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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51888 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51888)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The New Eschatology, by J. G. Broughton Pegg
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The New Eschatology
- Showing the Indestructibility of the Earth and the Wide
- Difference between the Letter and Spirit of Holy Scripture.
-
-Author: J. G. Broughton Pegg
-
-Release Date: April 29, 2016 [EBook #51888]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE NEW ESCHATOLOGY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Donald Cummings, Bryan Ness, Chris Pinfield
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
-Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note.
-
-Apparent typographical errors have been corrected.
-
-Italics are indicated by _underscores_. Small capitals have been
-converted to full capitals.
-
-In the list of the publisher's other books, at the end of the work, the
-first line of each entry sometimes comprises only part of the title and
-sometimes extends beyond the title. The entire first line has been
-italicised in the original. In this version only the title has been
-italicised.
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- NEW ESCHATOLOGY.
-
- SHOWING
-
- THE INDESTRUCTIBILITY OF THE EARTH
-
- AND
-
- THE WIDE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE LETTER AND
- SPIRIT OF HOLY SCRIPTURE.
-
- BY J. G. BROUGHTON PEGG.
-
- [Illustration: Behold He Cometh with Clouds; The Word]
-
- PHILADELPHIA
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO.
- 1872.
-
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO.,
- In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
-
- LIPPINCOTT'S PRESS,
- PHILADELPHIA.
-
-
-
-
-NOTE.
-
-
-This little work was published in England several years ago; but has
-never before been republished in this country. It deals with those texts
-of Scripture which have generally been supposed to foretell the
-destruction of the material universe; and shows conclusively that these
-passages have been entirely misunderstood by commentators; and that,
-rightly interpreted, they have no reference whatever to the outer realm
-of matter, but to the inner realm of mind; to the internal condition of
-the church, the loss or destruction of heavenly charity, and the eclipse
-of genuine faith, which it was foreseen and foretold would occur at the
-close of the first Christian Dispensation.
-
-It is proper to add, also, that, although the name of Swedenborg nowhere
-occurs in the book, it is evident that the author was familiar with his
-teachings, and viewed and treated his subject from the Swedenborgian
-stand-point. But with the lovers of spiritual truth and the seekers
-after a Spiritual Christianity, this fact--now that so many earnest
-inquirers are beginning to read the writings of the Swedish seer--will
-rather add to than detract from the interest and value of the work.
-
- AMERICAN EDITOR.
- PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 30, 1871.
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
- NEW ESCHATOLOGY.
-
-
-_For the first heaven and the first earth were passed away; and there
-was no more sea_.--REV. xxi. 1.
-
-While we blame the conduct of the Jews in adhering only to the literal
-sense of the Scriptures, and by such adherence rejecting their Messiah,
-we possibly forget that the Christian church has followed precisely the
-same line of conduct; and that to this we are indebted for the greater
-part of those absurd dogmas, which have so long exposed the Gospel to
-the derision of its enemies. Had men properly discriminated between
-those parts of the Sacred Volume which are _literally_ true, and those
-which are only _apparently_ so, we should never have heard of the
-doctrines of transubstantiation and Roman supremacy; nor of many other
-equally absurd beliefs which the generality of Christians entertain. We
-should not have seen a fallible and weak mortal exalted as Head over the
-church of God; we should not have heard of a morsel of bread being
-changed into the Lord's body; we should not have seen the Divine Nature
-divided among three separate and distinct Persons; nor should we have
-heard of the doctrine which we are about to bring under consideration.
-
-But do not mistake me. When I assert that the Scriptures in the literal
-sense sometimes speak only apparent truth, I by no means deny the divine
-authority of the Sacred Record. The church whose doctrines I advocate,
-most explicitly declares that the _whole_ of the Scriptures,--every
-chapter,--every verse,--every word, nay, sometimes every _letter_--is
-filled with the inbreathed wisdom of God. But when I say that apparent
-and not _real_ truths are often laid down in the letter of the Word, I
-affirm what every man who possesses any share of discernment will
-readily admit. The fact itself is too plain even to require proof. Thus
-we read that the sun rises, moves, and sets; which is certainly true in
-_appearance_, but not in reality. Again we are told that the LORD
-repents,--that He is weary, and that He turns away His face from man;
-which, though correct as regards appearance, has no foundation in
-literal fact; for though the Sun of Righteousness is said to rise upon
-the soul, and to set when the mind is given up to evil, yet it is here
-as in the case of the _material_ sun. In God "there is no variableness
-nor shadow of turning;"--"He fainteth not, neither is _weary_;"--"He is
-not a man that He should lie, nor the son of man that He should repent;"
-but as the earth, by turning to or from the sun, causes the appearance
-of motion in that body; so the mind of man, by turning to the Lord, or
-by departing from Him, causes an appearance of change in God; yet it is
-not He that changes, but the mind itself.
-
-And we may go still further. There are numerous passages in the Word of
-God, which in the literal sense only, do not convey even _apparent_
-truth. Among others the following, "Thou ridest through them with thine
-horses." "He rode upon a cherub and did fly; He came flying upon the
-wings of the wind." "He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood,
-dwelleth in me and I in him;" "for my flesh is meat indeed, and my blood
-is drink indeed." "This (bread) is my body; this cup is the New
-Testament in my blood." "If thy right hand offend thee, cut it off and
-cast it from thee." "I am the Door of the sheep." "I am the true vine,
-and my Father is the Husbandman." In all these passages, and others
-which will occur to every reader of the Scripture, the literal sense
-conveys neither real nor apparent truth. The Lord does not really ride
-through the sea, nor does he even _appear_ to do so. The flesh of the
-Saviour was not to be _literally_ eaten. The bread which He held was not
-really his body, nor did it even _seem_ to be so. And as in these and
-similar instances, the outward letter of the Word conveys not its true
-meaning, it is to be sought for in the law of correspondence; or in that
-eternal connection which subsists between natural things and spiritual.
-
-And upon this law of correspondence or analogy I must make a few
-preliminary remarks. It is what the world in general terms _figure_, or
-_metaphor_; but the New Church makes a distinction, and I will add,
-a very just one, betwixt _figure_ (properly so called) and
-_correspondence_. Figurative language is that in which a comparison is
-drawn between one natural object and another; the analogy between which
-exists only in the imagination, and has, therefore, no _real_ existence:
-but correspondence is the representation of spiritual things by natural;
-and the resemblance is not merely imaginary but real, consisting in the
-proper dependence of the latter upon the former, as an effect upon its
-cause. If we compare a mighty empire in its rise, glory, and decline, to
-an oak springing up, flourishing for centuries, and then decaying, we
-use _figurative_ language; since both the empire and the oak are
-_natural_ objects, which have no _real_ connection with each other, and
-between which the resemblance is only imaginary. But when the Creator is
-likened to the sun, the language is no longer _figurative_ but
-_correspondent_. It is not the comparison of earthly things with
-earthly, but of spiritual things with natural. And the objects compared
-have a real connection with each other, since the material sun depends
-on its Creator as an effect upon its cause. Again, when the church is
-described as the Lord's body, the language is correspondent and the
-connection real; for the rise and prosperity of the church depended upon
-the assumption of humanity by the Saviour; and it still hangs upon it as
-the cause of its existence.
-
-We further notice that all passages of the Word, the historical as well
-as the poetical, bear within them such a correspondent or internal
-sense. This will be placed beyond a reasonable doubt if we consider,
-first, that "all Scripture," whether historical or prophetic, is,
-according to the Apostle, inspired or _God-breathed_. And as the breath
-of God is the infinitude of his love and wisdom, every portion of the
-sacred Volume must be filled with it. Not only every book in general,
-but every verse and every sentence;--for if we can find a single
-sentence which does not contain within itself the infinite wisdom of
-God, such sentence must either form no part of the Scripture, or the
-assertion of Paul must be untrue. And secondly, the Word of God from the
-beginning to the end is intended to "make us wise unto salvation." This
-is the design with which every part of it was written. But we can only
-become truly wise by being acquainted with our own state, and with the
-nature of the Divine Redeemer. Whatever part, therefore, does not relate
-both to God and to ourselves, cannot communicate saving wisdom; and
-consequently, (if the Apostle be correct,) cannot form any portion of
-the Sacred Volume. Now, independently of the passages which we have
-before quoted, the greater part of what is called "the historical Word,"
-consists, in its mere _outward form_, of the records of the Jewish
-nation, their wars, and their policy. The prophecies themselves in their
-literal and obvious meaning, refer to the rise and decline of earthly
-states, and to the mutation of earthly empires. Either, then, such
-records and prophecies must have an internal and correspondent meaning,
-relating to spiritual and divine things, or if they have not, they
-cannot be fitted to communicate saving wisdom, and so cannot be
-accounted part of the Scriptures; seeing that the _Scriptures_ in every
-part, are, according to Paul, filled with this wisdom.[1]
-
-If, then, there _are_ parts of the Word of God, the true meaning of
-which is not to be found in the literal sense; if that Word contains,
-within the outward letter, a spiritual and internal meaning; and if we
-are to resort to such meaning where the letter gives not the true one;
-the next inquiry which arises is, How are we to determine when a passage
-is true in the literal sense, or when it is only true in the
-corresponding one? The answer is easy. When the outward meaning of any
-passage asserts something at variance with reason,--or when it appears
-opposed to the known character of God, then such meaning must be
-abandoned, and the truth sought in the internal sense. This answer has
-been admitted as correct by the Protestant churches, in their contest
-with their Catholic neighbors. The latter argue that the words of our
-Lord, "This is my body," are to be literally understood; while the
-former very justly answer that, since such an interpretation is opposed
-to reason and at variance with the nature of God as a God of truth, it
-ought to be and must be rejected; and the words considered as
-_figurative_, or as I have already termed it, _correspondent_.
-
-I have now proved a few preliminary points: _First_, that there are some
-portions of the Word of God, the true meaning of which is not to be
-found in the letter. _Second_, that when the literal sense of a passage
-is opposed to fact and reason, such literal sense is to be rejected. And
-_third_, that in such cases the interpretation must be sought in the
-correspondent or figurative meaning.
-
-We turn now to what is commonly denominated "the End of the World;" and
-on stating the generally received doctrine on this subject, we shall
-quote the words of the celebrated John Wesley, both on account of his
-piety and learning, and because the views which he maintains may be
-fairly taken as those of the generality of Christians. First he observes:
-
-"There shall be earthquakes, not in divers places only, but in _all
-places_; not in one part only, but in every part of the habitable world.
-In one of these every island shall flee away, and the mountains will not
-be found. Meanwhile all the waters of the terraqueous globe will feel
-the violence of these concussions. The sea and the waves roaring, with
-such an agitation as had never been known before since the hour that
-`the fountains of the great deep were broken up' to destroy the earth,
-which then stood 'out of the water and in the water!' The air will be
-all storm and tempest, full of dark vapors, and pillars of smoke
-resounding with thunder from pole to pole, and torn with ten thousand
-lightnings. But the commotion will not stop in the region of the air:
-the powers of heaven also shall be shaken. 'There shall be signs in the
-sun and in the moon, and in the stars;' those fixed as well as those
-that move round them. 'The sun shall be turned into darkness, and the
-moon into blood, before the great and terrible day of the Lord come.'
-'The stars shall withdraw their shining,' yea, and 'fall from heaven,'
-being thrown out of their orbits. And then shall be heard the universal
-_shout_ from all the companies of heaven, followed by the _voice of the
-archangel_, proclaiming the approach of the Son of God and man; and the
-_trumpet of God_ sounding an alarm to all that sleep in the dust of the
-earth. In consequence of this, all the graves shall open and the bodies
-of men arise."
-
-After the following judgment, (which Mr. Wesley thinks must last several
-thousand years, considering "the number of persons who are to be judged,
-and of actions which are to be inquired into,") he proceeds:
-
-"Then the heavens will be shriveled up as a parchment scroll, and pass
-away with a great noise. The very manner of their passing away is
-disclosed to us by the apostle Peter, 'In the day of God, the heavens
-being on fire shall be dissolved.' The whole beautiful fabric will be
-overthrown by that raging element, the connexion of all its parts
-destroyed, and every atom torn asunder from the others. 'By the same the
-earth also and the works that are therein, shall be burnt up;' the
-enormous work of nature, the everlasting hills, mountains that have
-defied the rage of time, and stood unmoved so many thousand years, will
-sink down in fiery ruin. How much less will the works of art, though of
-the most durable kind, the utmost efforts of human industry, tombs,
-pillars, triumphal arches, castles, pyramids, be able to withstand the
-flaming Conqueror! All, all will die, perish, vanish away, like a dream
-when one awaketh."[2]
-
-Such, in substance, is the doctrine of the Christian world; and
-certainly if _fear_ and _terror_ were sufficient to drive men into a
-state of righteousness, here are horrors enough to excite the fears even
-of the most courageous. But not the eloquence of man any more than his
-wrath, worketh the righteousness of God. It is not sufficient that a
-doctrine be eloquently set forth; it must also have truth for its
-foundation. It is not enough that Scripture be quoted to support it;
-that Scripture must also stand in its proper connexion, and retain its
-proper meaning; for if this be not the case, however eloquent the
-preacher and however numerous the apparent proofs, the tenet can only
-rank with that "wood, hay, and stubble,"--those unsubstantial and airy
-doctrines, which, when tried by the fire of Divine Wisdom, are consumed
-and pass away. And if we can prove, _First_, That the passages which are
-quoted to support the doctrine before us, are _literally_ understood,
-while nevertheless such literal sense leads to absurdity; _Second_, If
-we can further make it appear that such a _literal_ application of them
-makes them inconsistent with each other as well as with many plain
-portions of the Bible; and again, that, even if we admit such outward
-meaning to be correct, it gives no countenance to the doctrine in
-dispute; while at the same time that doctrine is opposed to the end of
-creation and the character of God;--if these propositions can be made
-good, I trust it will appear, that the tenet itself has no countenance
-from the Scriptures; and that the true meaning of the passages adduced,
-must be sought for in the internal or spiritual sense of the Word.
-
-The portions of Scripture on which the supposed destruction of the
-universe is founded, are far from numerous. Some of them are already
-quoted in the extract from Mr. Wesley; and previous to entering upon the
-consideration of our first proposition, we shall point out a few of the
-remainder. "Immediately after the tribulation of those days, the sun
-shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, the stars
-shall fall from heaven, and the powers of heaven shall be shaken; and
-then shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven; and then shall
-all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of man
-coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory. And He shall
-send his angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather
-together his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the
-other." Matt. xxiv. 29, 30, 31. "Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or
-one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, until all be fulfilled."
-Matt. v. 18. "Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven?
-This same Jesus who is taken from you, shall so come as ye have seen Him
-go into heaven." Acts i. 11. "Then cometh the end, when he shall have
-delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father." 1 Cor. xv. 24. "The
-Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels in
-flaming fire, taking vengeance on them that know not God." 2 Thess. i.
-7, 8. "The day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night, in which
-the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall
-melt with fervent heat; the earth also, and the works that are therein
-shall be burned up." 2 Peter iii. 10.
-
-But it is from the book of Revelation, that the principal part of the
-proofs are drawn. A book _confessedly_ figurative in its language, and
-which the wisest and most learned men have in vain striven to interpret.
-One could hardly commit or imagine a greater outrage upon the common
-sense of mankind, than that which the defenders of this doctrine have
-committed, by first confessing the Book itself to be figurative and
-inexplicable, and then adducing its language _literally_, in their
-support, as if they had all at once found out that it was no longer
-figurative but _literal_. If the visions of the Apostle are not literal,
-but grand and representative images, then ought they not to be
-understood in a literal manner, or if they are to be so understood, then
-as plain and literal narrative they may be easily explained; and the
-complaint which the receivers of this doctrine have so often made, that
-it cannot be understood, is to the last degree frivolous and foolish.
-
-And what makes the matter still worse is, that the passages they have
-adduced are among the most highly figurative in the Apostle's
-descriptions. The following are among them: "Behold He cometh with
-clouds, and every eye shall see Him; and they that pierced Him; and all
-the tribes of the earth shall wail because of Him." i. 7. "And I beheld
-when he had opened the sixth seal, and lo, there was a great earthquake;
-and the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as
-blood, and the stars of heaven fell unto the earth; even as a fig-tree
-casteth her untimely figs when she is shaken of a mighty wind; and the
-heaven departed as a scroll, when it is rolled together, and every
-mountain and island were moved out of their places." vi. 12, 13, 14.
-"And I saw a great white throne, and Him that sat on it, from whose face
-the earth and the heaven fled away, and there was found no place for
-them: and I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God." xx. 11,
-12. "And I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and
-the first earth were passed away, and there was no more sea." xxi. 1.
-
-Such are the texts of Scripture by which the doctrine before us is
-supported; the greater part of which have clearly no reference to the
-subject, and the remainder being not the literal language of narrative,
-but the _correspondent_ and mysterious words of prophecy. Yet, even
-viewing them in their outward meaning, we can scarcely fail to be struck
-with the wide difference which exists between them and the description
-of Mr. Wesley. There is nothing in them of an earthquake, amidst some
-general concussion in which every island shall flee away:--nothing of
-"the air resounding with thunder from pole to pole, and being torn with
-ten thousand lightnings:"--nothing of the connexion of every part being
-destroyed, and every atom torn asunder from the others. We may therefore
-fairly set these down as additional horrors, supplied by the imagination
-of the writer, and unsupported by anything like Scripture proof. And
-with regard to what remains, we will now see how far that _literal_
-sense upon which it rests, will stand the criterion by which we are to
-determine the meaning of Scripture. If the outward meaning is reasonable
-and consistent, then it must be adhered to, and the doctrine is
-established: but if, on the other hand, such interpretation leads to
-absurdity, then, by the consent of every Protestant church, that meaning
-must be laid aside; and with it, too, must be cast off the tenet of this
-world's destruction.
-
-But one cautionary remark must here be made. We are by no means
-authorized to mingle together literal and figurative language. That is,
-we have no right to interpret one part of a sentence literally, and
-another as figure. The passages before us are either _literal_, or they
-are _not_. If they _are_, then every part of them must be literally
-understood; if they are _not_, then no part of them can be literally
-interpreted. If, then, we adhere to the outward meaning, we must carry
-that adherence to every portion of the text; for if we reject such
-meaning in any part, we reject it in the whole; and the doctrine which
-depends for support upon it, must fall to the ground.
-
-Keeping this in view our first proposition is, that, to affix a literal
-sense to the passages before us, is to give them a meaning at once
-absurd and unreasonable. We might in proof of this, go through every
-word in every text. It is declared in the letter that "the Lord shall
-_descend_ from heaven;" but heaven is not a place connected either by
-height or distance with the material world. Could we rise far into the
-regions of space, and ascend for ever in the oceans of worlds, still, as
-regards _distance_, we should be no nearer heaven than before. Where God
-manifests Himself in the fullness of his love, there is heaven; but God
-being a Spirit, can only manifest Himself thus in a spiritual region;
-and such a region has no relation of space or distance with a world of
-matter. Hence, therefore, a descent from heaven is not a literal going
-down from a higher place to one beneath, and consequently must not be
-_literally_ understood. Here the literal meaning fails at the very
-threshold. At the first step we are obliged to seek for a figurative or
-spiritual sense.
