), and Adonai
(Lord), are plural words selected by the Spirit to define God in manifestation,
and frequently, though not invariably, used with a verb in the singular number.
Thus, in Genesis 1:1: “In the beginning, God created the noun (Elohim)
is in the plural number, but the verb (bahrah) is in the singular number.
This is contrary to
the normal rules of grammar, which state that a noun and its verb must agree in
number. Theology explains this departure from the normal rule as expressing a
“plurality of eminence,” and when, in Genesis 1:26, God is represented as
saying: “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness,” it
explains the use of the plural word Elohim
with its plural pronouns, us and our, as the three members of the one God
(the Trinity) conferring among themselves.
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In Phanerosis, Brother Thomas shows that
God in multiplicity, not God in trinity, is the true Bible doctrine. He
demonstrates that the suggestion that the use of a plural word such as Elohim to express a “plurality of
eminence” such as Hastings Bible
Dictionary claims, is unsound. and states that the selection of plural
terms to define the Deity is deliberate and doctrinal, being a feature of the
theme of God-manifestation.
He explains the use of
the plural noun with a verb in the singular number (as in Genesis 1: 1), as
indicating that Yah’s agents, the Elohim or
angels, were moved by the “one spirit” that emanated from Him. The work of
creation, therefore, was His work, as a completed building is accounted the
work of an Architect, and a Master Builder, because they directed the
operations whereby it came into existence. The title Elohim, therefore, relates to Yahweh in manifestation (see Psalm
103:20). That is why the Scriptures refer to Jacob wrestling with God, Moses
talking face to face with God, and yet, at the same time, state: “No man hath
seen God at any time” (I John 4:12). None has seen the great lncreate, the’ El of the heavens, Yahweh Himself Who dwells
in unapproachable light; but many have seen manifestations of His power and
glory in the Elohim, or angels.
But here’ occurs a
difficulty. If the plural noun is used in regard to God wrestling with Jacob or
speaking with Moses, does it mean that more than one were present? By no means.
The Elohim of Genesis 32:30 is described as an angel by Hosea (Ch. 12:3-4). Why, then, the use of the
plural noun in Genesis? Because, as Brother Thomas points out Elohim is a noun of multitude and the
individual angel wrestling with Jacob, did so as officially representing the Elohim as a whole.. We use a similar
form of language when we make reference to the Ecciesia. The word is a noun of
multitude, and can represent one or more. When a person speaks officially on
behalf of the Ecclesia, he represents the community as a whole, even though he
be but one. Let several ecclesias appoint a representative, and the same principle
remains.
In that sense, the
plural term is used even of individuals when they are representing the
aggregate of the Elohim..
The distinction
between Yahweh and Elohim is revealed in the incident
recorded in Exodus 24. Moses was told that he, alone, “shall come near Yahweh”
(v.2), bit the elders of Israel were not permitted to do so. Yet, v.11 states:
“The nobles saw God (Elohim) and did
eat and drink.” Neither Moses nor the nobles saw the great Increate. The former
saw His glory revealed through an angel of authority (probably the one referred
to as bearing the Name according to Exodus 23:20). so that it is stated, “the
similitude of Yahweh he beheld” (Num. 12:8). On the other hand, the nobles of
Israel “saw God,” or Elohim of lower
status (though of the same physical constitution) as the one who appeared unto
Moses, as recorded in the earlier verse.
We have personally
considered nearly every instance where the word Elohim occurs in Scripture (it
is used considerably more than 2,000 times), and have found no difficulty in
interpreting its use in accordance with the suggestions contained in Phanerosis, whereas the suggestion of
Trinitarians that it defines “a plurality of eminence” (whatever that might
mean) would cause difficulty.
In a previous edition
of Phanerosis it is claimed in an Additional Note that occurrences where
the term Elohim obviously relates to
one individual “demand attention in studying the usage of the Divine titles.”
Five references are specifically advanced, and in case any reader might feel
embarrassed with these when studying Phanerosis,
we propose to provide an explanation of them consistent with Brother
Thomas’ exposition.
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It is claimed that
this verse shows that the term is not plural in intent. It reads: “See I have
made thee a god to Pharaoh, and Aaron thy brother shall be thy prophet.”