-
-If we overcome _this_ difficulty, we have yet to encounter others. It is
-further said that He shall descend with "a trumpet." Now modern
-Christians ridicule the idea of visible habitations and outward objects
-in the spiritual world. What then are we to make of the description
-before us,--of this _trumpet_ with which the Lord is to descend? Is it
-_material_, or is it _not_? If it is material, then heaven, in which
-there are material objects, must be a material _place_; and the Being
-who uses this material trumpet, must be a material Being; consequently,
-we must materialize both heaven and its inhabitants. But if this trumpet
-is not a _material_ one, then let the defenders of the literal meaning
-tell us what is a spiritual trumpet? Whatever may be the answer, one
-thing is certain,--that which is spiritual is _internal_; and if by the
-words before us we are not to understand a literal trumpet, but
-something spiritual signified by it, then the literal meaning of the
-passage is not and cannot be the true one.
-
-It is further declared that "The Lord shall come in the clouds of
-heaven." The question again arises: What are we to understand by these?
-The clouds literally mean those masses of vapor, which, arising from the
-earth, are condensed and become visible in the atmosphere; and which
-surround the earth at the distance of a few miles. If we keep to the
-literal sense of the passage, these must be understood. But is it in
-these that the Lord is to descend? Is six or eight miles above the
-surface of the globe, heaven? Or can bodies which seldom rise beyond
-this elevation, be properly called the clouds of heaven? Or is this the
-glory with which the Lord is to be invested--the vapors which rise from
-the material globe?
-
-But this is not all. With Him the angels are also to descend. Now the
-nature of angels is not material; they exist not in space, nor are they
-included in its boundaries. How, then, we again ask, are spiritual
-beings to descend in a _material_ vapor? It would degrade the subject to
-carry these questions further; but every person's discernment will
-enable him to perceive that by no means can the _literal_ clouds be
-understood; and that these words must, like the former, be acknowledged
-as _figurative_. Here, therefore, at the very commencement we are
-obliged to _spiritualize_ both the _descent_, the _trumpet_, and the
-_clouds_. Do what we will, the literal sense is absurd. And if we are
-forced to allow that _part_ of the description cannot be literally
-understood, it is fair to conclude that the remainder has also an
-_internal_ meaning.
-
-We shall soon perceive further proof of this. After it is declared that
-the Lord shall come "in the clouds of heaven," it is added, as a
-necessary consequence, "and then shall _all the tribes of the earth_
-mourn, when they _see_ the Son of Man coming in the clouds." In
-agreement with this are the words of John, "Behold, He cometh _with
-clouds_; and _every eye_ shall see Him." If this be understood of an
-event which is literally to take place, we must again believe an
-impossibility. This world is a _round_ body; and that which is visible
-to the inhabitants of one hemisphere, must be invisible to the dwellers
-on the other. Those who live upon one part of its surface cannot, by any
-possibility, see what is above the opposite part. This is a circumstance
-of daily experience:--at twelve o'clock at midnight the sun is visible
-to the inhabitants of the other side of this earth, and with them it is
-noon-day; but at that hour it is invisible to us; nor can we, by any
-possible means, obtain a sight of it. If, then, it be true that an
-object visible on one side of a globe, is invisible on the opposite, we
-inquire, In what situation must the Lord appear, that He may be seen at
-one and the same moment from _every part_ of a round body? Where, or in
-what part of the atmosphere must He be placed that _all the tribes of
-the earth_, (those on its _opposite sides_,) may behold Him at the same
-time? Such a position is not only difficult, but absolutely impossible,
-unless the figure of the globe were changed; and to believe that such
-will be the manner of our Lord's coming, is to involve ourselves in a
-labyrinth of absurdities.
-
-Aware of this difficulty, the writer whom I have already quoted supposes
-that the inhabitants of this earth will be caught up in the air, and
-_thus_ be enabled to behold our Lord's descent. "Perhaps," says he, "it
-is more agreeable to our Lord's own account of his coming in the clouds,
-to suppose it will be above the earth, if not 'twice a planetary
-height;' and this supposition is not a little favored by what St. Paul
-writes to the Thessalonians, 'The dead in Christ shall rise first.' Then
-we who remain alive shall be caught up together with them in the clouds
-to meet the Lord in the air. So that it seems most probable, the 'great
-white throne' will be exalted high above the earth." Such a method of
-explanation only shows the difficulties into which the mere literal
-sense has thrown its followers. Independent of the total absence of all
-Scripture proof of these ideas, it may be remarked that, "twice a
-planetary height," that is, twice the distance of the farthest planet
-from the earth, is not the place of clouds; in such case, therefore, the
-Lord would not come _in_ the clouds, but far _above_ them. Nor could He
-be said to descend _from_ heaven; for as heaven, in the literal sense,
-is the starry region, if He remained stationary in that region, it would
-not be a descent _from_ heaven, but a descent _in_ heaven. And besides,
-as the clouds, literally, are the vapors surrounding the earth, by
-interpreting them to mean "twice a planetary height," the literal sense
-is given up; and if this be rejected, the doctrine before us is
-overthrown.
-
-Once more we turn to the texts. Another event which is said to accompany
-the coming of the Lord, is the falling of the stars from heaven to the
-earth. "The stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of heaven shall
-be shaken." "The stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a fig-tree
-casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken of a mighty wind." When,
-in disputing with the Romish church, we contend that the Lord's words
-are not to be understood _literally_, we think it sufficient to prove,
-that so understood they involve an absurdity. But fully as great an
-absurdity is involved in the literal interpretation of the words before
-us. The stars, though to us they appear but as shining atoms, are proved
-beyond the possibility of doubt, to be equal to our sun both in size and
-splendor. Each one of them is, in fact, a _sun_, as large and as
-brilliant as that which enlightens our day. Now the sun exceeds our
-earth nearly ten hundred thousand times in magnitude; _each_ star,
-therefore, may be reasonably supposed to exceed the size of this globe
-nearly a million times. As well, then, may we talk of ten thousand
-worlds falling upon an atom, as of ten thousand suns, each of them a
-million times larger than the globe, falling upon this grain of earth:
-it is in itself as impossible as for a piece of bread to become the body
-of the Lord.
-
-But further; the _number_ of these bodies is beyond the power of human
-calculation. Millions sink into nothing in computing it,--_thousands_ of
-millions are nothing. Every part of the vault of heaven contains
-myriads; and clusters of them have been observed which contain, within
-themselves, myriads more. Could we penetrate into the depths of space,
-as far as the eye could see--as far as thought could penetrate, we
-should find suns and worlds till the mind was lost in the idea of their
-multitude: and though we continued to move onward for ages, we should
-still find ourselves but on the threshold of creation. These are not the
-visions of speculation, but the facts of philosophy;--truths which
-actual observation has placed beyond a doubt. Such are, literally, the
-stars of heaven: myriads of myriads of suns, surrounded by ten thousand
-times ten thousand worlds. And let the common sense of mankind decide,
-whether all these can fall upon the surface of a globe not equal to the
-smallest of them in magnitude.
-
-But we have not yet done with this subject. Let us imagine it possible
-that these innumerable and enormous bodies _were_ thrown out of their
-stations, and by the hand of God launched towards our little world. What
-would result if they only came within a short distance of it? (to say
-nothing of their falling upon its surface.) It is well known to all who
-are acquainted with philosophy, that each of the heavenly bodies
-possesses a power called attraction, by which it draws towards itself
-any smaller body that comes within its sphere. So powerful is this
-attractive force that the sun alone draws all the worlds which move
-around it, and keeps them from flying off, though some are at the
-distance of eighteen hundred millions of miles! Each of the stars being
-of the same nature with our sun, possesses equally this attracting
-power. And were only a few of these bodies to be brought within a
-certain distance of the earth, the force of their combined attraction
-acting in contrary directions, would explode and scatter abroad, not
-only this earth but every earth in the system: and long before they
-could fall upon its surface, there would be no world for them to fall
-upon; it would be dissolved, and its atoms scattered through the
-universe.
-
-Again, the Apostle Peter declares that "The heavens shall pass away with
-a great noise, and _the elements_ shall _melt_ with fervent heat." A
-question, therefore, once more arises, what is meant by "the elements?"
-Literally, they signify the most simple forms of matter, fire, air,
-earth, and water. But how can these melt, or be melted?--Can _fire_ melt
-with fervent heat? It may be dispersed in its pure form, that of heat or
-caloric; but it is incapable of being melted. Can air, then, melt? It
-may be expanded, but it will not _melt_, in the literal meaning of the
-word. Can water melt? It may be raised in steam, and made to fly off in
-vapor: it may, by the application of heat, be resolved into air, its
-first principle; but it will not melt. There is, therefore, only one
-element out of the four which is capable of being literally melted;
-_earth may_, indeed, be vitrified, and rendered fluid. But how can _one
-element_ be denominated _the elements_? And besides, the apostle seems
-to exclude the _earth_ from the elements which are thus to melt; for he
-mentions _its_ destruction, as subsequent to that of the elements. "The
-elements shall melt with fervent heat, the _earth also_", that is, in
-addition to these, the earth and the works that are therein, shall be
-burned up.[3] Here again, the literal sense fails. We must either allow
-what is not true, namely, that _fire_, _air_, and _water_, can be melted
-by fire, or seek for an internal and figurative meaning.
-
-I might pass thus through the whole of the language on which this tenet
-is founded; and it would be easy to show that the circumstances are as
-impossible in their literal meaning, as that a man should eat "the flesh
-of his own arm," or that our Lord should literally be a _vine_ and a
-_door_.
-
-The very advocates of the doctrine are convinced of this. Hence they
-have framed various and contradictory systems to explain the above
-descriptions. One has asserted that the earth will at that period _be
-rolled out_ of her orbit, and that this motion will cause an appearance
-as if the heavens passed away. Another has enveloped the world in a
-thick mist, by which the light of the moon, being changed, will appear
-of a red color. A third has appointed a comet, which in its passage to
-or from the sun, will approach this earth and involve it in flames. All
-have seen the difficulties, and all have attempted to overcome them by
-explanations; yet, after all, the task remains as arduous as ever. If we
-will, in despite of reason, found a doctrine on the literal meaning of
-the texts, we must adhere to that meaning; for to depart from it, is to
-confess its insufficiency: and if, on the other hand, we resolve to
-reject the literal sense in _one part_, we then acknowledge that it is
-not the true one, and that another must be sought for. If we are obliged
-to give up a literal falling of stars to the earth, and a literal
-appearance in the clouds of the air, then we must give up also, a
-literal burning and destruction of the universe; for if one part of the
-sentence is to be understood figuratively, so is the other.
-
-And that such destruction is a spiritual event, and not a natural one,
-will appear still further from the following observation. When two
-prophecies are found, couched in the same language, and nearly in the
-same words, one of which prophecies has been fulfilled, while the other
-yet remains to be accomplished; the manner in which the latter will be
-fulfilled must be determined by the previous fulfillment of the former.
-
-Now it is a fact, although very seldom noticed, that the prophecies
-relating to the _first_ coming of the Lord, are expressed in the very
-same language with those which relate to his second appearance. We need
-only turn to the writings of the prophets to be convinced of this.
-"Behold," says Malachi, "the day cometh that shall _burn as an oven_,
-and all the proud, yea, and all that do wickedly shall be as stubble,
-and the day that cometh shall burn them up, saith JEHOVAH OF HOSTS. And,
-behold, I send you Elijah the prophet, before the coming of the _great
-and terrible day_ of the Lord." iv. 1, 5. Again, Isaiah: "All the host
-of heaven shall be dissolved, and the heavens shall be rolled together
-as a scroll, and all their host shall fall down as a falling fig from
-the fig-tree.[4] Every battle of the warrior is with confused noise, and
-garments rolled in blood; but this shall be with _burning_ and _fuel of
-fire_. For unto us a child is born." ix. 5. "Upon the servants and upon
-the handmaids in those days I will pour out my spirit; and I will show
-wonders in the heavens and in the earth, _blood_, and _fire_, and vapor
-of smoke. _The sun shall be turned into_ _darkness_ and _the moon into
-blood_ before the great and terrible day of the Lord come." Joel ii.
-29-31.
-
-This latter prophecy is expressly applied by Peter to the commencement
-of Christianity. In defending his brethren from the charge of imposture
-brought against them by the Jews on the day of Pentecost, he declares,
-"This (the extraordinary inspiration of the spirit) is that which was
-spoken by the prophet Joel; I will show wonders in the heaven above, and
-signs in the earth beneath, blood, and fire, and vapor of smoke. The sun
-shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood." Acts ii. 16-20.
-
-Once more, the prophet Haggai, speaking of the same period declares,
-"Thus saith Jehovah of hosts. Yet once it is a little while and I will
-shake the heavens and the earth and the sea and the dry land, and I will
-shake all nations and the desire of all nations shall come, and I will
-fill this house (the latter temple) with glory, saith Jehovah of hosts."
-Again, the prophet Joel before quoted, says, "Multitudes, multitudes in
-the valley of decision; for the _day of the_ Lord is near in the valley
-of decision. _The sun_ and _the moon shall be darkened_, and the stars
-shall withdraw their shining. The LORD also shall roar out of Zion, and
-utter his voice from Jerusalem, and the heavens and the earth shall
-shake: but the Lord will be the hope of his people. So shall ye know
-that I am the Lord your God, dwelling in Zion, my holy mountain. Then
-shall Jerusalem be holy." iii. 14-17. "But who (says Malachi,) may abide
-the day of His coming, or who shall stand when He appeareth? for He is
-like a refiner's _fire_ and like fullers' soap." And to conclude this
-magnificent imagery, Isaiah declares, "Behold, I create new heavens and
-a new earth; and the former shall not be remembered nor come to
-mind;--they shall not hunger, nor thirst, neither shall the heat of the
-sun smite them; but He that hath mercy upon them shall lead them, even
-by the springs of water shall He guide them."
-
-With such descriptions of the first Advent of the Messiah do the
-prophets abound. Let any one peruse with attention the writings of
-Isaiah, Jeremiah, Zechariah, Joel, Haggai, and Malachi, and he will be
-convinced of the truth of this remark. We will now notice the agreement
-which exists between these prophecies relating to his first appearance,
-and those which refer to his second coming. Both periods are called
-"_the day of the Lord_;" and both are ushered in by "darkness and
-gloominess." In both it is said that "the sun shall be turned into
-darkness, and the moon into blood;" and in both "the heavens and the
-earth" are said to "pass away." In both of them the Lord is declared to
-come "_in fire_," and the conclusion of both is "a new heaven and a new
-earth."
-
-Now _one_ of these periods is past. The first Advent of the Saviour to
-which the above prophecies refer, is accomplished. And how were these
-predictions fulfilled? Did the events _literally_ take place? Let
-history answer. Though the heavens and the earth were to be shaken and
-pass away, yet no commotion took place in the visible parts of nature.
-The seasons ran their wonted course; the sun gave forth his usual light;
-and the earth pursued without intermission her annual journey. Though
-the moon was to be "turned into blood," yet no such disaster befell the
-visible planet; her light shone as bright as ever. One solitary meteor
-alone over the plains of Judea, announced to the Eastern sages the
-coming of the Saviour. Though his approach was to be _in fire_, yet no
-material flames accompanied his Advent. The fire of Divine Love alone
-distinguished Him. Not one of all these predictions had anything
-resembling a literal accomplishment. And now let us look to the
-conclusion. If, when two prophecies are given, couched in the same
-language, one of which is fulfilled while the other remains to be
-accomplished, the interpretation of the second is to be judged of by the
-fulfillment of the first, the following argument at once arises: Since
-the prophecies relating to the first Advent of the Saviour are expressed
-by the very same terms, and represented by the very same images as those
-which refer to his _second_ coming, the meaning of these latter must be
-similar to that of the others. And since not one of _those_ prophecies
-ever received a literal fulfillment, so neither are we to expect a
-literal fulfillment of those before us. In a word, since the events
-predicted at the Lord's _first_ coming were not natural, but
-representative images of spiritual things--of states of the world and of
-the church; so those foreshadowing his second coming are representative
-of similar things, belonging to the minds of men, and will never receive
-a _literal_ accomplishment.
-
-If, however, it be still maintained in opposition to this remark, that
-they _must_ be understood literally, I will ask one question. Since the
-words of the _Old_ Testament which describe the first appearance of the
-Redeemer, are exactly similar to those of the _New_ which predict his
-second coming; how is it that the former never received a literal
-fulfillment? If it be replied, that this was figurative language, while
-the latter is literal description; I again inquire, By what authority or
-according to what rule is this distinction made? Why is the first to be
-resolved into figure, while the latter is considered as literally true?
-Such distinction between the two cannot arise from the _language_; this
-is almost word for word the same. It cannot be made because the literal
-sense is in one case _reasonable_, while in the other it is not; for in
-both cases it involves numerous absurdities. It cannot be because the
-one is prophecy and the other narrative; for both are the language of
-prophetic declaration. On what authority, then, is the literal meaning
-of the first _rejected_, while in the other it is retained and believed?
-Why are not both to be understood alike, since in both the descriptions
-are similar? There is no rule by which a distinction can be drawn.
-
-I have now gone over the first proposition, and have proved that a
-literal interpretation of the passages adduced involves absurdities as
-great as that of transubstantiation; and that the absence of all literal
-fulfillment in the case of other prophecies exactly similar, affords the
-strongest reason to expect that in _this_ instance no literal
-accomplishment will take place. That the language itself is that of
-_correspondence_,--the representation of spiritual things by natural;
-and as such it will receive a spiritual and not a natural fulfillment.
-
-2. We now pass to the second point, namely that the texts supposed to
-refer to the destruction of the material world are inconsistent with
-each other; and are opposed to other clear and express declarations of
-Scripture. In this case as in the former, we shall note the words in the
-debated texts. In the passages brought forward to support the doctrine,
-there are four ways mentioned in which the destruction of the heavens
-(or visible starry firmament) is hereafter to take place. First, in one
-passage of the Revelation, they are described as being "rolled away as a
-scroll;" in another the stars are said to "fall from heaven to the
-earth." In Peter's Epistle it is declared that they shall "pass away
-with a great noise;" and in another place the same apostle says that
-"the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved." Now these four
-descriptions considered literally, contradict and destroy each other. To
-dissolve is to separate into particles, and to return to their first
-elements. But if the starry heavens are _thus_ to be destroyed, then
-they can neither fall to the earth nor be rolled together as a scroll;
-for that which is dissolved and reduced to its first elements, can be
-destroyed no further except by annihilation. And if the heavenly bodies
-are to be _thus_ dissolved, then no other kind of dissolution can affect
-them. Again, if we take the other passage, "they were rolled away as a
-scroll," we are placed in precisely the same dilemma. By their being
-rolled away as a scroll, we must then understand that they will be
-driven from their stations, thrown into confusion, and hurried afar into
-the depths of space. But if they are thus rolled away they cannot
-possibly "fall to the earth," for the two events stand in direct
-opposition; in the first instance they must be hurled into space, far
-beyond the earth's orbit; in the latter they must absolutely fall upon
-her surface. And now we ask, Are the stars to be rolled away, or are
-they to fall upon the earth? The literal sense of the Scripture mentions
-both events; but if one occurs, the other (consistently with the text)
-can never take place.
-
-Suppose, however, we admit for the sake of argument, that the rolling
-away of the heavens is an event separate from the destruction of the
-stars. We again inquire whether this event will take place _before_ such
-destruction, or _after_ it. If _before_ it, we come to the former
-conclusion; for then the stars must fly off with the heaven in which
-they are fixed. If _after_ it, then, as there will be nothing but _empty
-space_ remaining, we ask how such empty space can be called _the
-heavens_; and how empty _space_ without a single visible object, can be
-"rolled away as a scroll!" In this instance, therefore, if we abide by
-the literal sense of one passage, we must of necessity reject that of
-the others.
-
-But it is further said that all these events are to take place
-_previous_ to the appearance of the Son of Man. "The sun shall be
-darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall
-fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens shall be shaken. And
-then (immediately following these events) shall appear the sign of the
-Son of Man in heaven." Now this prior commotion includes the dissolution
-of all the elements, "The heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and
-the elements shall melt with fervent heat." Among the number of the
-elements, _the air_ will of course be destroyed, for it is included
-among them; and with the air those _clouds_ which depend upon it for
-their existence and visibility. Yet, after this, when the clouds have
-ceased to be, and when the heavens are no more, the Son of Man is to
-appear in these very clouds and in the midst of this heaven! Here,
-again, is an inconsistency in the literal sense of the passage. If the
-heavens, and with them the clouds are dissolved, then it is impossible
-that anything can appear _in_ what has ceased to have an existence. Or
-if the Son of Man _is_ to appear in the clouds, then the heavens cannot
-be destroyed previous to that appearance. Which way soever we turn we
-are met by a difficulty. If we receive one of the passages in the
-literal sense, we must either reject or spiritualize the other.
-
-Again: at the time of our Lord's ascension, the two angels who appeared
-to the disciples declared, "this same Jesus which is taken up from you
-into heaven, shall _so come in like manner_, as ye have seen him go into
-heaven." Acts i. 11. It would therefore appear that, if these angelic
-messengers are worthy of credit, the _descent_ of our Lord is to be
-exactly similar in circumstance to his ascent. Now, in his ascension
-into heaven, there are several things which require notice. 1st: It was
-_private_. He led his disciples from the city to the Mount of Olives.
-2d: It was seen by none but his followers. The generality of the Jewish
-nations did not even know that such an event had taken place; they
-considered our Lord as a dead man; and hence when they accused Paul
-before Festus, one part of that accusation was that he affirmed one
-Jesus to be alive, who was (in their opinion) dead. Acts xxv. 19. 3d:
-His ascension was a _solitary_ one. There is no account whatever that
-any persons were _seen_ ascending with Him:--"_He_ was taken up; and a
-cloud received _Him_ out of their sight." And, 4th: It was _unattended
-by any outward pomp_. The Jews knew nothing of it;--there was no
-alteration in the visible world; and even those who witnessed the event,
-beheld nothing save a bright cloud into which he passed and disappeared.
-The ascension of the Saviour was therefore to the world a _private_
-occurrence, so far as privacy consists in general ignorance respecting
-it. It was seen by none but his disciples; it was without pomp or show.
-Of those who afterwards heard of it, numbers gave no credit to the
-story. And the only visible proof that it had taken place, was the
-effect which followed--the extraordinary out-pouring of the divine
-influence.
-
-And if we keep to the literal sense of the words, _this_ is to be his
-descent from heaven: He is to come _in like manner_ as He went up. If,
-then, this be the case, then such descent will be an occurrence unknown
-to the generality of mankind, or only known by its following effects. It
-will be unaccompanied by any destruction, and even by any commotion in
-the realm of material nature. And many of those who hear of it may be
-expected to deny it, according to his own words: "When the Son of Man
-cometh shall He find faith on the earth?"
-
-Such, according to the passage before us must be the manner of his
-Second Coming: but let us, if we can, reconcile this with the former
-descriptions. In the one case all nature is to be _destroyed_; in the
-other it is to remain unshaken. In the former instance He is said to
-descend with thousands of angels; in the latter, to come unattended. By
-the first description, He is to be seen visibly by all; in the second,
-He will be invisible to all except his followers. The two accounts thus
-stand in direct contradiction to each other. If He comes again in the
-same "manner" that He ascended, then the former passages cannot be
-literally understood: or if He comes literally in the manner they
-describe, the passage before us cannot be true.
-
-I might here, as in the former case, go through every passage, and show
-that each of them contains within itself accounts which are inconsistent
-with those of the others: in one it is said that the Lord shall descend
-from heaven in flaming fire: in another, in the clouds: in a third, on a
-great white throne. In one it is declared that, before his face the
-earth and the heaven shall flee away, and their place be no more found:
-in a second, that _after_ His coming the departed shall rise from the
-earth, and the grave and the sea give up their dead; consequently, if
-the latter part be true, the earth will not pass away at the time of His
-descent. In the whole there are inconsistencies which science, according
-to the literal meaning, may disguise, but can never reconcile.
-
-We now turn to the consideration of other passages which, taken even in
-their literal sense, militate strongly against the doctrine in dispute.
-After the destruction of the antediluvian earth by the flood, Jehovah
-affirmed, "I will not _again curse the ground any more_, though the
-imagination of man's heart is evil from his youth; neither will I again
-smite any more every living thing as I have done." This _curse_ which
-the Lord is here inferred to have pronounced upon the former world, in
-whatever sense the terms be taken, was accomplished in its destruction;
-and the end of that world by a flood of waters, completed its
-fulfillment. The curse of the Lord, therefore, when pronounced upon the
-earth, leads to its dissolution. But God Himself affirms that He will
-not thus curse the ground any more,--that He will not again suffer it to
-be destroyed, neither will He again smite everything living. The
-declaration is absolute. It is not said that He will refrain from it
-during a _limited period_, but that He will not do it _any more_--to all
-eternity. Yet if the commonly received doctrine be correct, this
-declaration of Jehovah must be untrue. If _again_ everything living _is_
-to be smitten,--if again the earth is to be cursed with destruction as
-complete, if not more so than the former one; then it cannot be true
-that every living thing is _not_ again to be smitten, nor the earth
-again to be cursed. In this instance the literal proofs clash with the
-solemn declaration of God.
-
-If, however, it be objected that these words refer not so much to the
-_destruction_ of the globe, as to the _mode_ of that event, I reply that
-no such qualifying language is found in the text. The words are general;
-they are not "I will not again curse the earth _with water_," but I will
-not curse the ground,--I will not destroy the earth "_any more_," either
-in this way or in any other. "I will not smite any more everything
-living as I have now done," by an universal destruction. And, in fact,
-the promise that _a flood_ should no more destroy the world, would have
-afforded little consolation to Noah, had he understood that another
-destruction more awful than the former, was approaching, in which not
-this world only, but the whole universe would perish; and when not the
-greater part, but _all_ things living, would be destroyed, without the
-preservation even of a remnant. The flood is certainly in the following
-chapter referred to particularly as the more recent danger, and a
-repetition of which would be most dreaded by the survivors; but the very
-same declaration of Jehovah, which interdicts a flood of waters, equally
-interdicts any other entire destruction:--"I will not in any way curse
-the ground any more."
-
-There is another subject upon which I must touch, but very briefly,
-since the arguments arising out of it might be carried to a length far
-exceeding my prescribed limits. The prophetic writings abound with
-descriptions of what is called "the kingdom of David:"--a kingdom which
-was to arise in the latter day, and upon which every blessing of heaven
-was to descend. "In those days," says the prophet Amos, "I will raise up
-the tabernacle of David that is fallen, and close up the breaches
-thereof; and I will raise up his ruins, and I will build it as in the
-days of old." ix. "And in the days of these kings (that is, literally,
-in the latter times of the Roman power,) shall the God of heaven set up
-a kingdom which shall never be destroyed, and the kingdom shall not be
-left to other people; but it shall break in pieces, and consume all
-these kingdoms, and it shall stand for ever." Dan. ii. 44. Again, the
-same prophet: "I saw in the night visions, and behold one like unto the
-Son of Man came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the ancient of
-days, and they brought him near before him. And there was given him
-dominion and glory and a kingdom, that all people, nations, and
-languages should serve him: his dominion is an everlasting dominion,
-which shall not pass away; and his kingdom, that which shall not be
-destroyed." That these descriptions refer to the Redeemer, is evident.
-Isaiah when predicting his approach, and the establishment of his
-kingdom, says, "Of the increase of his government and peace there shall
-be no end upon the throne of David, and upon his kingdom to order it and
-to establish it with judgment and with justice from henceforth even for
-ever." ix. 7.
-
-Now the question is, to what authority or kingdom do these predictions
-refer? That it is not to the general government of God, is clear,--this
-had existed from eternity; but the dominion spoken of, was to commence
-at a definite period of time,--"at that time," and "in the days of those
-kings." The general subjection of all things to the Divine Being, is
-also something arising out of his very nature, and is neither given nor
-acquired; but this was something to be acquired. "The Lord God shall
-_give_ unto him the throne of his father David:"--"The saints of the
-Most High shall take the kingdom." Nor can it refer to the kingdom of
-the just in glory, for the descriptions are such as can only apply to
-the state of men on earth. "He shall feed his flock like a shepherd; He
-shall gather the lambs with His arm, and carry them in His bosom." Isa.
-xl. 11. "I will set up one shepherd over them, and he shall feed them,
-even my servant David." If, therefore, this kingdom be neither the
-general dominion over all, nor the state of the righteous in eternity,
-it can only relate to the kingdom of the church on earth. And that it
-does so, is plain from the very terms used. David is, by almost all
-professed Christians, acknowledged to have been a type and
-representative of the Messiah; and the Jewish nation over whom he
-reigned, most certainly prefigured the Christian church: the throne of
-David is therefore the authority of the Lord in his church on earth, and
-his kingdom is that church itself. Now this kingdom and this
-throne,--this church and authority _are everlasting_; they shall "never
-be destroyed;" they shall "not pass away;" they shall "stand for ever."
-But if _the earth_ on which this church exists, is hereafter to dissolve
-and pass away, the kingdom must pass away with it. For though it is true
-that the just in heaven would still constitute a kingdom of the Lord,
-yet that kingdom would no longer be "_the kingdom of David_." The very
-declaration that the kingdom of the Lord _on earth_ will _never be
-destroyed_, supposes as a necessary consequence, that the earth on which
-it is erected will also continue to exist.
-
-In agreement with this are the words heard by John; "There were great
-voices in heaven, saying, the kingdoms _of this world_ are become the
-kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ, and He shall reign for _ever
-and ever_." Rev. xi. 15. And over what is He thus to reign? Most
-certainly over the kingdoms which He is here said to have obtained--the
-kingdoms of _this world_; and over these He is to reign "for ever and
-ever." But how is He to reign for ever over the kingdoms of the world,
-if the world and its kingdoms are to be destroyed? Whenever the earth is
-dissolved, the kingdoms of the world will be no more; and he cannot
-reign over that which has no existence! If, then, the world and its
-kingdoms are to be destroyed, He can never reign _for ever_ over them:
-or if He will thus reign for ever over the kingdoms of the world, then
-those kingdoms must exist for ever; and if the _kingdoms_ exist for
-ever, _the world_ on which they are founded must exist for ever with
-them.
-
-And exactly in accordance with this assertion are the words of the
-Psalmist: "He (the Lord) built his sanctuary in high places, like _the
-earth_ which He hath established _for ever_." And those of
-Solomon:--"One generation passeth away, and another cometh, _but the
-earth abideth for ever_." The same is declared of the heavens: "His name
-shall endure _for ever_; His name shall be continued _as long as the
-sun_." Psalm lxxii. 17. "His seed shall endure _for ever_, and his
-throne _as the sun_ before me; it shall be _established for ever as the
-moon_, and as a faithful witness in heaven." lxxxix. 36.
-
-Nothing can be more directly opposed to the common opinion than these
-explicit declarations of the Bible. It is certain that these passages
-refer to the visible earth and to the material heaven; and these it is
-expressly declared are to continue not for a limited time, but for ever:
-while in the passages adduced to prove the opposite, we are left to
-struggle among difficulties, without any certainty that the visible
-earth is at all intended, since even those commentators who believe the
-tenet are compelled, in most instances, to abandon the proofs of it.
-
-I have now established, as far as is necessary, my second proposition. I
-have shown that the literal sense of the passages brought forward to
-confirm the doctrine of the earth's destruction, are inconsistent with
-each other, as well as with other parts of the Sacred Volume; and
-therefore, that such literal meaning cannot be the true one. I have
-shown that the words of Jehovah assert that the world shall not be
-smitten any more. I have further shown that the duration of the kingdom
-of God, runs parallel with that of the visible world, and that therefore
-both must endure for ever. And lastly, that the sacred writers declare
-in explicit language the endless duration both of the earth and the
-heavens.
-
-3. I now proceed to consider the third part of the subject: that the
-passages brought forward, when taken in their proper connexion, give no
-countenance to the popular doctrine, but on the contrary, afford evident
-proofs that they have no reference to it. In doing this, I shall adduce
-them one by one in the order they are laid down. And first, the passage
-in the Gospel of Matthew: "Immediately after the tribulation of those
-days the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light,
-and the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens
-shall be shaken. And then shall appear the sign of the Son of Man coming
-in the clouds of heaven; and then shall all the tribes of the earth
-mourn when they see the Son of Man coming in the clouds of heaven with
-power and great glory."
-
-I have already noticed the inconsistencies which arise from adopting the
-literal meaning of the passage; and I now remark further, that in their
-literal and obvious application, the words refer not to any destruction
-of the world in general, but to the approaching overthrow of the Jewish
-nation and polity. I admit that they have a spiritual reference to the
-state of the Christian church of which the Jews were a type; but of this
-we shall speak hereafter. It is with the literal meaning we have now to
-do, since on the literal meaning the doctrine is founded.[5]
-
-Our Lord had been addressing the multitude in the temple; and in that
-address He had solemnly warned them of their approaching danger. On his
-departure, his followers pointed to its stately and magnificent
-buildings; and He again seized the opportunity to repeat to them the
-prediction of its final destruction. Naturally anxious to learn the fate
-of their country, and, perhaps, too uneasy on their own account, they
-came to Him privately and asked, "When shall these things be?" and "what
-shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the consummation of the
-age?"[6]--that is, the period of the Jewish government and religion. In
-reply, He delivered the splendid prophecy before us; first warning them
-against those pretenders to Messiahship, who, soon after His ascension,
-overrun the land of Judea; and then going on to describe the miseries
-which were coming upon the Jews, and the final overthrow of their temple
-and city;--He delivers to them this prediction, not in the common
-language of narrative, but, in the magnificent figures of the ancient
-prophecy. A method of speaking which, while it pointed out the mutation
-of earthly things, had a further reference to things spiritual. And thus
-while He pointed out the overthrow of the Jewish power, He referred
-likewise to the degraded state and corruption of the Christian
-church,--the spiritual Jerusalem,--when, having lost its love or
-charity, it sunk down into a state of formal observance as lifeless as
-the departed spirit of Judaism.
-
-In neither of these senses, however, does the passage point to any
-destruction of the visible universe. If we take it in its outward
-reference to the Jewish nation, then the darkening of the sun and the
-withdrawing of the moon, together with the other parts of the
-description, can only be representative images of their multiplied
-distresses. This view of the subject is taken by most of those who have
-commented on the words. "The sun shall be darkened," "that is, (says
-one,) all their glory and excellency shall be eclipsed; all their wealth
-and prosperity shall be laid waste;--the whole government, civil and
-ecclesiastical, shall be destroyed; and such marks of misery found upon
-them, as never were seen upon a people."[7] But among the believers of
-the tenet in dispute, we presume there is not one more highly celebrated
-for learning than Dr. Adam Clarke; yet he, in commenting upon this
-passage, gives up all idea of a literal destruction. The following is
-the doctor's explanation:
-
-"'Immediately after the tribulation.'--Commentators generally understand
-this and what follows, of the end of the world and Christ's coming to
-judgment. But the word _immediately_ shows that our Lord is not speaking
-of any distant event, but of something immediately consequent on
-calamities already predicted; and that must be the destruction of
-Jerusalem. The _Jewish heaven_ shall perish and _the sun_ and _moon_ of
-its glory and happiness shall be darkened,--brought to nothing. _The sun
-is the religion of the church; the moon the government of the state_;
-and _the stars_ are the _judges and doctors of both_. In the prophetic
-language, great commotions upon earth are often represented under the
-notion of commotions and changes in the heavens. The fall of Babylon is
-thus represented by the constellations of heaven withdrawing their
-light, and the sun and the moon being darkened:--the destruction of
-Egypt by the heaven being covered, the sun enveloped with a cloud, and
-the moon withholding her light: the destruction of the Jews by Antiochus
-Epiphanes, is represented by _casting down some of the host of heaven_
-and _the stars_ to the ground. And this very destruction of Jerusalem is
-represented by the prophet Joel, by showing wonders in heaven and in
-earth,--_darkening the sun, and turning the moon into blood_. This
-general mode of describing these judgments, leaves no room to doubt the
-propriety of its application in the present case." (_Commentary on
-Matthew._)
-
-Thus, in the hands of one of the most learned advocates of the doctrine,
-does one of its principal proofs vanish into air. According to his
-showing, there is nothing in the whole passage referring at all either
-to the material earth, or the visible heavens; and the whole is a
-figurative account of the overthrow of the religion and government of
-the Jews,--"the _sun_ and _moon_ of the _Jewish heaven_." We might
-follow the doctor through the whole chapter, and show that in almost
-every point he confirms what has been formerly advanced. "The sign of
-the Son of Man was, (he says,) the signal manifestation of Christ's
-power and glory," in the destruction of Jerusalem. The "angels sent
-forth to gather the elect, the apostles and their successors in the
-Christian ministry." The sound of a trumpet, "the earnest affectionate
-call of the Gospel:" and "_the elect_," "the Gentiles who were now
-chosen or elected, in place of the rebellious obstinate Jews." In the
-same manner he explains the whole of this and the following chapter; and
-in the latter declares that the whole of the accounts up to the
-thirty-first verse, may be properly applied to the destruction of
-Jerusalem. And here we may leave him; for if there is nothing from the
-first verse of the twenty-fourth chapter, to the thirty-first verse of
-the twenty-fifth, which relates to the destruction of the world, surely
-nothing respecting it will be found in the remainder.
-
-Thus does this passage, so often brought forward to add to the terror of
-the world's dissolution, which has been sounded forth from pulpits and
-re-echoed from the press, when calmly examined, prove to have no
-connexion with the subject: but to refer to an event as different from
-the general conflagration, as light from darkness.
-
-But some may be ready to say, "Although it has not this reference in its
-outward meaning, yet you have already confessed that it relates to
-Christianity and the church; and is not the doctrine contained in this
-internal application?" I answer, no! The doctrine only stands upon the
-supposition that the heavens and the earth referred to in the passage,
-are the literal and visible portions of nature. We have seen that in its
-relation to the Jews, no such things are intended; still less,
-therefore, can it point to these in its _internal_ meaning. As the sun
-and moon in the literal application are, (to use the words of Dr.