The word “god” is Elohim, the same word as is elsewhere
rendered “God.” How is the passage to be understood? The Companion Bible, in a marginal note, suggests that it signifies
“instead of God.” This is confirmed by Exodus 4:16, where it is written
concerning Moses: “He (Aaron) shall be thy spokesman unto the people: and . . .
thou shalt be to him instead of God.” The RSV has rendered both places “as
God”: “I have made thee as God to Pharaoh.”
However, the term Elohim could apply to Moses in that he
appeared before Pharaoh in an official capacity, representing both the Elohim of heaven who would bring the
plagues upon Egypt, as well as the nation of Israel who are elsewhere described
as “the body of Moses.” As Moses before Pharaoh represented the people as a
whole (as Christ before Yahweh represents his people) the plural term can
properly apply: particularly as he was associated with Aaron in his approach to
Pharaoh.
This reference reads:
“For Yahweh your Elohim is Elohei of Elohim. and
Adonai of Adonai, a great El, the mighty and the terrible
“Here,” comment the
critics, “it would appear that
Jehovah, Elohim. Adonim and El are all used of the
one ‘great God,’ whilst the name Jehovah and one of the titles is singular, and
two titles are plural.”
It is true that both
plural and singular titles are here used in relation to Yahweh, but that is
because they refer to Him in different aspects and manifestations. When the
verse is read in the light of the exposition contained in Phanerosis, the following thoughts emerge:
“Yahweh your Elohim” This signifies that Yahweh will be manifested
in a multitude identified with Israel.
“Is Elohei of Elohim”
-..-
Or Elohim of Elohim
(rendered “God of gods”). Two orders of Elohim are indicated, one higher than
the other. The Scriptures refer to the angels of heaven as Elohim, and the
rulers of Israel as Elohim (Ps. 82:6). The former have been placed over the
latter(Exod. 23:20). but their authority stems from Yahweh.
“Adonai of Adonim” — Two forms of the same plural word, and again
indicating two orders of Lords or Rulers: one in heaven and the other on earth.
A great El” — Behind the multiple manifestation of power (Elohim) and authority
(Adonai) there is the great Increate providing the Source of all strength and
rule. He is one, but is manifested multitudinously:
and that requires
titles both in the singular as well as in the plural numbers.
The angels of heaven
can well be described as the God of gods, or Elohim of Elohim because,
receiving power from El or Yahweh, they energize the called on earth (described
as gods, Ps. 82:6; John 10:34) that have been given into their charge (Heb. 2:5; Malt. 18:10).
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Psalm 82:1
It is suggested by
some that here, the plural term Elohim must
relate to Yahweh personally; but why should it? There is no difficulty in understanding
this passage in the light of God-manifestation. The word Elohim occurs twice, and relates in both instances to the same people:the rulers of Israel. Jesus endorsed this when he
declared to the Jews that the Scriptures “called them gods, unto whom the word
of God came” (John 10:34-35), and he was specifically referring to this Psalm.
The rulers of Israel are called Elohim(Gods)
in several places in Scripture, because the authority they wielded came from
heaven. Israel, in fact, constituted the “congregation of El,” as this Psalm indicates. It can be read: “Elohim (Mighty Ones the rulers of Israel) are in the congregation
of El (the Increate); He (i.e. El) judgeth among the Elohim (Mighty
Ones).”
The obvious meaning is
that though the Elohim of Israel constituted
the congregation of El, He was
judging among them, and as the subsequent verses of the Psalm show, they would
be cast down from their positions of eminence, to die like common men (v.6).
Psalm
45:7
Concerning this
reference, it is claimed:
“An outstanding
illustration of the use of Elohim as a singular noun although plural in form,
is in Psalm 45: ‘Thy throne, 0 God is for ever…God, thy God, hath anointed thee
with the oil of gladness above thy fellows.’ Here we have Elohim three times,
and its singular usage is beyond question when the reference is to the Mighty
One of v.3, and it is difficult to think of it as other than a singular noun
when applied to the God (Elohim) that anoints and exalts the Elohim upon whom
the sceptre is bestowed . . . .“
There would be some
validity in this criticism if Brother Thomas set forward the view that Elohim related to a multitude of beings
acting independent of each other. That is not his interpretation of the word in
its plurality. He viewed it as indicating the One Eternal Spirit multitudinously
manifested. The word is compounded of roots that signify “mighty ones” united
together as one; and this idea is strengthened when the plural noun is used
with a singular verb. Thus, as indicated earlier, Jacob wrestled with Elohim
(Gen. 32:30), which Hosea describes as an “angel” (Hos. 12:4).