-Clarke,) "the sun and moon of the _Jewish_ heaven" or state, so in
-spiritual reference, they are the sun and moon of the _Christian_
-heaven, or state of the church; and, as pointing to spiritual principles
-and spiritual states, have nothing to do with the outward machinery of
-nature. As no destruction of the world, then, can be found in the
-_internal_ sense of the prophecy, it is confessed, even by the advocates
-of the doctrine, that there is nothing respecting it in the _outward_
-sense. And if nothing is found relating to it either in the _spiritual_
-or _literal_ meaning of the words, then it is not there _at all_; and
-the passage as a proof of the dissolution of all things, must be
-abandoned for ever.[8]
-
-The next passage which claims attention, is that in the sixth chapter of
-the Revelation; for the words in the first chapter being those of the
-apostle previous to his prophetic visions, may be classed among the
-apostolic passages of which we shall speak hereafter. The text before us
-reads: "And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal, and lo, there
-was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as sackcloth of hair,
-and the moon became as blood, and the stars of heaven fell unto the
-earth, even as a fig-tree casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken
-of a mighty wind: and the heaven departed as a scroll when it is rolled
-together, and every mountain and island were moved out of their places."
-In this part of the subject I say nothing of the evidently figurative
-nature of the passage, nor of the absurdities before alluded to, as
-existing in the sense of the letter; but I shall make one remark obvious
-to the minds of all, and borne out by the connexion of the words
-themselves. The vision of the _seals_ (as well as that of the vials,) is
-one continued prophecy, which is not concluded until the breaking of the
-seventh seal in the eighth chapter. Now the events above described,
-whether representative or literal, happen under the _sixth_ seal; yet
-the descriptions of the _seventh_ as well as those of the others, refer
-to events which were to occur in the church and on this visible earth.
-The sealing of the hundred and forty-four thousand,--the prohibition of
-the wind to blow on the earth,--the seven trumpets and their
-consequences, evidently relate to states of the church in this world;
-yet all these things which were to be transacted in the visible world,
-happen _after_ the description above quoted.
-
-If, then, various and multiplied events are described as occurring _on
-the earth, after_ the heavens had departed like a scroll, and the
-islands were moved out of their places, nothing can be more clear than
-that the destruction of the earth is not here alluded to; for if the
-world is to be destroyed under the _sixth_ seal, then no events can
-happen _upon it_ under the _seventh_, since it will then have no
-existence; but as such events _are_ described as passing _in the world_
-under the _seventh_ seal, then that world cannot previously be destroyed
-under the _sixth_ seal.
-
-And in this opinion we are, as before, supported by the advocates of the
-doctrine themselves. The sealing of the tribes is almost universally
-acknowledged to signify the preservation of the church, under those
-heavy and forthcoming calamities represented by the effects of the seven
-trumpets. And as this preservation, and these calamities, occur _after_
-the darkening of the sun, and the falling of the stars, the latter event
-is generally supposed to prefigure (not the destruction of visible
-nature, but) some great change in the political or religious
-constitution of the world. The precise period to which this change is to
-be referred, has, however, divided the opinions of the learned. Some
-apply it altogether to the Jews, and suppose that their destruction in
-Judea and at Jerusalem was so dismal that it was represented to John as
-the darkening of the sun, and the moon looking like blood, and the stars
-falling. Others apply it to the overthrow of Paganism and the
-destruction of the heathen emperors; and accordingly by the earth
-quaking,--the sun becoming black,--the moon becoming blood, and the
-stars falling from heaven to earth, is to be understood the great
-changes that were made in the Roman empire by the overturning of the
-Pagan state. Others again apply it to "the great and horrible confusion
-of the Christian world under Antichrist, when Christ the Sun of
-Righteousness began to be obscured; that is, his doctrine darkened,--the
-moon or church turned into blood,--the stars or pastors fallen from
-heavenly offices, the Scriptures, like the heavens rolled up, forbidden
-to be read, the mountains, (king and princes) in jeopardy,--and the
-islands brought under Antichrist's yoke and tyranny." Very few venture
-to apply it to what is commonly called the "end of the world;" and none
-can do it without charging the apostle with inconsistency, by affirming
-that it shall take place at a definite period of time; and then speaking
-of events that are to occur in the world _after_ that time, that is,
-after the world shall have been destroyed!
-
-On this passage the commentator whom we have already quoted observes,
-
-"A great earthquake," that is, "a most stupendous change in the civil
-and religious constitution of the world." "The _sun_"--the ancient Pagan
-government of the Roman empire, "_was totally darkened_; and like a
-black hair sackcloth, was degraded and humbled to the dust. The
-_moon_--the ecclesiastical state of the same empire, _become as blood_,
-was totally ruined; their sacred rites abrogated; their priests and
-religious institutions desecrated; their altars cast down; their temples
-destroyed, or turned into places of Christian worship. The _stars of
-heaven_--the gods and goddesses, demi-gods and deified heroes, of their
-poetical and _mythological heaven_, prostrated indiscriminately, and lay
-as useless as the figs or fruit of a tree shaken down before ripe by a
-tempestuous wind. _And the heaven departed as a scroll._ The whole
-system of Pagan and idolatrous worship, with all its spiritual, secular,
-and superstitious influence, blasted, shriveled up, and rendered null
-and void as a parchment scroll when exposed to the action of a strong
-fire. And every mountain--all the props, supports, and dependencies of
-the empire; whether regal allies, tributary kings, dependent colonies,
-or mercenary troops, were all moved out of their places, so as to stand
-no longer in the same relation to that empire and its worship, support,
-and maintenance, as they formerly did. And _island_:--The heathen
-temples, with their precincts and inclosures, cut off from the common
-people, may be here represented by _islands_."[9]
-
-Like the former passage, therefore, this is rendered nugatory as a proof
-of the dissolution of the universe; and rendered so, too, by the
-admission of its friends. As that referred to the _Jewish heaven_ which
-passed away at the destruction of the city of Jerusalem, so this is
-affirmed to apply to the _mythological heaven_ of the Pagans, which was
-dissolved at the conversion of Constantine to Christianity; and to have
-no allusion to the system of material nature. Here are two of the
-strongest passages thrown aside as useless in the controversy; and we
-shall quickly perceive that, when closely examined, the advocates of the
-doctrine equally cast off, if not the whole, at least the greater part,
-of the remainder.
-
-Indeed, as I have already remarked, the connexion of the passage is such
-as will by no means admit of any literal burning of the earth; so that,
-even though its inapplicability to the subject had _not_ been allowed,
-yet would the inconsistency attendant on such a meaning, have pleaded
-loudly for its rejection.
-
-We pass now to consider the next proof, which occurs in the twentieth
-chapter of the same book: "And I saw a great white throne and Him that
-sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away, and there
-was found no place for them. And I saw the dead small and great stand
-before God; and the books were opened," etc. In connection with this
-stands the first verse of the twenty-first chapter: "And I saw a new
-heaven and a new earth; for the first heaven and the first earth were
-passed away, and there was no more sea."
-
-Upon this passage we may repeat the remark which we applied to the
-foregoing: that the events which follow this descent of the Saviour, and
-which are stated as its consequences, are such as apply only to the
-church of God on earth; and that, therefore, the words before us cannot
-point to any dissolution of the universe. The immediate effects of the
-passing away of the heaven and the earth, are the formation of a new
-heaven and a new earth, and the descent of "the holy city New
-Jerusalem." This latter event the celebrated Dr. Hammond declares cannot
-refer to the state of glorified saints in heaven, but must signify some
-peculiar benefit bestowed upon the church on earth. The expression
-"descending out of heaven from God," at once determines its reference to
-a state of things below; and it no doubt relates to the restoration of
-Christianity to its primitive purity. In the very same manner does Dr.
-Clarke explain the passage, though he evidently betrays a wish to find
-within it a proof of the dissolution of all things. "The New Jerusalem,"
-says he, "doubtless means the Christian church in a state of great
-prosperity and purity:" and alluding to the description given of her, he
-observes, that "it has been _most injudiciously_ applied to _heaven_."
-If, then, the consequence of the passing away of the first heaven is to
-usher in (not eternal glory, but) a prosperous state of the church on
-earth, it must follow in course that such a passing away of the heavens
-must refer to a change and alteration in the church, and not in the
-natural world;--to the conclusion and departure of a state of darkness,
-and the commencement of a new state of light and affection. As the
-former _Jewish heaven_ of types and shadows departed at the first coming
-of the SON OF GOD, and as the _mythological heaven of Paganism_ was
-"shriveled up" at the triumph of the Gospel, so must the _modern
-Christian heaven_ of ignorance and evil pass away at the Second Coming
-of the SON OF MAN; and to it will succeed a _new heaven_ of purity and
-peace.
-
-In this application of the passage, we are supported by the explanation
-of the above commentators. They agree in defining heaven and earth
-figuratively, to mean the state of the world and of the church;--of the
-Jewish world, when applied to the Jews;--of the Pagan world, when
-applied to the Heathen: and by the self-same mode of interpretation, we
-are justified in applying it to the _Christian world_ in its reference
-to Christians. In no case can it be explained of the visible world of
-matter; for the passages being acknowledged to be figurative, it must,
-as in the other instances, bear the figurative meaning.
-
-Having thus noticed the only two texts in the Revelations, which seem,
-in the least, to bear upon the subject, I may be allowed again to repeat
-my surprise, that persons should be found attempting to support a
-doctrine by the literal sense of this book. Those among the advocates of
-the popular belief, who have most carefully studied the prophecy,
-protest their ignorance of its meaning and application. "I cannot
-pretend to explain the book," says the writer above quoted; "I do not
-understand it. I repeat it, I do not understand the book; and I am
-satisfied, that not one who has written on the subject, knows anything
-more of it than myself."--"What the prophecies mean, and when and _how_
-they are to be fulfilled, God in heaven alone knows." It "is termed a
-_Revelation_; but it is a revelation of _symbols_;--an exhibition of
-_enigmas_, to which no particular solution is given; and to which God
-alone can give the solution." "To pretend to say, (observes Calmet,)
-what this new heaven and new earth mean, and what are their ornaments
-and qualities, is, in my opinion, the greatest of all presumptions."
-Yet, into this presumption do the generality of Christians fall, who,
-amidst this candid confession of learned ignorance, bring forth with the
-greatest confidence the literal sense of the book, to support a doctrine
-which length of time has seemed to render sacred.
-
-The words of the apostles now demand our attention; and with respect to
-these we notice a fact which is necessary to the proper understanding of
-their ideas; that is, that the apostles were themselves ignorant both of
-the time when, and the manner how, the second coming of the Lord would
-be accomplished; and that they have, therefore, when speaking upon this
-subject, carefully abstained from giving any opinion of their own,
-confining themselves entirely to the words of the Saviour, or
-paraphrasing them without altering the symbolic images.
-
-This circumstance in no degree detracts from that extraordinary
-illumination with which the apostles were endowed. They were men raised
-up by God, and filled with the Divine influence, in order that they
-might propagate in the world, and among all nations, the religion of
-Christ; but it does not appear that among the supernatural gifts which
-they received, the gift of _prophecy_ was included, except in the case
-of the apostle John. Yet, even if we allow, for the sake of argument,
-that they did _possess_ this gift, it would by no means follow that they
-perfectly understood their own predictions. It is the peculiar nature of
-prophecy, that its proper meaning is not known until the time of its
-fulfillment; and this was especially the case with the Jewish writers
-who foretold the first advent of the Saviour. Although their predictions
-seem now so clear and strong, yet both the prophets themselves and their
-followers, were at the time ignorant of their precise meaning; and hence
-arose the absurd notions which the Jews entertained of a temporal
-salvation and an earthly Saviour. The gift of prophecy was, therefore,
-except in very rare instances, accompanied by entire ignorance of the
-manner of its fulfillment. It does not, however, appear that this gift
-was bestowed in general upon the apostles; their knowledge of the second
-coming of the Saviour was derived entirely from the words of the
-Saviour; and of the express meaning of these words, as referring to a
-future event, they were completely ignorant. In quoting his prediction
-they, therefore, seem to have held a persuasion that this second coming
-was very speedily to be accomplished. Thus they speak of the "day of the
-Lord" as "at hand,"--of "the Judge standing at the door:" and Paul, in
-particular, seems to have believed that some of the Christians of that
-day, if not himself among them, would live to see its approach.
-
-Whether this latter opinion be true or not, certain it is that the words
-of the apostles had such an effect upon the first Christians, that they
-were in momentary expectation of the appearance of the Lord. During the
-first nine centuries after his ascension, a general idea prevailed that
-his second coming would speedily take place; and when, after waiting
-nine hundred years, they found their expectations disappointed, they
-still looked to the one thousandth year to usher in this great event;
-and so powerfully did this opinion operate upon the world, that rich and
-poor flocked in great numbers to the Holy Land, there to await his
-appearance. The wealthy sold their possessions, or gave them away to
-charitable institutions; kings quitted their thrones, and subjects their
-employment, under the impression that "the end of all things was at
-hand," and that the world was of no further value. Such, then, was the
-effect of a misapplication of prophetic language; and though nearly
-nineteen hundred years have gone by, yet are the Christian churches
-still following in the steps of their predecessors, holding the literal
-sense of the Word in defiance of reason, and looking for the Lord's
-personal appearance in the clouds of heaven, though common sense
-proclaims its improbability.
-
-But to return. From a comparison of the descriptions of the apostles
-with the predictions of the Lord, it is easy to perceive whence they
-quoted. In many instances the two accounts are almost word for word the
-same; in others they are enlarged; but in none is the connexion of
-events, or the prophetic symbols, disturbed. "The day of the Lord (says
-Peter,) shall come as a _thief in the night_, in which the heavens shall
-_pass away_ with a great noise." Here it is easy to perceive whence the
-words of the apostle were drawn; for we have only to compare them with
-those of our Lord, to be convinced that it was from these the
-description is taken. "Heaven and earth (says the Saviour) shall _pass
-away_, but my words shall not pass away." "Know this, that if the good
-man of the house had known at what hour _the thief_ would come, he would
-have watched, and not have suffered his house to be broken through."
-Again, Paul declares, "The Lord Himself shall descend from heaven with a
-shout, with the voice of the _archangel_ and _the trump_ of God; and the
-dead in Christ shall rise first." Here, too, the prophecy is quoted from
-the Saviour's declaration: "He shall send his angels with a _great
-sound_ of a _trumpet_, and they shall gather together his elect from the
-four winds, from one end of heaven to the other." Once more the Apostle
-John says: "Behold, he cometh _with clouds_; and every eye shall _see_
-him, even they that pierced Him; and all _the tribes of the earth_ shall
-wail because of Him:" where the allusion is to these words: "Then shall
-appear the sign of the coming of the Son of Man in _heaven_; and then
-shall all the _tribes of the earth mourn_, when they _see_ the Son of
-Man _coming in the clouds_ of heaven, with power and great glory."
-"Behold, (says the Lord) I _stand at the door_ and knock;" "Behold,"
-says the apostle, echoing the Saviour's words, "the Judge _standeth at
-the door_."
-
-It would exceed my present limits to enter fully into this subject.
-Suffice to say, that in most passages the reference to our Lord's
-predictions may be plainly discerned; and in all the prophetic
-representatives are retained: The sun,--the moon,--the stars,--the
-earth,--the heavens, darkness, dissolution, and fire--the very images
-which are used by the Saviour, are likewise used by the apostles, and
-used, too, with a reference to the _same period_--the last days of the
-Christian church. If these images, when used by the prophets and by the
-Redeemer, are figurative, then, as the same _images_ applied to the
-_same period_, they are figurative when employed by the apostles. Or, if
-the dissolution and burning of the earth described by the latter are
-literal facts, then the burning of the earth and its dissolution
-described by the former, are literal facts likewise; for the _same
-images_ applied to the _same period_, must have the _same meaning_.
-
-If, then, these observations be correct, and I see not how they can be
-fairly controverted;--if the apostles did not, except in one instance,
-possess the power of foretelling future events, and if their
-descriptions of the second coming of the Lord are gathered from his own
-words, or from the prophetic writings, then we must judge of their
-meaning by that of the prophecies whence they are derived. This is a
-plain and self-evident conclusion. If I quote the words of any writer,
-the meaning of the quotation must be gathered from the works of that
-writer; and more especially if I quote for a similar purpose, and
-profess myself one of his disciples and admirers. The passages,
-therefore, which occur in the apostolic writings, are by no means
-decisive proofs of the doctrine in debate. As quotations and paraphrases
-of the Lord's words and those of the prophets, they must, by every rule
-of fair criticism, have a similar meaning. We have seen that the former
-are, by the acknowledgment of the most learned writers, figurative and
-correspondent; the just inference therefore is, that the latter, as
-quotations and paraphrases of them, must be figurative also.
-
-4. The last part of our proposition comes now before us, namely: that
-the doctrine of the destruction of the universe is opposed to the end of
-creation, and to the character of God as a Being of unbounded love and
-infinite wisdom. I may here be told of the tendency of matter to
-dissolution; of its mutability and constant change; of the elements of
-destruction which nature herself engenders; and of all those by which
-reason and science have sought to gloss over the popular tenet. But the
-_mutability_ of nature is no proof of final dissolution. _Mutability_ is
-liability to change, or a continual tendency to remove from one state to
-another. Whatever is changeable, or whatever can experience alteration,
-is, therefore, mutable. But this mutability attaches not to material
-nature alone, but to all creation; the highest archangel in the highest
-heaven, as well as every spirit embodied on earth, is a mutable
-creature. The state of glory in the eternal world, as well as the state
-of man below, is a state of _mutability_,--a state in which there are
-continual changes either for the better or the worse. This will appear
-plain if we consider that, whatever is immutable cannot be acted upon by
-any higher power; for the action of such a superior cause supposes a
-corresponding _effect_ and that effect supposes a _change_ in the object
-acted upon, in one way or another; and, consequently, any object upon
-which an effect can be produced, must be a mutable or changeable object.
-Now, in the case of angelic beings, God, the First Cause of their
-existence, is continually acting upon them by his love and wisdom, and
-thus raising them eternally in the scale of blessedness: such alteration
-of their state from glory to glory is a change,--an effect produced upon
-them by an Almighty Cause; and this effect is at once a proof that
-angels themselves are _mutable_ creatures, or liable to change. The same
-may be said of the state of blessedness; it is continually receiving
-fresh supplies of glory from the Fountain of life, and is thus
-_changing_--becoming more and more blessed: and it equally applies to
-the spirit of man. This, like the mind, is never "at one stay;" nor,
-perhaps, does the state of the mind remain precisely the same for two
-hours together. The angels of heaven, the state of the blessed, the
-spirit of man, are all changeable. God is the _only immutable Being_;
-for He alone cannot be acted upon or changed by any higher power; and
-hence it is one of his exclusive prerogatives to be "without
-variableness or shadow of turning." If, then, the angelic hosts, as well
-as heaven itself, are mutable, while yet they endure for ever, the
-mutability of nature is no proof at all that she, any more than the
-former, is approaching dissolution.
-
-"Nature herself," as one well observes, "effects her renovation from her
-decay." Matter, though decomposed and subjected to ten thousand changes,
-loses none of its essential properties; but continually assuming new
-forms, gives variety to the world, without being at all altered from its
-original nature. Indeed, it has been strongly asserted that there has
-not been a particle of matter lost from the creation to the present
-moment; changed every particle may have been, but still there is not one
-wanting; and if this be the case, such continual change is no proof of
-approaching destruction.
-
-We are accustomed to look upon God as a Being of infinite Love; and,
-perhaps, at this stage of the subject it may be well to inquire, what
-motive induced the Lord first to create the visible universe; and what
-was the end proposed in its creation. In the breast of the Divine Being
-there could exist but one motive from which creation could spring; and
-this was Love. But the Love of God being infinite, could only have
-respect to an eternal work; hence the end of creation was to make as
-many beings as possible happy, and this to all eternity. In order to
-accomplish this, infinite _Love_ clothing or embodying itself in
-_wisdom_, made the worlds. According to the words of the apostle, "By
-the Word (or the wisdom of God,) were the heavens made;" intending these
-as the habitations of rational beings, who after having passed through a
-short state of probation, might finally enter upon a spiritual state and
-enjoy perfect happiness. The wisdom of God, being the manifestation of
-his love, in completing this work, arranged everything in the most
-perfect order; and accordingly every part of the universe is formed in
-the manner best fitted to promote the end of its existence,--the
-everlasting happiness of man. In our own world, where evil has produced
-a corresponding change in outward things, even that change itself is
-good, since, while it reminds man of his corruption, it leads him to
-seek a better habitation.
-
-Thus far our assertions are easy of proof. GOD IS LOVE;--not merely
-_loving_, but LOVE, the Spring and Fountain of all derived existence.
-And love, even in its derivative form in the bosom of man, is an active
-passion, continually seeking for objects on whom to bestow its
-affection. As is the stream, then, so is the fountain: God being Love in
-its Infinite Essence, must ever have sought to form creatures capable of
-being rendered eternally happy; and hence the motive that led to
-creation. But _love_ always manifests itself in the understanding or
-thought; and by the thought is brought into outward action. It is the
-thought or wisdom of man in which his love first takes a definite form;
-this serves it for a guide, and directs its operations: and so again is
-it with the Being in whose "image" we are formed. The manifestation of
-infinite Love, is infinite Wisdom; and this brings the power into
-outward act: by infinite Wisdom, therefore, as the acting form of
-infinite Love, were rational beings and their varied habitations
-created. But this perfect wisdom can never produce anything unlike
-itself; for, as is the _cause_, so is the _effect_; hence the frame of
-nature which that wisdom calls into being, must be like itself, the most
-perfect and complete that could possibly exist. The _motive_, therefore,
-which led to creation was _Love_; its _cause_, Wisdom; its _end_,
-continued and eternal happiness.
-
-And further, as the love and wisdom of God once operated in bringing the
-universe into existence, so from that period have they been unceasingly
-employed in preserving the creatures which they formed; for, as the
-_end_ of creation was the "bringing of many souls into glory," so, to
-the present, has that end been answered by the constant exercise of the
-Divine protection over the universe of matter and its rational
-inhabitants; that the one might continue a fit habitation for the
-creatures of God; and that by the constant procreation of the human
-race, a succession of men might be brought into being as candidates for
-everlasting glory. But the expected dissolution of the universe, and the
-end of human succession, will at once put a stop to this infinite
-design. If, after a certain number of persons have been born into the
-world, the procreation of man must end, then the purpose of creation
-cannot be _infinite_; for that which has reference to a certain number
-and a definite period of time, is not an _infinite_ purpose; and that
-which is not an infinite purpose, is not the off-spring of _infinite
-love_. Or, if the purpose of God in creation _did_ spring from infinite
-love, then it must be an infinite purpose; and if the purpose of
-creation be infinite, then it is not bounded by a few thousand years,
-nor will it end with a few generations.
-
-Nor is the popular doctrine more consistent with the character of God
-than with the infinity of his designs. We have seen that _love_ was the
-cause of the world's creation; but what motive, I ask, can lead to its
-destruction? There is nothing in the Almighty contrary to love;
-therefore, if it is destroyed at all, _love_ must be still the motive.
-But love never works except for the good of its creatures; therefore, if
-the universe is dissolved, it must be because such dissolution will
-confer a benefit upon mankind. And the question then arises: What
-benefit can mankind derive from the destruction of this material world?
-The answer of some will be ready. "The world" they tell us, "has been
-changed by sin, and it will be dissolved in order that it may be
-restored to its pristine glory and beauty;--that a new heaven and a new
-earth may spring from its ashes." But does the change here supposed in
-the constitution of the world, require its dissolution? When sin entered
-into the universe, and the mind of man was contaminated, an immediate
-and corresponding effect was produced upon the world of matter; but the
-production of that effect was not accompanied by a _dissolution_ of the
-material system; it operated surely indeed, but slowly, and without any
-outward destruction. Why, then, should not the change from evil to good,
-be effected in like manner as the change from good to evil? When the
-earth is "filled with the knowledge of the Lord,"--when all shall
-experimentally "know Him from the least even unto the greatest,"--when
-man is again restored to his former state of peace and purity, a
-corresponding change must once more take place in his material
-habitation; but that change requires no destruction of the world to
-effect it. Similar causes produce similar effects; and as a change in
-man from good to evil, produced an alteration in the system of the
-world, but without any dissolution, so a change in the souls of men from
-evil to good, must likewise produce an alteration in the earth, but
-without dissolution.
-
-But this destruction, it is said, is to usher in "a new heaven and new
-earth." We are, therefore, justified in asking, for what purpose is this
-new material system created? Since it is believed that the succession of
-man will cease with _this_ earth, why should _another_ earth be formed?
-Is another race of men to be created? This, the strongest advocates of
-the doctrine do not even suppose. Is it, then, to be the habitation of
-the righteous of the present earth? This, it cannot be, for the bodies
-of the departed will no longer be material, but _spiritual_; and to
-assert that a _spiritual_ substance can dwell and walk on a material
-earth, however pure that earth may be, is to assert what every one sees
-to be preposterous. Since, then, it will not suit the departed
-righteous, and another race is not to be formed, why, we continue to
-ask, will this new earth be created? Here we are left completely in the
-dark; nor amidst all the reasoning of the advocates of the popular
-doctrine, can we find a single clue to direct us to an answer.
-
-And here the former inquiry properly comes in. Since there is nothing in
-the nature of God contrary to _love_, and since that love only works for
-the temporal or everlasting benefit of man, what motive can induce the
-Almighty to destroy this visible universe? We have seen that the state
-of mankind in time will not be improved by it; for a change in the
-constitution of the earth has been already, and may again be, effected
-without it: and, besides, whenever such an event takes place, time and
-the temporal existence of man will be no more: and the eternal happiness
-of the blessed can in no degree be increased by an overthrow of material
-nature; for when the spirit has left this sphere, it has done with
-matter, and no longer depends upon it for its feelings or its pleasures.
-If, then, such a dissolution of the earth as Christians in general look
-for, will neither benefit mankind in time nor in eternity, then it is
-contrary to the character of God that He should bring such an event to
-pass; for He never operates unless to effect some benevolent purpose;
-and this will effect none, either here or hereafter.
-
-The same reasons which induced the Almighty to call the universe into
-existence, will therefore induce Him to continue its existence. The
-desire which He felt to make as many rational beings as possible happy,
-led to creation. The same feeling has preserved the world in existence
-to the present moment. And as God is unchangeable, that desire must
-operate as powerfully ten thousand ages hence, as it does now; and the
-operation of that desire must, as a necessary consequence, lead to the
-preservation of this earth, from which a succession of rational
-creatures is to spring. If, then, at a future period the world is
-destroyed, and the multiplication of the human race ceases, it must be
-either because the Lord is unable to save more, or is unwilling to do
-it. The first supposition is impious, and the other supposes a change in
-the Almighty; for then that desire which led to creation must have
-ceased to exist in the Divine bosom; the infinite love of God must have
-ceased to operate; and of consequence, the Lord Himself must have
-changed both his desires and his operations. The destruction of the
-world is, therefore, opposed to the character of God, as a Being of
-infinite Love and unbounded power.
-
-We may now sum up the arguments which have been adduced.
-
-1. When the literal sense of a passage of Scripture is opposed to common
-sense and reason, such literal sense must be laid aside, as not
-containing the true meaning. But the literal sense of those passages
-which speak of a destruction of the earth, is both absurd and
-unreasonable. Therefore the literal sense of these passages must be
-abandoned, and does not contain the proper interpretation. Again: when
-two prophecies are found couched in the same language, and referring to
-a similar event, one of which is fulfilled while the other remains
-unaccomplished; the manner in which the latter will be fulfilled, must
-be judged of by the previous fulfillment of the former. But the first
-prophecies relating to the first coming of the Lord, are exactly similar
-to those which refer to His second coming; yet they never were
-_literally_ fulfilled: therefore we have no just reason to look for a
-literal fulfillment of the latter. 2. When any text of Scripture is, in
-the letter, inconsistent with itself, or with other plain and express
-passages of the Word, the interpretation must be sought for in the
-spiritual meaning of the words. But the proofs of this earth's
-destruction are inconsistent with themselves, and are opposed to other
-plain and direct portions of the Word of God; therefore the meaning of
-those alleged proofs must be found, not in the literal sense, but in
-their spirit. 3. In the explanation of every part of the Sacred
-Scriptures, a due regard must be had to the connexion in which it
-stands; and any mode of explanation which tends to break such connexion,
-or is at variance with it, may be beautiful but cannot be _true_. But
-the connexion in which the passages referred to are found, is completely
-at variance with the doctrine derived from them; nor can they in any way
-support that doctrine until severed from this connexion. Therefore that
-explanation which the generality of Christians gives them, cannot be
-correct. 4. And, lastly, whatever doctrine is opposed to the character
-of God, as a God of unbounded love and infinite wisdom, is not a
-doctrine of the Bible. But the doctrine before us is thus opposed both
-to his nature and perfections; therefore it cannot be true.
-
-The arguments arising out of these propositions might be carried to a
-great extent. If, however, they have been supported by reason as well as
-Scripture,--if we have no right to expect a literal fulfillment of the
-prophecy relating to the Lord's second coming; and if the literal sense
-of the passages must be abandoned; then we have no reason to look for an
-overthrow of the universe, and the improbability of such a destruction
-has been fairly established.
-
-Having thus gone through the principal part of the subject, and having
-shown that the common interpretation, against which so many and serious
-objections lie, cannot be the true meaning; I proceed, as a necessary
-conclusion, to notice briefly the spiritual meaning of the prophetic
-symbols used in the passages that we have noticed, and their connexion
-with each other. That the whole of these passages relate to the
-Christian church, we have already stated; and that they are of
-importance to us, may be fairly inferred from their being found in the
-Sacred Volume. It is, therefore, scarcely possible to conceive that even
-learned and pious men have been able to perceive nothing within them but
-earthly concerns,--mere temporal events; the destruction of Jerusalem;
-the conversion (whether real or pretended) of Constantine; wars in
-Italy; the irruption of the Goths; and the famine of the Antonines; as
-if these events were either able, or likely, to give that saving wisdom
-which it is the object of God by his Word to bestow. Everything in the
-Sacred Volume is intended to contribute to our salvation; but
-transactions like these do not tend to make us wiser or better. It is to
-the Christian church, and to its principles and practice, therefore,
-that these descriptions refer; and as they relate to the general body,
-they apply to every individual of which that body is composed, and thus
-demand our most serious attention.
-
-The principal symbol used in these prophecies is, "the sun;" and this is
-said to "become black," and to be "turned into darkness." Our first
-inquiry, therefore, is, what principle in the spiritual world of
-Christianity, corresponds with this luminary in the world of matter. And
-in this inquiry we shall be aided, if we consider the functions it
-performs. The sun is the source of all natural heat and splendor; and
-without his influence, the worlds in the solar system, now glowing in
-light and beauty, would be dead and unattractive masses of matter. He is
-the cause of all vegetable and animal life: deprived of his beams,
-vegetation would decay, and the animal kingdom sink in death. He is the
-principal agent in the production of sight; the eye without him, would
-be a useless organ. In a word, if we were called upon to name the most
-important agent in the material world, our thoughts would turn at once
-to the sun. Now, in the spiritual world, including both the church of
-God and the individual spirit of man, what is that which produces the
-same effects as the natural sun does in the system of matter? What is
-the source of love and wisdom, spiritual heat and spiritual light?--What
-is it that produces in the mind those fruits of righteousness which are
-the characteristics of true religion? What gives to reason (the eye of
-the mind) its power of discerning spiritual things? and invests the
-soul, naturally dark and lifeless, with spiritual life and glory? It is
-Divine Love that does this. This is the Sun of the spiritual
-universe,--the Fountain of all heavenly light and life,--the Cause of
-every good word and work. And in giving this meaning to the natural
-image, we are supported throughout by the Sacred Scripture. The Lord is
-called "the Sun," and, "the Sun of Righteousness." He is said to _rise_
-upon the mind, when the spirit turns itself toward Him; and to _turn
-away_ from man, when he departs from his Maker. In the same manner,
-whenever the prophets or apostles were favored with a visible
-representation of the Divine Majesty, they describe the face of God as
-shining like _the sun_. Now the face of God is his Love. Hence the
-Psalmist says, "Lift upon us _the light of thy countenance_, and cause
-thy face to shine upon us." And this love of God is described as the
-sun, rising, shining, and giving light. Thus, too, in the visions of
-John, when the apostle beheld an image of the pure church of Christ, he
-describes her as "a woman _clothed with the sun_;" or encompassed on
-every side by the Divine Love. By the sun, then, in the internal sense
-of prophecy, we understand the infinite and unbounded love of the
-Almighty, which alone is the cause of life and light; and which gives
-strength, support, and beauty, to the spiritual system of man.
-
-Having obtained the meaning of this principal symbol, we shall be at no
-loss to determine that of the other. "_The moon_," as regards apparent
-splendor, is the second great luminary in the visible heavens. In
-herself, however, she is a dark body, and possesses no power of
-communicating light except by the reflection of the sun's beams. In this
-case, therefore, we have to seek a second principle in the heaven of the
-church, corresponding with this second light in the heaven of matter; a
-principle which, though it enlightens and cheers the soul, has no
-brightness in itself; but derives all its usefulness and beauty from a
-conjunction with LOVE. And this principle we find in FAITH; that faith
-which springs from charity. As the moon derives all her light from the
-sun, so does true faith draw all its glory from love. As the moon
-separated from the sun's influence, is dark and lifeless, so is faith
-without love, dead and useless. And as the light proceeding from the
-moon is but the rays of the sun reflected from her surface, so is the
-faith that springs from a modification of the love of God, a reflection
-of his infinite benevolence.
-
-And here, again, the apostle confirms this idea. While he represents the
-church of God as being _clothed with the Sun_, he also describes her as
-standing upon the moon, or having "the moon under her feet:"--pointing
-out the love with which she is continually encompassed, and the faith
-upon which she is securely founded. Thus Paul, speaking of the universal
-church of Christ, declares that it is "built upon the _foundation_ of
-the apostles and prophets:"--that is, upon their doctrines, and upon the
-truth which they made known; "Jesus Christ Himself," as THE TRUTH
-Itself, being "the chief corner stone." Eph. ii. 20. With this, too,
-agrees the sublime prophecy of Isaiah. When speaking of the church
-restored to its full perfection and glory, he says, "_Thy sun_ shall no
-more go down, neither shall thy _moon_ withdraw herself; for JEHOVAH
-shall be thine EVERLASTING LIGHT and the days of thy mourning shall be
-ended." ix. 20. That is: Thy love shall no more depart, neither shall
-thy faith and charity decay; for God shall dwell in every soul by his
-love, and his beams shall be reflected from every bosom.
-
-We might go through the whole of those predictions which relate to this
-subject; and in all cases we should find that this interpretation of the
-figures not only makes a complete and consistent sense, but that the
-passages so interpreted would stand in the most complete agreement with
-the general tenor of the Scriptures, and with the hopes of the best and
-wisest among men.
-
-The third symbolic figure is, "the stars:" and these, as regards the
-quantity of light transmitted to the earth, are secondary luminaries in
-the visible system. They shine not with any borrowed radiance, but with
-their own native splendor. And here, again, we must repeat the inquiry,
-what are those luminaries in the _mental heaven_, which hold a secondary
-place in the concern of salvation, to love and faith; yet shine, not
-with reflected light, but with the real brightness of the Divine Glory?
-The answer is easy: They are the doctrines of religion or the
-_knowledges_ of truth;--those portions of the eternal reason, which THE
-MANIFESTED TRUTH has Himself revealed. But some may be ready to observe,
-that these are already included in the Faith of which I have just
-spoken. A single remark, however, will obviate this objection. That
-FAITH and the _knowledge of truth_ generally go together, is certainly
-true,--even as the moon and stars shine at the same time. But to _know_
-the truth is one thing, and to have faith in God is another and widely
-different thing; as different as the light of the stars is from that of
-the moon. And as the stars frequently shine when the moon is not seen,
-so does the knowledge of truth frequently exist in the mind when true
-faith has no existence. I am, therefore, consistent in declaring that
-the _light_ of the stars,--the knowledge of doctrines, though a valuable
-acquisition, is secondary in importance both to Christian _faith_ and to
-Divine _Love_. Yet the doctrines or truths which are the objects of this
-knowledge, are not derived from any source lower than divinity itself;
-they are, as just observed, portions of eternal wisdom designed for the
-guidance of the church of God; and derived from the "Father of lights,"
-from whom proceeds "every good and every perfect gift."
-
-In thus mentioning _doctrines_, (or the term which I have used as
-synonymous, _truths_, for pure doctrines are but truths embodied) I by
-no means refer to the tenets of a sect or party, but to the eternal
-wisdom of the Almighty, as revealed in his word: and with respect to
-this, the parallel between it and the natural image may be carried
-through all its parts. As the stars are of the same nature with the sun,
-and like him shine with their native and proper light, so is the wisdom
-of God of the same nature with his love; both being essential attributes
-of Divinity. As the stars, however, though in themselves splendid
-bodies, communicate no heat to the earth, and are but of secondary
-importance in comparison with the sun and moon, so does the mere
-knowledge of truths, (although the truths in themselves possess the
-nature of divinity,) leave the soul as cold and lifeless as before; and
-is of far less importance in the spiritual system than the love of God,
-or faith, its reflection on the soul. Carry the comparison as far as we
-may, still the stars of the natural heaven correspond exactly to the
-_truths_ of the church; and the light which they emit, to the
-_knowledge_ of that truth.
-
-And this interpretation of the symbol agrees, too, with the vision of
-the apostle. The church clothed with the Sun of love, and standing upon
-faith; the symbolic _moon_ had upon her head (the seat of intelligence
-and wisdom) a crown of twelve _stars_;--denoting the knowledges of pure
-truth which should ornament that church in her last state of peace and
-holiness. So the great red dragon, who is described as fighting with
-Michael and his angels, is said to have drawn the third part of the
-stars from heaven;--pointing out the almost total extinction of real
-truth in the corrupted Christian churches. We might again trace this
-meaning in every passage where the natural image occurs, and we should
-still find that the sense it gives to each of them is consistent both
-with the Word of God, as referring to the great concern of salvation,
-and with the connexion in which the passages are found.
-
-In these symbolic representations we, therefore, perceive the three
-sources of light in the Christian heaven, love, faith, and knowledge.
-The first being the diffused affection of the Father of spirits; the
-second, its reflection in the soul of man; the third, the truths of
-doctrine which enliven and ornament the church, proceeding immediately
-from the Source of all Wisdom. The glory of each is the same in
-substance, as the light of the sun, moon, and stars, is the same in
-nature; but it differs in degree, as the luminary whence it springs is
-of more or less importance to the eternal happiness of man. Knowledge is
-the least important; of itself merely, it produces nothing. Faith rises
-above knowledge; yet even faith by itself is useless. Love is the chief;
-this quickens, animates, and renders fruitful, the church of God, and
-the soul of each individual member.
-
-I press this interpretation on no one; yet I may say, without breaking
-the bounds of Christian liberty, that it carries probability on its very
-face. The parallel between the natural image and its spiritual
-correspondent, is complete throughout; but this can by no means be said
-of the various constructions which have generally been put upon them.