Why use a plural noun
to describe an angel? Hastings’ Bible Dictionary
suggests that the plural emphasizes the eminence of the one referred to;
but that hardly explains why an unnamed angel should be so treated! But if that
angel wrestled with Jacob as the representative of his fellows in heaven, the
plural term is appropriate.
Psalm 45 states that “Elohim anointed Christ.” By Elohim we understand Yahweh in
multitudinous manifestation. Did not Yahweh, through the angels, His Elohim, anoint the Son? Who can doubt
it? The anointing took place after the resurrection of the Lord, and was
performed by angels supervised by Yahweh. Did not the Elohim remove the stone from the sepulchre, revive the body, and
clothe it with immortality?
The answer is
not in doubt.
Psalm 45, however, applies the plural term to
the Lord Jesus; on
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what grounds can it do
so? On the same principle as suggested above.
Was the Lord anointed
on his own behalf merely, or on behalf of those “in him”? Undoubtedly the
latter. Scripture represents Christ as both an individual and a community. As a
community the brethren of Christ are “the anointed” being “in him,” that is, in
the Christ, or the Anointed (2 Cor. 1:21; 1 John 2:27).
In this they have been
anointed or Christed in him above their fellows of
the Adamic race. This will apply even more so in, the Age to come when they
shall experience the full anointing of being ,changed into spirit nature, and
will thus inherit blessings above those of their mortal contemporaries who will
enjoy the privilege of Christ’s reign.
What is the
difference between Ehyeh and Yahweh?
Ehyeh is the verb, and Yahweh is the noun. If this is accepted, (and it can
only be disputed by those who reject the inspiration of the Bible), the
prophetic significance and pronunciation of the Name, Yahweh, is beyond all
doubt.
Doubt has been thrown
on both by those who reject the declaration of Exodus 3:14-15 as inspired.
Ehyeh is the future form of the verb, to be. In Exodus 3:12, two verses before
the declaration of the Name, we read that the Eternal Spirit, speaking through
the Elohim said to Moses: Ki e/zyelu irnmok: “Certainly I will be with thee.” Yet, in v.14,
the same verb is rendered “I am.”
It has been
observed:
“Out of over forty
other occurrences of this first person, singular number, future tense of the
verb, in such a grammatical position as to make it allowable to draw a
comparison with this verse . . . . there is only one instance of ‘Ehyeh’ being
rendered ‘I am’ in the A.V. We have ‘I will be’ 27 times, and the remaining
occurrences represented by ‘will I be,’ ‘I shall be,’ ‘shall I be,’ ‘though I
be,’ etc.”
The fact that Moses
was instructed to tell the Israelites that Ehyeh had sent unto them, and then that
Yahweh had instructed him, would indicate that both forms of the Name were used
by God. He used the name Ehyeh, I will be, when speaking of Himself (“Thou
shalt say unto the children of Israel, Ehyeh hath sent me unto you” — Exod.
3:14), but directed that Yahweh be the form of the name when used by others
(“Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel. Yahweh ... hath sent me” — v.15). In either case, what He will be
is left unexpressed.
It is claimed that the
Hebrew verb ehyeh does not mean “to be,” so much as “to
come to be.” Hebrew has no real verb of “being,” but one of “becoming.” Thus,
in selecting this verb, Deity proclaimed His intention of becoming or
extending Himself, or His being in others. He was, like a Father proclaiming
His intention of extending Himself in a family, the firstborn of which is the
Lord Jesus who now manifests the fulness of the Divine glory mentally, morally
and physically. What he is now, we can become.
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The explanations
of this apparent anomaly that are generally advanced are:
1. He was not “known” by the Name in the fullest sense, though the
Name had been proclaimed. Thus it is suggested that it was “known” as a Name
but not “understood” or “appropriated” in the fullest sense of the word.
2. The Name was quite unknown prior to the revelation to Moses, and he, as the author of Genesis, introduced it wherever appropriate.
The first suggestion
hardly seems appropriate to the circumstances. It is difficult to imagine that
Abraham, the father of the faithful, of whom Christ declared: “He saw my day
and was glad,” did not fully understand the Name he used. In fact, his use of the name in Genesis 22, would
reveal the very reverse, if in fact he used it.
This leaves the second
alternative, But how could Moses introduce it into the conversation of the
Patriarchs, or as the name of a place (Gen. 22:14) if it were entirely unknown?
We suggest that the
principle, or doctrinal import, of the Name was well known to the Patriarchs,
though God at that time had not appropriated it to Himself. They worshipped El
Shaddai (Exod. 6:3) whom they believed would reveal Himself in a Son and sons.
In fact, this had been proclaimed in the declaration of Genesis 3:15. The one promised was to be the
“seed of the woman,” not of a man; which shows that God had to become manifest
in flesh! This is what was commonly believed by the faithful, so that to their
minds, the One they worshipped was He who would become manifested in flesh. The
common Hebrew verb e/uyeh
could well be used to define their belief, for as the late Bro. C. C.
Walker observed: “though but one word in the Hebrew, it is in itself a complete
sentence.” Eve, therefore, could have used either ehyeh or yahweh as common words in Gen. 4:1, as
expressing her mind of the intentions of the One she worshipped; and this could
be the case with other places such as Gen. 4:26; 22:14, etc.
It was not until Moses
was sent down into Egypt, however, that Deity formally took the verb ehyeh and made Yahweh His Memorial Name, which thence onwards was used to identify
Himself with His purpose.
Brother Thomas writes
of the equality of Christ with God, quoting from John 10:33-36. The equality of
Christ with God or Yahweh is inferred in Philippians 2:6. But what is meant by
it? Not an equality of status (see 1 Cor. 15:28), but of nature; and to that
equality all can attain (Rom. 5:2; 2 Pet. 1:4; Rev. 3:12).
This is made clear on
p.69 of Phanerosis. The point of the
argument which Jesus had with the Jews was whether Messiah was to be of God or
only of David; whether he was to be “of Deity, or of mere humanity.” If he were
to have been simply son of David, “then he would be equal in natural descent,
and inferior in rank” inasmuch as “fathers take precedence of sons.”
131
Jesus was begotten
from above; so must all those who would be sons of God (Jhn.
3:3 mg.); he submitted to his flesh being crucified, and in doing so denied it
to serve His God; and so must all those who would attain unto an equality with Christ
by attaining unto Divine nature. They become “heirs of God, and joint-heirs
with Christ; if so be that they suffer with him; that they may be also
glorified together” (Rom.8:17).
Brother Thomas is very
careful to disclaim any connection with Trinitarian error, when writing of the
“equality of Christ with God.”
The Son Of Man Ascending Up Where He was Before
The “hard sayings” of
John 6 caused many disciples to turn from the Lord Jesus (v.60), and have been
the cause of much controversy since.
On the grounds that
Jesus taught that he “came down from heaven” (v.38), many have claimed that he
had corporeal pre-existence before his birth of Mary. In Phanerosis, Brother Thomas beautifully expounds upon this chapter,
and his words of exposition should be carefully heeded.
The Lord’s discourse
in the Capernaum synagogue. stemmed from the statement of the Jews who quoted
from Nehemiah 9:15: “He gave them bread from heaven to eat.” They referred to
the manna provided in the wilderness, and which Nehemiah described as “bread
from heaven.”
In reply, the Lord
declared that “the bread of God is he (R.V. —that) which cometh down from
heaven, and giveth life unto the world,” and then claimed: “I am the bread of
life”: “I came down from heaven.”
The context shows that
he meant that he came down from heaven the same as did the manna in the days of
Moses,
How was that “bread from heaven” provided?
Obviously the
latter.
That, also, was the
way the “true manna” was provided: “The Holy Spirit shall come upon thee, and
the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee; therefore also that holy thing
which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God” (Luke 1:35).
Jesus had no corporeal
pre-existence before his birth, but he nevertheless “came down from heaven” in
the sense that he was heaven-provided. He explained this by stating during the
latter part of his discourse: “It is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh
profiteth nothing” (John 6:63).
It is significant that
the Lord stated that it would be the “Son of man” that would ascend, and not
the Son of God (John 6:62). He was obviously referring to Daniel 7: 13, and
identifying himself with the one to which reference is there made. It is
obvious, however, that the Son of Man did not pre-exist as such, and his words
can only mean that the Spirit which was poured out upon Mary to beget the Son, would
ascend in a new form: as Son of Man. His words can be paraphrased: “What if ye
shall see the Son of man ascend up where he, the Spirit, was before? It us the
spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing.”
The title Son of Man defines Christ as the Judge
(see John 5:27). There was a
threatening note in the Lord’s discourse, therefore, when he used this title.