-The sun, it is said, is the civil government of a state; and the moon,
-its ecclesiastical policy. But in vain shall we attempt to draw a
-comparison here between the natural figure and the object said to be
-signified by it. The civil government of an empire is not the source of
-all wisdom, love, and prosperity, as the sun is of heat, light, and
-fruitfulness. It does not give to the ecclesiastical all its power,
-glory, and beauty, as the sun does to the moon; nor would the church
-become dead and lifeless if separated from the state, as the moon would
-if severed from the sun. The pastors of the church, which it is affirmed
-are the stars, do not, like the stars, shine with their own native
-splendor. The comparison, therefore, does not in any degree hold good:
-while in the meaning we have given above, consistency both with
-Scripture and reason, as well as with the best interests of man, is
-preserved throughout.
-
-Now if this signification of the sun, moon, and stars, be correct, we
-need not employ much time in fixing the meaning of the terms "heaven,"
-and "earth," when applied to the church of God. _Heaven_, or the
-atmosphere, is that in which the sun, moon, and stars appear; and by
-means of which they produce their effects. It is the grand reservoir of
-those particles, which, acted upon by the sun, and thus set in motion,
-cause heat; and preserve on the earth, life and vegetation. And the
-earth is that body, on the surface of which vegetation flourishes and
-life appears. This at once points out the figures as applying to the
-_inward feelings_ and _outward life_ of an _individual_; or, to the
-internal state of the church and its outward forms and ceremonies. It is
-in what the apostle calls "the inward man," that _love_, _faith_, and
-_knowledge_ produce their first effects; and by operating upon the
-feelings and affections of the mind, cause spiritual light and
-heat--true wisdom and divine love. And these produce a corresponding
-effect in the outward conduct, bringing forth "fruits meet for
-repentance,"--the living forms and witnesses of religion. As the sun
-shines in the atmosphere and produces fruit on the earth, so love shines
-in the soul and brings forth effects in the conduct, either in the case
-of an individual, or of the church as an assembly of individuals. By the
-same rule of analogy we may perceive what is meant by _the clouds_.
-These in the natural world, are vapors exhaled from the earth by the
-heat of the sun; and which condensed into form in the atmosphere, serve
-to perform their important functions. They temper and lessen in some
-degree the heat of the sun; they serve to beautify the appearance of the
-heavens; they are the great depository of rain, and the principal agents
-in the production of tempests. That which corresponds to them must,
-therefore, be something springing from the outward state of man, which
-is the grand depository of truth (spiritual water), behind which the
-glory of the Divine Love and Wisdom is seen, and which accommodates this
-wisdom to the capacity of mankind. And this we find in the outward
-letter of the Word of God. The historical narratives, the figures of
-prophecy, the parables of the Saviour, are all images rising from the
-world and the temporal state of mankind; and thus, like the _clouds_,
-they have their origin from the earth. Within this outward body of image
-and narrative are contained the treasures of wisdom and knowledge; it is
-the grand source from which truth must be drawn. And the glory of God
-shines through the whole, imparting to every natural form the splendor
-of divinity. And as the material images of the Bible serve to
-accommodate the wisdom of God to the capacity of his creatures, so have
-they often been the cause of those convulsions in the church, which
-seemed even to threaten her existence. "The _letter_" has often killed,
-when unaccompanied in the mind with the "_spirit_ which giveth life." We
-cannot, therefore, find in the figure before us anything which so
-completely accords with its origin and design, as the outward letter of
-the Word of God--the clouds of the Christian heaven.
-
-The meaning of the principal symbols being thus stated, we pass to the
-connexion which they bear to each other in the predictions of the
-Saviour. We have already noted that the prophecy contained in Matthew,
-and recorded by the other Evangelists, refers in its primary application
-to the destruction of Jerusalem by the Roman armies; but in its more
-extensive meaning it points to the state of the Christian church in her
-period of decline and corruption, of which Jerusalem in her last days
-was a fitting type. With respect to this it is declared "_the sun_ shall
-be darkened"--the Divine Love obscured and lost; "and the moon shall not
-give her light"--faith and charity shall sink in darkness; "and the
-stars"--the knowledge of truth "shall fall from heaven,"--no longer
-exist in the minds of her members; "and the powers of heaven"--the whole
-internal state of the church "shall be shaken"--shall be thrown into
-complete disorder and confusion. This meaning, to which we are led by
-the connexion and correspondence of the natural symbols, points to a
-time (not when the universe shall be destroyed, but) when true religion
-shall have ceased to exist in the church:--"when the love of many shall
-wax cold:" when true faith will no longer be found; and when
-knowledge--the knowledge of genuine spiritual truth--shall have passed
-away. The same things are described in the vision of the apostle. "There
-was a great earthquake"--a shaking and disorder in the state of the
-church; "and the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon
-became as blood, and the stars of heaven fell to the earth,"--the
-knowledge of truth which once shone in the _mind_, sunk into mere
-outward _creeds_ and confessions of faith; "and the heaven departed as a
-scroll when it is rolled together"--the whole internal state of the
-church was thrown into confusion, and every inward feeling of religion
-perished.
-
-The event immediately following is the appearance of the Son of Man in
-the clouds, with a trumpet; and since it is confessed that a trumpet
-signifies "the call of the Gospel," or as I would express it, the
-manifestation of truth; and as the _clouds_ correspond to the _outward
-form_ of the Word, the appearance of the Lord in the clouds and attended
-by trumpets, must signify the manifestation of spiritual love and truth
-in the letter of Scripture: and this is supported by what is afterwards
-said to be the consequence; "a new heaven and a new earth,"--a new state
-of the church both internal and external, both as regards inward
-feelings and outward conduct.
-
-That this interpretation is true, I call upon no one to believe; but
-that it is probable will, I think, be confessed by all; and that it is
-in perfect harmony with the infinite designs of God toward his rational
-creatures, as well as with his character as a Being of infinite Love,
-will be equally acknowledged. Whether there has been a period in the
-Christian church (as there certainly was in the Jewish) when the above
-description was applicable to her; when religion had sunk into mere
-formality; when bigotry and intolerance both in priests and people, cut
-up charity by the roots; when faith was a mere body from which the
-spirit had departed; when the clergy were mere formalists, and the
-people were sensualized; when sacred knowledge was neglected by the one
-and unknown to the other: whether, I say, such a period _has_ yet
-arrived, and if so, whether it was _eighty_ years ago, or eight hundred,
-it is not my province now to inquire. My object is to show that the
-images used by the sacred penmen have reference to such a state, and to
-a subsequent restoration; and this I have shown by the rule or law of
-analogy existing between spiritual and natural things, as well as by the
-grand design of the Word of God in which those images occur.
-
-And if it be probable that such is really the fact, then the design with
-which I commenced my task is completed. If the natural sense of the
-words of Scripture is absurd--if the best commentators themselves admit
-that in their outward application the words have no reference to the
-destruction of the natural world--and if, considered in their internal
-meaning, they relate to the church, its decline, and restoration; then
-there is no proof in the Scriptures of the dissolution of the visible
-universe; but strong evidence that it will never take place.
-
-Let us, however, before leaving the subject, take a hasty glance at the
-two doctrines which have been presented. The first declares that after
-creating the universe, and endowing it with life and beauty; after
-forming man as a candidate for eternal glory, and after raising up a
-church which it is said was to endure "for ever," God will at a future
-time (for what reason, or to answer what purpose, is unknown,) destroy
-the fabric he has created; throw the whole universe into confusion and
-reduce it to ashes. That He will, for some reason equally unknown, put
-an end to the human race, and no more bring rational creatures to
-eternal happiness; that heaven will be closed, and not another candidate
-admitted; and that the church will then cease on earth, and never again
-be restored. And this supposition is founded on vague and mysterious
-texts of Scripture, and on a literal interpretation of figures which the
-most learned confess they cannot comprehend.
-
-The other doctrine maintains that God, having created the world and
-peopled it with inhabitants, will continue it in existence; and that
-though religion will in the "latter ages" decline, yet at length "the
-Lord will appear in the brightness of his glory," will destroy evil and
-false-hood among men,--restore the world to its first state of purity;
-and that it shall then for ever become one vast temple, from which a
-ceaseless song of praise shall continually arise; while its inhabitants,
-prepared and preparing for a higher state, shall pass in succession into
-the eternal rest of God; and that the earth shall therefore be a nursery
-for glory,--a place of trial for a continual race of candidates for
-heaven.
-
-This is a consummation worthy of the Creator,--worthy of the infinity of
-his nature and perfections,--worthy of the plan of redemption which He
-became incarnate to effect. It is agreeable to the dictates of the
-soundest reason, and in accordance with the hopes and wishes of every
-man who has not bowed down his reason to the idol of popular opinion.
-While the opposite tenet sets reason at defiance, makes the Bible teach
-what is practically absurd, and stands in opposition to the opinion of
-some of the most learned among its own advocates.
-
-We cannot conclude this little treatise more appropriately than in the
-words of a writer often quoted in these pages.
-
-"The doctrines or principles which I have stated and defended in this
-work, I believe to be the truths of God. Those against which I have
-argued, I believe to be either false or unproved. The doctrine which
-cannot stand the test of rational investigation, cannot be true. We have
-gone too far when we have said 'such and such doctrines should not be
-subjected to rational investigation, being doctrines of pure
-revelation.' I know no such doctrine in the Bible. The doctrines of the
-Scripture are doctrines of _eternal reason_; and they are revealed
-because they _are such_. Human reason could not have found them out; but
-when revealed, reason can both apprehend and comprehend them. It sees
-their perfect harmony among themselves, their agreement with the
-perfections of the Divine Nature, and their sovereign suitableness to
-the nature and state of man: thus reason approves and applauds. Some men
-cannot reason, and therefore they declaim against reason, and proscribe
-it in the examination of religious truth."
-
-Men may incorporate their doctrines in _creeds_, or articles of faith,
-and sing them in _hymns_; and this may be both useful and edifying if
-the doctrines be _true_. But in every question which involves the
-eternal interests of man, the _Holy Scriptures_ must be appealed to in
-union with _reason_ their great commentator. He who forms his _creed_ or
-_confession of faith_ without these, may believe anything or nothing, as
-the cunning of others or his own caprice may dictate. Human creeds and
-confessions have been often put in the place of the Bible, to the
-dishonor both of revelation and reason. Let _those_ go away, let these
-be retained, whatever be the consequence.
-
-[1] See on this subject, "The Plenary Inspiration of the Scriptures
-asserted," by Rev. S. Noble:--a work well worthy the perusal of
-every Christian, and which deserves a place in every library.
-
-[2] See Wesley's Sermons. Sermon xv. "preached before the Hon.
-Sir Edward Clive, one of the judges of his Majesty's court of common
-pleas, in St. Paul's Church, Bedford, on Friday, March 10, 1758."
-
-[3] Dr. Clarke has a very curious note on this passage. He supposes
-that the "noise" will be occasioned by the action of electric fire, on
-the watery particles of the atmosphere. These, being divided into
-their two component _gases_, the one will ascend into the higher regions,
-and the other float on the earth's surface. Thus, he says, the
-account of the apostle is "philosophically correct." Whether this
-be the _apostle_, or whether such account is correct in any degree, let
-common sense judge.
-
-[4] This passage in its mere outward application, refers to a
-temporal overthrow in the land of Idumea; it has also, however, an
-acknowledged relation to the triumphs of the Gospel, and the overthrow
-of its enemies. Still, it makes little difference in the strength
-of the argument, to which event it is referred. Such descriptions have
-been given, they have been fulfilled, yet in no case literally. This is
-all that need be proved.
-
-[5] See Sir Isaac Newton,--Locke,--Dr. A. Clarke,--Burkitt, etc.
-
-[6] See Dr. Adam Clarke's remark upon this passage.
-
-[7] Birkitt's Notes on the New Testament.
-
-[8] For further remarks on this text, see "Noble's Plenary Inspiration
-of the Scriptures."
-
-[9] Dr. A. Clarke, in loc.
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The New Eschatology, by J. G. Broughton Pegg
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The New Eschatology
- Showing the Indestructibility of the Earth and the Wide
- Difference between the Letter and Spirit of Holy Scripture.
-
-Author: J. G. Broughton Pegg
-
-Release Date: April 29, 2016 [EBook #51888]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE NEW ESCHATOLOGY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Donald Cummings, Bryan Ness, Chris Pinfield
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
-Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div id="tnote">
-
-<p>Transcriber's Note.</p>
-
-<p>Apparent typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="front section">
-
- <h1><span class="small">THE</span><br />
- <span class="smcap">New Eschatology</span>.</h1>
-
- <p class="x-small">SHOWING</p>
-
- <p>THE INDESTRUCTIBILITY OF THE EARTH</p>
-
- <p class="x-small">AND</p>
-
- <p>THE WIDE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE LETTER AND<br />
- SPIRIT OF HOLY SCRIPTURE.</p>
-
- <p><span class="small">BY</span><br />
- J. G. BROUGHTON PEGG.</p>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img src="images/roundel.jpg" width="100" height="99" alt="roundel"/>
-</div>
-
- <p>PHILADELPHIA<br />
- <span class="gap-between">J. B. LIPPINCOTT &amp; CO.</span><br />
- 1872.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
- <p class="x-small">Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by<br />
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT &amp; CO.,<br />
- In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
- <p class="x-small smcap">Lippincott's Press,<br />
- Philadelphia.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum">{5}</div>
-
-<h2>NOTE.</h2>
-
-<p>This little work was published in England several
-years ago; but has never before been republished in
-this country. It deals with those texts of Scripture
-which have generally been supposed to foretell the destruction
-of the material universe; and shows conclusively
-that these passages have been entirely misunderstood
-by commentators; and that, rightly interpreted,
-they have no reference whatever to the outer realm
-of matter, but to the inner realm of mind; to the
-internal condition of the church, the loss or destruction
-of heavenly charity, and the eclipse of genuine
-faith, which it was foreseen and foretold would occur at
-the close of the first Christian Dispensation.</p>
-
-<p>It is proper to add, also, that, although the name of
-Swedenborg nowhere occurs in the book, it is evident
-that the author was familiar with his teachings, and
-viewed and treated his subject from the Swedenborgian
-<span class="pagenum">{6}</span>
-stand-point. But with the lovers of spiritual truth and
-the seekers after a Spiritual Christianity, this fact&mdash;now
-that so many earnest inquirers are beginning to read the
-writings of the Swedish seer&mdash;will rather add to than
-detract from the interest and value of the work.</p>
-
-<div class="right1"><span class="smcap">American Editor.</span></div>
-
-<div class="left1"><span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>, Oct. 30, 1871.</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum">{7}</div>
-
-<h2><span class="small">THE</span><br />
- NEW ESCHATOLOGY.</h2>
-
-<p id="revquote"><i>For the first heaven and the first earth were passed<br />
-away; and there was no more sea</i>.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Rev.</span> xxi. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="uppercase">While</span> we blame the conduct of the Jews in adhering
-only to the literal sense of the Scriptures, and
-by such adherence rejecting their Messiah, we possibly forget
-that the Christian church has followed precisely the
-same line of conduct; and that to this we are indebted for
-the greater part of those absurd dogmas, which have so long
-exposed the Gospel to the derision of its enemies. Had
-men properly discriminated between those parts of the Sacred
-Volume which are <i>literally</i> true, and those which are
-only <i>apparently</i> so, we should never have heard of the doctrines
-of transubstantiation and Roman supremacy; nor of
-many other equally absurd beliefs which the generality of
-Christians entertain. We should not have seen a fallible
-and weak mortal exalted as Head over the church of God;
-we should not have heard of a morsel of bread being
-changed into the Lord's body; we should not have seen the
-<span class="pagenum">{8}</span>
-Divine Nature divided among three separate and distinct
-Persons; nor should we have heard of the doctrine which
-we are about to bring under consideration.</p>
-
-<p>But do not mistake me. When I assert that the Scriptures
-in the literal sense sometimes speak only apparent
-truth, I by no means deny the divine authority of the Sacred
-Record. The church whose doctrines I advocate, most
-explicitly declares that the <i>whole</i> of the Scriptures,&mdash;every
-chapter,&mdash;every verse,&mdash;every word, nay, sometimes every
-<i>letter</i>&mdash;is filled with the inbreathed wisdom of God. But
-when I say that apparent and not <i>real</i> truths are often
-laid down in the letter of the Word, I affirm what every
-man who possesses any share of discernment will readily
-admit. The fact itself is too plain even to require proof.
-Thus we read that the sun rises, moves, and sets; which is
-certainly true in <i>appearance</i>, but not in reality. Again we
-are told that the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> repents,&mdash;that He is weary, and
-that He turns away His face from man; which, though correct
-as regards appearance, has no foundation in literal
-fact; for though the Sun of Righteousness is said to rise
-upon the soul, and to set when the mind is given up to evil,
-yet it is here as in the case of the <i>material</i> sun. In God
-"there is no variableness nor shadow of turning;"&mdash;"He
-fainteth not, neither is <i>weary</i>;"&mdash;"He is not a man that
-He should lie, nor the son of man that He should repent;"
-but as the earth, by turning to or from the sun, causes the
-appearance of motion in that body; so the mind of man,
-by turning to the Lord, or by departing from Him, causes
-<span class="pagenum">{9}</span>
-an appearance of change in God; yet it is not He that
-changes, but the mind itself.</p>
-
-<p>And we may go still further. There are numerous passages
-in the Word of God, which in the literal sense only,
-do not convey even <i>apparent</i> truth. Among others the following,
-"Thou ridest through them with thine horses." "He
-rode upon a cherub and did fly; He came flying upon the
-wings of the wind." "He that eateth my flesh and drinketh
-my blood, dwelleth in me and I in him;" "for my flesh is
-meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed." "This (bread)
-is my body; this cup is the New Testament in my blood."
-"If thy right hand offend thee, cut it off and cast it from
-thee." I am the Door of the sheep." "I am the true
-vine, and my Father is the Husbandman." In all these
-passages, and others which will occur to every reader of
-the Scripture, the literal sense conveys neither real nor apparent
-truth. The Lord does not really ride through the
-sea, nor does he even <i>appear</i> to do so. The flesh of the
-Saviour was not to be <i>literally</i> eaten. The bread which He
-held was not really his body, nor did it even <i>seem</i> to be so.
-And as in these and similar instances, the outward letter of
-the Word conveys not its true meaning, it is to be sought
-for in the law of correspondence; or in that eternal connection
-which subsists between natural things and spiritual.</p>
-
-<p>And upon this law of correspondence or analogy I must
-make a few preliminary remarks. It is what the world in
-general terms <i>figure</i>, or <i>metaphor</i>; but the New Church
-makes a distinction, and I will add, a very just one, betwixt
-<span class="pagenum">{10}</span>
-<i>figure</i> (properly so called) and <i>correspondence</i>. Figurative
-language is that in which a comparison is drawn
-between one natural object and another; the analogy between
-which exists only in the imagination, and has, therefore,
-no <i>real</i> existence: but correspondence is the representation
-of spiritual things by natural; and the resemblance
-is not merely imaginary but real, consisting in the proper
-dependence of the latter upon the former, as an effect upon
-its cause. If we compare a mighty empire in its rise,
-glory, and decline, to an oak springing up, flourishing for
-centuries, and then decaying, we use <i>figurative</i> language;
-since both the empire and the oak are <i>natural</i> objects, which
-have no <i>real</i> connection with each other, and between which
-the resemblance is only imaginary. But when the Creator
-is likened to the sun, the language is no longer <i>figurative</i>
-but <i>correspondent</i>. It is not the comparison of earthly
-things with earthly, but of spiritual things with natural.