What would they do when they saw the one they refused
132
elevated as judge over
all! Further, he had told them that they must eat his flesh and drink his
blood; or absorb into their beings all that is represented thereby. They
misunderstood him to mean a literal eating. He now revealed that such was not
what he meant, for the Son of Man must ascend up where the spirit was before.
It was the spirit-word that they had to consume, and it comprised the teaching
he delivered unto them: “the words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and
they are life.”
This is true of the
doctrine of God-manifestation. It is a teaching that is worthy of our closest
attention, one that we must understand, and manifest in action, if we would
form part of the Yahweh Name (Isa. 30:17) in the Age to come.
133
1’l 51 52 16,22
126 45 47 54 121 1638 115
214 98 18,17 104
3 5 44 65 31
23 115
3:15 70,
71, 76 DEUTERONOMY
3:22 65 6:3 68
3:24 87. 98 6:4 62
4,1 71 18:15-19 75
5:3 47 18:18 76
9:18 96 28:58 114
11:7 45 30:3-10 96
14:22 42 32:20 28
17:1 42 32:29-43 101
17:3 42 33:22 101
17:8 42 33:27 110
17:11 JOSHUA
18:1-5 5:14 121
21:22-32 96 10:25-26 111
23:6 44
26:26-30 96 1 SAMUEL
28:13 . 58 2:25 . 45
30:8 . 45 2 SAMUEL
31:30, 32 . 45 7:14 ., 73
31:43-54 . . 96 7:19 74
32:30 94 23:5.7 7:6
33:20 . 43, 115
1
KINGS 45
35:2, 4 45
491618 101 115
2
KINGS
EXODUS 6:17 95
3:14 53,
57, 58
3:14.15
59, 63 1 CHRONICLES
4:22-23 73 16:22 90
6:3 42,
53, 57, 63 17:13
13:1, 13-15 105 17:17 74
13:14 . 105 28:18 .
89
15 . 111 NEHEMIAH
15:3 107 9:20,30 .
28, 90
17:15 115 JOB
21:6 45 5-13 . 32
22:8-9 . . . .. 45 11,7-9 38
23:20-23 . 121 12,6 44
24:10 60,
64 19:26 . .‘ 44
28:42-43 99 22:12 44
29:12 115 33:4 49:
53
29:37 43,115 34:14 49
30:25 . 90 35:9 46
33:18-20 60 37:10 .53.
33:20 94 38:7 50
34:6 60
PSALMS
34:14 60 2 .
. 33, 75
34:20 105 2:6-9 121
35:12 47 8:3 54
LEVITICUS 8:6 121
21:12 90 14:1-2 39
25:23 105 16:4 123
25:25-34 105 18,8.16 103
18:10 .
88, 89 43:10,
11 50
18:16 76 44:8 a
18:31 44 44:6 51
18,32 112 44:28 41
18:34 110 45:1 .41
18,47 112 45,1-4
18:49 112 49:2 82
30:9 86 45:18 52
38 86 49:6
40,6 84, 86 49:2 82
41,4, 8 86 50:8 124
45,9-11 100 54:5 68, 100
45:16 113 55:4 111
50 96 58,12 75
51,12 48 62:3 106
58,10-Il 113 63:9 122
68,13 118 64,1-4 104
68,16 91 JEREMIAH
68,18 91,97 6:28 116
75,10 113 15:16
84
76:12 113 22,18-20 117
80 89 23:6 68, 97
82,8 113 33:16
68
86,16 111 30:7 118
89 110 51:20 105
89,6 . 124
977 52, 122 LAMENTATIONS
97,9 122 4,2 100
103:20 51, 93 EZEKIEL
104:3 .
88 1,10
65, 102
104:1-5 93 1,12
89
110 , 73 1,14 89, 102, 109
114:7 44 1,20 109
116:16 . 76, 111 1,24 67, 89, 119
119:97-104 83 3,3-4
60
132:11-18 74 5:11 107
132:12-14 75 8:7, 8 117
139:7-12 49 10:12 109
144:6 .
. 104 20:33-44
110, 118
148:14 113 28:12-19 92
149 . .
113 31,11 42
37:10 104
PROVERBS 43:4 65
30:4 53
SONG DANIEL
5:16 60 2,34, 35, 44, 45 102
ISAIAH 319-23 118
6:8 45 4:26
96
9:5 42 7:9-10 60, 67, 101
9,6 124 7:11, 12 109
11,2-5 82 8:15-18
96
11:10, 12 115 9:20-23
96
18:3 115 9:24
81
28,5-6 106 10:5-9
96
29:13 33 10:8 98, 120
30:27 114 10,9, 17 120
31:9 115 10:16
97
33,6, 22 123 10:18 97,
98
37:16 89 12:1 118, 120, 121, 124
40:10 110 12:2 120, 121
41 :14-16 105 12:12, 13 120
HOSEA 6:45 ‘84
1:6, 8, 9 123 6:46 56
3,4 122 6:56 84
11,1 73 6:63 ..
47, 84
JONAH 6:68 79
33 7:16 43, 78
7:17 78
MICAH 8:15 . 83
5:8 .. ... . . 107, 119 3,1718 43
HABAKKUK 8:28 31, 32, 40, 79
1:11 44 10:33-36 ... . 30,69
3:3-6 . 116 1245 .
.. 47
3:8, 15 89 12:48-49 79
ZECHARIAH 14:9
. 47
3:8-9 . 47, 107 14,23-24 79
108 173 31 71
9:9.16 . 104, 106, 107, ~ 17,8, 9, 14, 17 31
11:10-13 17: 114
12,6 . 118 17,2
MALACHI ACTS
2:15 . • ..
45 1,8 44
3,2-4 108, 118 3:23
. . 78
4,2 110 5:31 50
4,13 . 119 7,3~ 58
MATTHEW 17:27 49
1,23 83
12,19, 23 80 ROMANS
12,28 ..
54 1:19 38
19:17 . 41 3:11 39
22:41-46 .
59 8,19 123
23:18 43 8,23 .
67, 123
23:19 .
. 114 8:28 . . 93
24:31 96 9:5 30
MARK 9,33 46
6:3 83 11,25 101
12,29-34 40,
68 11:33-36 38
13:32 11,36 46
131
LUKE 16:25 39
2,13-14 61
2,40, 46-52 83 1 CORINTHIANS
3:38 72 1,21 .
39
8,15
80 2,6-16 28
8:26 80 2:7-8 39
11:20 54 2:9 104
JOHN 3:21 104
1:1, 30 90 8:4-7 40
1:18 .. 56 8:6 46,
123
1:32 .
98 9:13 116
4,24 10:18 116
5,18 30
122 15:24 74
519 ‘
48 15:27 91
5,21 2
CORINTHIANS
5,22-27 121 4:14 111
5:25-29 .
120 4,15 104
5:30 ~
48 5:17 112
5:47 71 6:16, 18 91
6:38 83 13,5 36
GALATIANS I PETER
2:20 .
36 1:7 100
5:6 36 1:11 .... 28,90
6.15 112 1:12 93
EPHESIANS 2
PETER
1,22-23 . 101,
123 1:1 100
2:15 112 1:20-21 . 21,
46
3:17 36, 61, 84 1
JOHN
4,3, 13..16
98 2:20, 27 90
4:4 ... 53, 98 3:8
. 35
4,6 . 91 5:6 31
4,18 32 30
4:24 112 5:20 31
6’Il 82
6:17 82 REVELATION
1:4-5 109
PHILIPPIANS 1:7
. 89
26-11 30,
122 1:13-15 67, 89, 114, 118
3,20 30 1:16 . 83,
124
3:21 83 1:18 125
COLOSSIANS 2:25 114
1:15 . 47 3:12 114
2:14.15 .. 122 3:21 114
3:9-10 ... 31 4:5 65
4:6 109
I THESSALONIANS 4:7
. 102
1,1 61, 114 5:6
. . 109
1,14 . 93 5:11 60
4:17 . 89 6:10 116
2 THESSALONIANS 7:9,
14, 17 67
1:7-9 103 7:15 . 91
1 TIMOTHY 11:1 116
3,16 . 11,15 110
6:3-4 80 14.4
6:15 40, 95 14.8-11 110
6:16 47, 56, 95 14:10 88
HEBREWS 15 111
15:2 . . 65
15:6 ..
i,6 52 16,12
25 123 16,14 107
27 i i 17,1, 15
17,4 . .. . 99
2: 17,14 95, 110
2: 18,8 99,
110
42 19,14 .
89, 99, 111
82 19,15 .
83, 124
10,5 84, ~ 119
1: 100 19,20 88, 119
42
13,10-13 ~ 116 21:3 91
JAMES 21,4 .. . . . 125
2,22 100 21:20 . 101
3,14-15 34 22:16 50