-And the objects compared have a real connection with each
-other, since the material sun depends on its Creator as an
-effect upon its cause. Again, when the church is described
-as the Lord's body, the language is correspondent and the
-connection real; for the rise and prosperity of the church
-depended upon the assumption of humanity by the Saviour;
-and it still hangs upon it as the cause of its existence.</p>
-
-<p>We further notice that all passages of the Word, the
-historical as well as the poetical, bear within them such a
-correspondent or internal sense. This will be placed beyond
-a reasonable doubt if we consider, first, that "all Scripture,"
-<span class="pagenum">{11}</span>
-whether historical or prophetic, is, according to the
-Apostle, inspired or <i>God-breathed</i>. And as the breath of
-God is the infinitude of his love and wisdom, every portion
-of the sacred Volume must be filled with it. Not only
-every book in general, but every verse and every sentence;&mdash;for
-if we can find a single sentence which does not
-contain within itself the infinite wisdom of God, such sentence
-must either form no part of the Scripture, or the
-assertion of Paul must be untrue. And secondly, the Word
-of God from the beginning to the end is intended to "make
-us wise unto salvation." This is the design with which
-every part of it was written. But we can only become
-truly wise by being acquainted with our own state, and
-with the nature of the Divine Redeemer. Whatever part,
-therefore, does not relate both to God and to ourselves, cannot
-communicate saving wisdom; and consequently, (if the
-Apostle be correct,) cannot form any portion of the Sacred
-Volume. Now, independently of the passages which we
-have before quoted, the greater part of what is called "the
-historical Word," consists, in its mere <i>outward form</i>, of the
-records of the Jewish nation, their wars, and their policy.
-The prophecies themselves in their literal and obvious
-meaning, refer to the rise and decline of earthly states, and
-to the mutation of earthly empires. Either, then, such
-records and prophecies must have an internal and correspondent
-meaning, relating to spiritual and divine things,
-or if they have not, they cannot be fitted to communicate
-saving wisdom, and so cannot be accounted part of the
-<span class="pagenum">{12}</span>
-Scriptures; seeing that the <i>Scriptures</i> in every part, are,
-according to Paul, filled with this wisdom.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_1" id="Ref_1" href="#Foot_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>If, then, there <i>are</i> parts of the Word of God, the true
-meaning of which is not to be found in the literal sense;
-if that Word contains, within the outward letter, a spiritual
-and internal meaning; and if we are to resort to such
-meaning where the letter gives not the true one; the next
-inquiry which arises is, How are we to determine when a
-passage is true in the literal sense, or when it is only true
-in the corresponding one? The answer is easy. When
-the outward meaning of any passage asserts something at
-variance with reason,&mdash;or when it appears opposed to the
-known character of God, then such meaning must be
-abandoned, and the truth sought in the internal sense.
-This answer has been admitted as correct by the Protestant
-churches, in their contest with their Catholic neighbors.
-The latter argue that the words of our Lord, "This is my
-body," are to be literally understood; while the former
-very justly answer that, since such an interpretation is
-opposed to reason and at variance with the nature of God
-as a God of truth, it ought to be and must be rejected;
-and the words considered as <i>figurative</i>, or as I have already
-termed it, <i>correspondent</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I have now proved a few preliminary points: <i>First</i>, that
-there are some portions of the Word of God, the true
-<span class="pagenum">{13}</span>
-meaning of which is not to be found in the letter. <i>Second</i>,
-that when the literal sense of a passage is opposed to fact
-and reason, such literal sense is to be rejected. And <i>third</i>,
-that in such cases the interpretation must be sought in the
-correspondent or figurative meaning.</p>
-
-<p>We turn now to what is commonly denominated "the
-End of the World;" and on stating the generally received
-doctrine on this subject, we shall quote the words of the
-celebrated John Wesley, both on account of his piety and
-learning, and because the views which he maintains may
-be fairly taken as those of the generality of Christians.
-First he observes:</p>
-
-<p>"There shall be earthquakes, not in divers places only,
-but in <i>all places</i>; not in one part only, but in every part of
-the habitable world. In one of these every island shall
-flee away, and the mountains will not be found. Meanwhile
-all the waters of the terraqueous globe will feel the
-violence of these concussions. The sea and the waves
-roaring, with such an agitation as had never been known
-before since the hour that `the fountains of the great deep
-were broken up' to destroy the earth, which then stood
-'out of the water and in the water!' The air will be all
-storm and tempest, full of dark vapors, and pillars of
-smoke resounding with thunder from pole to pole, and torn
-with ten thousand lightnings. But the commotion will not
-stop in the region of the air: the powers of heaven also
-shall be shaken. 'There shall be signs in the sun and in
-the moon, and in the stars;' those fixed as well as those
-<span class="pagenum">{14}</span>
-that move round them. 'The sun shall be turned into
-darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and
-terrible day of the Lord come.' 'The stars shall withdraw
-their shining,' yea, and 'fall from heaven,' being thrown
-out of their orbits. And then shall be heard the universal
-<i>shout</i> from all the companies of heaven, followed by the
-<i>voice of the archangel</i>, proclaiming the approach of the Son
-of God and man; and the <i>trumpet of God</i> sounding an
-alarm to all that sleep in the dust of the earth. In consequence
-of this, all the graves shall open and the bodies of
-men arise."</p>
-
-<p>After the following judgment, (which Mr. Wesley thinks
-must last several thousand years, considering "the number
-of persons who are to be judged, and of actions which are
-to be inquired into,") he proceeds:</p>
-
-<p>"Then the heavens will be shriveled up as a parchment
-scroll, and pass away with a great noise. The very manner
-of their passing away is disclosed to us by the apostle Peter,
-'In the day of God, the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved.'
-The whole beautiful fabric will be overthrown by
-that raging element, the connexion of all its parts destroyed,
-and every atom torn asunder from the others. 'By the
-same the earth also and the works that are therein, shall be
-burnt up;' the enormous work of nature, the everlasting
-hills, mountains that have defied the rage of time, and
-stood unmoved so many thousand years, will sink down in
-fiery ruin. How much less will the works of art, though
-of the most durable kind, the utmost efforts of human industry,
-<span class="pagenum">{15}</span>
-tombs, pillars, triumphal arches, castles, pyramids,
-be able to withstand the flaming Conqueror! All, all will
-die, perish, vanish away, like a dream when one awaketh."<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_2" id="Ref_2" href="#Foot_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Such, in substance, is the doctrine of the Christian world;
-and certainly if <i>fear</i> and <i>terror</i> were sufficient to drive men
-into a state of righteousness, here are horrors enough to
-excite the fears even of the most courageous. But not the
-eloquence of man any more than his wrath, worketh the righteousness
-of God. It is not sufficient that a doctrine be eloquently
-set forth; it must also have truth for its foundation.
-It is not enough that Scripture be quoted to support
-it; that Scripture must also stand in its proper connexion,
-and retain its proper meaning; for if this be not the case,
-however eloquent the preacher and however numerous the
-apparent proofs, the tenet can only rank with that "wood,
-hay, and stubble,"&mdash;those unsubstantial and airy doctrines,
-which, when tried by the fire of Divine Wisdom, are consumed
-and pass away. And if we can prove, <i>First</i>, That
-the passages which are quoted to support the doctrine before
-us, are <i>literally</i> understood, while nevertheless such literal
-sense leads to absurdity; <i>Second</i>, If we can further
-make it appear that such a <i>literal</i> application of them makes
-them inconsistent with each other as well as with many
-plain portions of the Bible; and again, that, even if we
-admit such outward meaning to be correct, it gives no countenance
-<span class="pagenum">{16}</span>
-to the doctrine in dispute; while at the same time
-that doctrine is opposed to the end of creation and the
-character of God;&mdash;if these propositions can be made good,
-I trust it will appear, that the tenet itself has no countenance
-from the Scriptures; and that the true meaning of
-the passages adduced, must be sought for in the internal or
-spiritual sense of the Word.</p>
-
-<p>The portions of Scripture on which the supposed destruction
-of the universe is founded, are far from numerous.
-Some of them are already quoted in the extract from Mr.
-Wesley; and previous to entering upon the consideration
-of our first proposition, we shall point out a few of the remainder.
-"Immediately after the tribulation of those
-days, the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not
-give her light, the stars shall fall from heaven, and the
-powers of heaven shall be shaken; and then shall appear
-the sign of the Son of man in heaven; and then shall all the
-tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of man
-coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory.
-And He shall send his angels with a great sound of a
-trumpet, and they shall gather together his elect from the
-four winds, from one end of heaven to the other." Matt.
-xxiv.&nbsp;29, 30, 31. "Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or
-one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, until all be
-fulfilled." Matt. v.&nbsp;18. "Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye
-gazing up into heaven? This same Jesus who is taken
-from you, shall so come as ye have seen Him go into
-heaven." Acts i.&nbsp;11. "Then cometh the end, when he
-<span class="pagenum">{17}</span>
-shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the
-Father." 1 Cor. xv.&nbsp;24. "The Lord Jesus shall be revealed
-from heaven with his mighty angels in flaming fire,
-taking vengeance on them that know not God." 2 Thess. i.&nbsp;7, 8.
-"The day of the Lord will come as a thief in the
-night, in which the heavens shall pass away with a great
-noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat; the
-earth also, and the works that are therein shall be burned
-up." 2 Peter iii.&nbsp;10.</p>
-
-<p>But it is from the book of Revelation, that the principal
-part of the proofs are drawn. A book <i>confessedly</i> figurative
-in its language, and which the wisest and most learned
-men have in vain striven to interpret. One could hardly
-commit or imagine a greater outrage upon the common
-sense of mankind, than that which the defenders of this
-doctrine have committed, by first confessing the Book itself
-to be figurative and inexplicable, and then adducing its
-language <i>literally</i>, in their support, as if they had all at
-once found out that it was no longer figurative but <i>literal</i>.
-If the visions of the Apostle are not literal, but grand and
-representative images, then ought they not to be understood
-in a literal manner, or if they are to be so understood,
-then as plain and literal narrative they may be easily
-explained; and the complaint which the receivers of this
-doctrine have so often made, that it cannot be understood,
-is to the last degree frivolous and foolish.</p>
-
-<p>And what makes the matter still worse is, that the passages
-they have adduced are among the most highly figurative
-<span class="pagenum">{18}</span>
-in the Apostle's descriptions. The following are among
-them: "Behold He cometh with clouds, and every eye
-shall see Him; and they that pierced Him; and all the
-tribes of the earth shall wail because of Him." i.&nbsp;7. "And
-I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal, and lo, there
-was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as sackcloth
-of hair, and the moon became as blood, and the
-stars of heaven fell unto the earth; even as a fig-tree casteth
-her untimely figs when she is shaken of a mighty wind;
-and the heaven departed as a scroll, when it is rolled together,
-and every mountain and island were moved out of
-their places." vi.&nbsp;12, 13, 14. "And I saw a great white
-throne, and Him that sat on it, from whose face the earth
-and the heaven fled away, and there was found no place for
-them: and I saw the dead, small and great, stand before
-God." xx.&nbsp;11, 12. "And I saw a new heaven and a new
-earth, for the first heaven and the first earth were passed
-away, and there was no more sea." xxi.&nbsp;1.</p>
-
-<p>Such are the texts of Scripture by which the doctrine
-before us is supported; the greater part of which have
-clearly no reference to the subject, and the remainder being
-not the literal language of narrative, but the <i>correspondent</i>
-and mysterious words of prophecy. Yet, even viewing
-them in their outward meaning, we can scarcely fail to be
-struck with the wide difference which exists between them
-and the description of Mr. Wesley. There is nothing in
-them of an earthquake, amidst some general concussion in
-which every island shall flee away:&mdash;nothing of "the air
-<span class="pagenum">{19}</span>
-resounding with thunder from pole to pole, and being torn
-with ten thousand lightnings:"&mdash;nothing of the connexion
-of every part being destroyed, and every atom torn asunder
-from the others. We may therefore fairly set these down
-as additional horrors, supplied by the imagination of the
-writer, and unsupported by anything like Scripture proof.
-And with regard to what remains, we will now see how far
-that <i>literal</i> sense upon which it rests, will stand the criterion
-by which we are to determine the meaning of Scripture.
-If the outward meaning is reasonable and consistent,
-then it must be adhered to, and the doctrine is established:
-but if, on the other hand, such interpretation leads
-to absurdity, then, by the consent of every Protestant
-church, that meaning must be laid aside; and with it, too,
-must be cast off the tenet of this world's destruction.</p>
-
-<p>But one cautionary remark must here be made. We
-are by no means authorized to mingle together literal and
-figurative language. That is, we have no right to interpret
-one part of a sentence literally, and another as figure.
-The passages before us are either <i>literal</i>, or they are <i>not</i>.
-If they <i>are</i>, then every part of them must be literally understood;
-if they are <i>not</i>, then no part of them can be literally
-interpreted. If, then, we adhere to the outward
-meaning, we must carry that adherence to every portion of
-the text; for if we reject such meaning in any part, we
-reject it in the whole; and the doctrine which depends for
-support upon it, must fall to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Keeping this in view our first proposition is, that, to affix
-<span class="pagenum">{20}</span>
-a literal sense to the passages before us, is to give them a
-meaning at once absurd and unreasonable. We might in
-proof of this, go through every word in every text. It is
-declared in the letter that "the Lord shall <i>descend</i> from
-heaven;" but heaven is not a place connected either by
-height or distance with the material world. Could we rise
-far into the regions of space, and ascend for ever in the
-oceans of worlds, still, as regards <i>distance</i>, we should be no
-nearer heaven than before. Where God manifests Himself
-in the fullness of his love, there is heaven; but God being
-a Spirit, can only manifest Himself thus in a spiritual
-region; and such a region has no relation of space or distance
-with a world of matter. Hence, therefore, a descent
-from heaven is not a literal going down from a higher place
-to one beneath, and consequently must not be <i>literally</i> understood.
-Here the literal meaning fails at the very
-threshold. At the first step we are obliged to seek for a
-figurative or spiritual sense.</p>
-
-<p>If we overcome <i>this</i> difficulty, we have yet to encounter
-others. It is further said that He shall descend with "a
-trumpet." Now modern Christians ridicule the idea of
-visible habitations and outward objects in the spiritual
-world. What then are we to make of the description before
-us,&mdash;of this <i>trumpet</i> with which the Lord is to descend?
-Is it <i>material</i>, or is it <i>not</i>? If it is material, then heaven,
-in which there are material objects, must be a material
-<i>place</i>; and the Being who uses this material trumpet, must
-be a material Being; consequently, we must materialize
-<span class="pagenum">{21}</span>
-both heaven and its inhabitants. But if this trumpet is
-not a <i>material</i> one, then let the defenders of the literal
-meaning tell us what is a spiritual trumpet? Whatever
-may be the answer, one thing is certain,&mdash;that which is
-spiritual is <i>internal</i>; and if by the words before us we are
-not to understand a literal trumpet, but something spiritual
-signified by it, then the literal meaning of the passage is
-not and cannot be the true one.</p>
-
-<p>It is further declared that "The Lord shall come in the
-clouds of heaven." The question again arises: What are
-we to understand by these? The clouds literally mean
-those masses of vapor, which, arising from the earth, are
-condensed and become visible in the atmosphere; and
-which surround the earth at the distance of a few miles.
-If we keep to the literal sense of the passage, these must
-be understood. But is it in these that the Lord is to descend?
-Is six or eight miles above the surface of the
-globe, heaven? Or can bodies which seldom rise beyond
-this elevation, be properly called the clouds of heaven?
-Or is this the glory with which the Lord is to be invested&mdash;the
-vapors which rise from the material globe?</p>
-
-<p>But this is not all. With Him the angels are also to
-descend. Now the nature of angels is not material; they
-exist not in space, nor are they included in its boundaries.
-How, then, we again ask, are spiritual beings to descend in
-a <i>material</i> vapor? It would degrade the subject to carry
-these questions further; but every person's discernment will
-enable him to perceive that by no means can the <i>literal</i>
-<span class="pagenum">{22}</span>
-clouds be understood; and that these words must, like the
-former, be acknowledged as <i>figurative</i>. Here, therefore, at
-the very commencement we are obliged to <i>spiritualize</i> both
-the <i>descent</i>, the <i>trumpet</i>, and the <i>clouds</i>. Do what we will,
-the literal sense is absurd. And if we are forced to allow
-that <i>part</i> of the description cannot be literally understood,
-it is fair to conclude that the remainder has also an <i>internal</i>
-meaning.</p>
-
-<p>We shall soon perceive further proof of this. After it is
-declared that the Lord shall come "in the clouds of
-heaven," it is added, as a necessary consequence, "and
-then shall <i>all the tribes of the earth</i> mourn, when they <i>see</i>
-the Son of Man coming in the clouds." In agreement with
-this are the words of John, "Behold, He cometh <i>with
-clouds</i>; and <i>every eye</i> shall see Him." If this be understood
-of an event which is literally to take place, we must again
-believe an impossibility. This world is a <i>round</i> body; and
-that which is visible to the inhabitants of one hemisphere,
-must be invisible to the dwellers on the other. Those who
-live upon one part of its surface cannot, by any possibility,
-see what is above the opposite part. This is a circumstance
-of daily experience:&mdash;at twelve o'clock at midnight the
-sun is visible to the inhabitants of the other side of this
-earth, and with them it is noon-day; but at that hour it is
-invisible to us; nor can we, by any possible means, obtain
-a sight of it. If, then, it be true that an object visible on
-one side of a globe, is invisible on the opposite, we inquire,
-In what situation must the Lord appear, that He may be
-<span class="pagenum">{23}</span>
-seen at one and the same moment from <i>every part</i> of a
-round body? Where, or in what part of the atmosphere
-must He be placed that <i>all the tribes of the earth</i>, (those on
-its <i>opposite sides</i>,) may behold Him at the same time? Such
-a position is not only difficult, but absolutely impossible, unless
-the figure of the globe were changed; and to believe
-that such will be the manner of our Lord's coming, is to
-involve ourselves in a labyrinth of absurdities.</p>
-
-<p>Aware of this difficulty, the writer whom I have already
-quoted supposes that the inhabitants of this earth will be
-caught up in the air, and <i>thus</i> be enabled to behold our
-Lord's descent. "Perhaps," says he, "it is more agreeable
-to our Lord's own account of his coming in the clouds,
-to suppose it will be above the earth, if not 'twice a planetary
-height;' and this supposition is not a little favored by
-what St. Paul writes to the Thessalonians, 'The dead in
-Christ shall rise first.' Then we who remain alive shall be
-caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord
-in the air. So that it seems most probable, the 'great white
-throne' will be exalted high above the earth." Such a
-method of explanation only shows the difficulties into
-which the mere literal sense has thrown its followers. Independent
-of the total absence of all Scripture proof of
-these ideas, it may be remarked that, "twice a planetary
-height," that is, twice the distance of the farthest planet
-from the earth, is not the place of clouds; in such case,
-therefore, the Lord would not come <i>in</i> the clouds, but far
-<i>above</i> them. Nor could He be said to descend <i>from</i> heaven;
-<span class="pagenum">{24}</span>
-for as heaven, in the literal sense, is the starry region, if He
-remained stationary in that region, it would not be a descent
-<i>from</i> heaven, but a descent <i>in</i> heaven. And besides,
-as the clouds, literally, are the vapors surrounding the
-earth, by interpreting them to mean "twice a planetary
-height," the literal sense is given up; and if this be rejected,
-the doctrine before us is overthrown.</p>
-
-<p>Once more we turn to the texts. Another event which
-is said to accompany the coming of the Lord, is the falling
-of the stars from heaven to the earth. "The stars shall
-fall from heaven, and the powers of heaven shall be
-shaken." "The stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even
-as a fig-tree casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken
-of a mighty wind." When, in disputing with the Romish
-church, we contend that the Lord's words are not to be
-understood <i>literally</i>, we think it sufficient to prove, that so
-understood they involve an absurdity. But fully as great
-an absurdity is involved in the literal interpretation of the
-words before us. The stars, though to us they appear but
-as shining atoms, are proved beyond the possibility of
-doubt, to be equal to our sun both in size and splendor.
-Each one of them is, in fact, a <i>sun</i>, as large and as brilliant
-as that which enlightens our day. Now the sun exceeds
-our earth nearly ten hundred thousand times in magnitude;
-<i>each</i> star, therefore, may be reasonably supposed
-to exceed the size of this globe nearly a million times.
-As well, then, may we talk of ten thousand worlds falling
-upon an atom, as of ten thousand suns, each of them a
-<span class="pagenum">{25}</span>
-million times larger than the globe, falling upon this grain
-of earth: it is in itself as impossible as for a piece of bread
-to become the body of the Lord.</p>
-
-<p>But further; the <i>number</i> of these bodies is beyond the
-power of human calculation. Millions sink into nothing
-in computing it,&mdash;<i>thousands</i> of millions are nothing. Every
-part of the vault of heaven contains myriads; and clusters
-of them have been observed which contain, within themselves,
-myriads more. Could we penetrate into the depths
-of space, as far as the eye could see&mdash;as far as thought
-could penetrate, we should find suns and worlds till the
-mind was lost in the idea of their multitude: and though
-we continued to move onward for ages, we should still find
-ourselves but on the threshold of creation. These are not
-the visions of speculation, but the facts of philosophy;&mdash;truths
-which actual observation has placed beyond a doubt.
-Such are, literally, the stars of heaven: myriads of myriads
-of suns, surrounded by ten thousand times ten thousand
-worlds. And let the common sense of mankind
-decide, whether all these can fall upon the surface of a
-globe not equal to the smallest of them in magnitude.</p>
-
-<p>But we have not yet done with this subject. Let us
-imagine it possible that these innumerable and enormous
-bodies <i>were</i> thrown out of their stations, and by the hand
-of God launched towards our little world. What would
-result if they only came within a short distance of it? (to
-say nothing of their falling upon its surface.) It is well
-known to all who are acquainted with philosophy, that each
-<span class="pagenum">{26}</span>
-of the heavenly bodies possesses a power called attraction,
-by which it draws towards itself any smaller body that
-comes within its sphere. So powerful is this attractive
-force that the sun alone draws all the worlds which move
-around it, and keeps them from flying off, though some are
-at the distance of eighteen hundred millions of miles!
-Each of the stars being of the same nature with our sun,
-possesses equally this attracting power. And were only
-a few of these bodies to be brought within a certain distance
-of the earth, the force of their combined attraction
-acting in contrary directions, would explode and scatter
-abroad, not only this earth but every earth in the system:
-and long before they could fall upon its surface, there would
-be no world for them to fall upon; it would be dissolved,
-and its atoms scattered through the universe.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the Apostle Peter declares that "The heavens
-shall pass away with a great noise, and <i>the elements</i> shall
-<i>melt</i> with fervent heat." A question, therefore, once more
-arises, what is meant by "the elements?" Literally, they
-signify the most simple forms of matter, fire, air, earth,
-and water. But how can these melt, or be melted?&mdash;Can
-<i>fire</i> melt with fervent heat? It may be dispersed in its
-pure form, that of heat or caloric; but it is incapable of
-being melted. Can air, then, melt? It may be expanded,
-but it will not <i>melt</i>, in the literal meaning of the word.
-Can water melt? It may be raised in steam, and made to
-fly off in vapor: it may, by the application of heat, be
-resolved into air, its first principle; but it will not melt.
-<span class="pagenum">{27}</span>
-There is, therefore, only one element out of the four which
-is capable of being literally melted; <i>earth may</i>, indeed, be
-vitrified, and rendered fluid. But how can <i>one element</i> be
-denominated <i>the elements</i>? And besides, the apostle seems
-to exclude the <i>earth</i> from the elements which are thus to
-melt; for he mentions <i>its</i> destruction, as subsequent to that
-of the elements. "The elements shall melt with fervent
-heat, the <i>earth also</i>", that is, in addition to these, the earth
-and the works that are therein, shall be burned up.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_3" id="Ref_3" href="#Foot_3">[3]</a></span>
-Here again, the literal sense fails. We must either allow what
-is not true, namely, that <i>fire</i>, <i>air</i>, and <i>water</i>, can be melted
-by fire, or seek for an internal and figurative meaning.</p>
-
-<p>I might pass thus through the whole of the language on
-which this tenet is founded; and it would be easy to show
-that the circumstances are as impossible in their literal
-meaning, as that a man should eat "the flesh of his own
-arm," or that our Lord should literally be a <i>vine</i> and a <i>door</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The very advocates of the doctrine are convinced of this.
-Hence they have framed various and contradictory systems
-to explain the above descriptions. One has asserted that
-<span class="pagenum">{28}</span>
-the earth will at that period <i>be rolled out</i> of her orbit, and
-that this motion will cause an appearance as if the heavens
-passed away. Another has enveloped the world in a thick
-mist, by which the light of the moon, being changed, will
-appear of a red color. A third has appointed a comet,
-which in its passage to or from the sun, will approach this
-earth and involve it in flames. All have seen the difficulties,
-and all have attempted to overcome them by explanations;
-yet, after all, the task remains as arduous as
-ever. If we will, in despite of reason, found a doctrine on
-the literal meaning of the texts, we must adhere to that
-meaning; for to depart from it, is to confess its insufficiency:
-and if, on the other hand, we resolve to reject the
-literal sense in <i>one part</i>, we then acknowledge that it is not
-the true one, and that another must be sought for. If we
-are obliged to give up a literal falling of stars to the earth,
-and a literal appearance in the clouds of the air, then we
-must give up also, a literal burning and destruction of the
-universe; for if one part of the sentence is to be understood
-figuratively, so is the other.</p>
-
-<p>And that such destruction is a spiritual event, and not a
-natural one, will appear still further from the following observation.
-When two prophecies are found, couched in the
-same language, and nearly in the same words, one of which
-prophecies has been fulfilled, while the other yet remains to
-be accomplished; the manner in which the latter will be
-fulfilled must be determined by the previous fulfillment of
-the former.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{29}</span>
-Now it is a fact, although very seldom noticed, that the
-prophecies relating to the <i>first</i> coming of the Lord, are expressed
-in the very same language with those which relate
-to his second appearance. We need only turn to the writings
-of the prophets to be convinced of this. "Behold,"
-says Malachi, "the day cometh that shall <i>burn as an oven</i>,
-and all the proud, yea, and all that do wickedly shall be as
-stubble, and the day that cometh shall burn them up, saith
-<span class="smcap">Jehovah of Hosts</span>. And, behold, I send you Elijah the
-prophet, before the coming of the <i>great and terrible day</i> of
-the Lord." iv.&nbsp;1, 5. Again, Isaiah: "All the host of
-heaven shall be dissolved, and the heavens shall be rolled
-together as a scroll, and all their host shall fall down as a
-falling fig from the fig-tree.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_4" id="Ref_4" href="#Foot_4">[4]</a></span>
-Every battle of the warrior
-is with confused noise, and garments rolled in blood; but
-this shall be with <i>burning</i> and <i>fuel of fire</i>. For unto us a
-child is born." ix.&nbsp;5. "Upon the servants and upon the
-handmaids in those days I will pour out my spirit; and I
-will show wonders in the heavens and in the earth, <i>blood</i>,
-and <i>fire</i>, and vapor of smoke. <i>The sun shall be turned into</i>
-<span class="pagenum">{30}</span>
-<i>darkness</i> and <i>the moon into blood</i> before the great and terrible
-day of the Lord come." Joel ii.&nbsp;29-31.</p>
-
-<p>This latter prophecy is expressly applied by Peter to the
-commencement of Christianity. In defending his brethren
-from the charge of imposture brought against them by the
-Jews on the day of Pentecost, he declares, "This (the extraordinary
-inspiration of the spirit) is that which was
-spoken by the prophet Joel; I will show wonders in the
-heaven above, and signs in the earth beneath, blood, and
-fire, and vapor of smoke. The sun shall be turned into
-darkness, and the moon into blood." Acts ii.&nbsp;16-20.</p>
-
-<p>Once more, the prophet Haggai, speaking of the same
-period declares, "Thus saith Jehovah of hosts. Yet once
-it is a little while and I will shake the heavens and the
-earth and the sea and the dry land, and I will shake all
-nations and the desire of all nations shall come, and I will
-fill this house (the latter temple) with glory, saith Jehovah
-of hosts." Again, the prophet Joel before quoted, says,
-"Multitudes, multitudes in the valley of decision; for the
-<i>day of the</i> Lord is near in the valley of decision. <i>The sun</i>
-and <i>the moon shall be darkened</i>, and the stars shall withdraw
-their shining. The <span class="smcap">Lord</span> also shall roar out of Zion, and
-utter his voice from Jerusalem, and the heavens and the
-earth shall shake: but the Lord will be the hope of his
-people. So shall ye know that I am the Lord your God,
-dwelling in Zion, my holy mountain. Then shall Jerusalem
-be holy." iii.&nbsp;14-17. "But who (says Malachi,) may
-abide the day of His coming, or who shall stand when He
-<span class="pagenum">{31}</span>
-appeareth? for He is like a refiner's <i>fire</i> and like fullers'
-soap." And to conclude this magnificent imagery, Isaiah
-declares, "Behold, I create new heavens and a new earth;
-and the former shall not be remembered nor come to mind;&mdash;they
-shall not hunger, nor thirst, neither shall the heat
-of the sun smite them; but He that hath mercy upon them
-shall lead them, even by the springs of water shall He guide
-them."</p>
-
-<p>With such descriptions of the first Advent of the Messiah
-do the prophets abound. Let any one peruse with attention
-the writings of Isaiah, Jeremiah, Zechariah, Joel,
-Haggai, and Malachi, and he will be convinced of the
-truth of this remark. We will now notice the agreement
-which exists between these prophecies relating to his first
-appearance, and those which refer to his second coming.
-Both periods are called "<i>the day of the Lord</i>;" and both
-are ushered in by "darkness and gloominess." In both it
-is said that "the sun shall be turned into darkness, and the
-moon into blood;" and in both "the heavens and the earth"
-are said to "pass away." In both of them the Lord is declared
-to come "<i>in fire</i>," and the conclusion of both is "a
-new heaven and a new earth."</p>
-
-<p>Now <i>one</i> of these periods is past. The first Advent of
-the Saviour to which the above prophecies refer, is accomplished.
-And how were these predictions fulfilled? Did
-the events <i>literally</i> take place? Let history answer. Though
-the heavens and the earth were to be shaken and pass
-away, yet no commotion took place in the visible parts of
-<span class="pagenum">{32}</span>
-nature. The seasons ran their wonted course; the sun
-gave forth his usual light; and the earth pursued without
-intermission her annual journey. Though the moon was
-to be "turned into blood," yet no such disaster befell the
-visible planet; her light shone as bright as ever. One solitary
-meteor alone over the plains of Judea, announced to
-the Eastern sages the coming of the Saviour. Though his
-approach was to be <i>in fire</i>, yet no material flames accompanied
-his Advent. The fire of Divine Love alone distinguished
-Him. Not one of all these predictions had anything
-resembling a literal accomplishment. And now let
-us look to the conclusion. If, when two prophecies are
-given, couched in the same language, one of which is fulfilled
-while the other remains to be accomplished, the interpretation
-of the second is to be judged of by the fulfillment
-of the first, the following argument at once arises:
-Since the prophecies relating to the first Advent of the
-Saviour are expressed by the very same terms, and represented
-by the very same images as those which refer to his
-<i>second</i> coming, the meaning of these latter must be similar
-to that of the others. And since not one of <i>those</i> prophecies
-ever received a literal fulfillment, so neither are we to
-expect a literal fulfillment of those before us. In a word,
-since the events predicted at the Lord's <i>first</i> coming were
-not natural, but representative images of spiritual things&mdash;of
-states of the world and of the church; so those foreshadowing
-his second coming are representative of similar
-<span class="pagenum">{33}</span>
-things, belonging to the minds of men, and will never receive
-a <i>literal</i> accomplishment.</p>
-
-<p>If, however, it be still maintained in opposition to this
-remark, that they <i>must</i> be understood literally, I will ask
-one question. Since the words of the <i>Old</i> Testament which
-describe the first appearance of the Redeemer, are exactly
-similar to those of the <i>New</i> which predict his second coming;
-how is it that the former never received a literal fulfillment?
-If it be replied, that this was figurative language,
-while the latter is literal description; I again inquire, By
-what authority or according to what rule is this distinction
-made? Why is the first to be resolved into figure, while
-the latter is considered as literally true? Such distinction
-between the two cannot arise from the <i>language</i>; this is almost
-word for word the same. It cannot be made because
-the literal sense is in one case <i>reasonable</i>, while in the other
-it is not; for in both cases it involves numerous absurdities.
-It cannot be because the one is prophecy and the other narrative;
-for both are the language of prophetic declaration.
-On what authority, then, is the literal meaning of the first
-<i>rejected</i>, while in the other it is retained and believed?
-Why are not both to be understood alike, since in both the
-descriptions are similar? There is no rule by which a distinction
-can be drawn.</p>
-
-<p>I have now gone over the first proposition, and have
-proved that a literal interpretation of the passages adduced
-involves absurdities as great as that of transubstantiation;
-and that the absence of all literal fulfillment in the case of
-<span class="pagenum">{34}</span>
-other prophecies exactly similar, affords the strongest reason
-to expect that in <i>this</i> instance no literal accomplishment
-will take place. That the language itself is that of <i>correspondence</i>,&mdash;the
-representation of spiritual things by natural;
-and as such it will receive a spiritual and not a natural
-fulfillment.</p>
-
-<p>2. We now pass to the second point, namely that the
-texts supposed to refer to the destruction of the material
-world are inconsistent with each other; and are opposed to
-other clear and express declarations of Scripture. In this
-case as in the former, we shall note the words in the debated
-texts. In the passages brought forward to support the
-doctrine, there are four ways mentioned in which the destruction
-of the heavens (or visible starry firmament) is
-hereafter to take place. First, in one passage of the Revelation,
-they are described as being "rolled away as a
-scroll;" in another the stars are said to "fall from heaven
-to the earth." In Peter's Epistle it is declared that they shall
-"pass away with a great noise;" and in another place the
-same apostle says that "the heavens being on fire shall be
-dissolved." Now these four descriptions considered literally,
-contradict and destroy each other. To dissolve is to
-separate into particles, and to return to their first elements.
-But if the starry heavens are <i>thus</i> to be destroyed, then
-they can neither fall to the earth nor be rolled together as
-a scroll; for that which is dissolved and reduced to its
-first elements, can be destroyed no further except by annihilation.
-And if the heavenly bodies are to be <i>thus</i> dissolved,
-<span class="pagenum">{35}</span>
-then no other kind of dissolution can affect them.
-Again, if we take the other passage, "they were rolled
-away as a scroll," we are placed in precisely the same dilemma.
-By their being rolled away as a scroll, we must
-then understand that they will be driven from their stations,
-thrown into confusion, and hurried afar into the depths of
-space. But if they are thus rolled away they cannot possibly
-"fall to the earth," for the two events stand in direct
-opposition; in the first instance they must be hurled into
-space, far beyond the earth's orbit; in the latter they must
-absolutely fall upon her surface. And now we ask, Are
-the stars to be rolled away, or are they to fall upon the
-earth? The literal sense of the Scripture mentions both
-events; but if one occurs, the other (consistently with the
-text) can never take place.</p>
-
-<p>Suppose, however, we admit for the sake of argument,
-that the rolling away of the heavens is an event separate
-from the destruction of the stars. We again inquire
-whether this event will take place <i>before</i> such destruction, or
-<i>after</i> it. If <i>before</i> it, we come to the former conclusion; for
-then the stars must fly off with the heaven in which they
-are fixed. If <i>after</i> it, then, as there will be nothing but
-<i>empty space</i> remaining, we ask how such empty space can
-be called <i>the heavens</i>; and how empty <i>space</i> without a
-single visible object, can be rolled away as a scroll!"
-In this instance, therefore, if we abide by the literal sense
-of one passage, we must of necessity reject that of the
-others.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{36}</span>
-But it is further said that all these events are to take
-place <i>previous</i> to the appearance of the Son of Man. "The
-sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her
-light, and the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers
-of the heavens shall be shaken. And then (immediately
-following these events) shall appear the sign of the Son
-of Man in heaven." Now this prior commotion includes
-the dissolution of all the elements, "The heavens being on
-fire shall be dissolved, and the elements shall melt with
-fervent heat." Among the number of the elements, <i>the air</i>
-will of course be destroyed, for it is included among them;
-and with the air those <i>clouds</i> which depend upon it for their
-existence and visibility. Yet, after this, when the clouds
-have ceased to be, and when the heavens are no more, the
-Son of Man is to appear in these very clouds and in the
-midst of this heaven! Here, again, is an inconsistency in
-the literal sense of the passage. If the heavens, and with
-them the clouds are dissolved, then it is impossible that
-anything can appear <i>in</i> what has ceased to have an existence.
-Or if the Son of Man <i>is</i> to appear in the clouds,
-then the heavens cannot be destroyed previous to that appearance.
-Which way soever we turn we are met by a
-difficulty. If we receive one of the passages in the literal
-sense, we must either reject or spiritualize the other.</p>
-
-<p>Again: at the time of our Lord's ascension, the two
-angels who appeared to the disciples declared, "this same
-Jesus which is taken up from you into heaven, shall <i>so come
-in like manner</i>, as ye have seen him go into heaven." Acts
-<span class="pagenum">{37}</span>
-i.&nbsp;11. It would therefore appear that, if these angelic messengers
-are worthy of credit, the <i>descent</i> of our Lord is to
-be exactly similar in circumstance to his ascent. Now, in
-his ascension into heaven, there are several things which
-require notice. 1st: It was <i>private</i>. He led his disciples
-from the city to the Mount of Olives. 2d: It was seen
-by none but his followers. The generality of the Jewish
-nations did not even know that such an event had taken
-place; they considered our Lord as a dead man; and
-hence when they accused Paul before Festus, one part
-of that accusation was that he affirmed one Jesus to be
-alive, who was (in their opinion) dead. Acts xxv.&nbsp;19.
-3d: His ascension was a <i>solitary</i> one. There is no account
-whatever that any persons were <i>seen</i> ascending with Him:&mdash;"<i>He</i>
-was taken up; and a cloud received <i>Him</i> out of their
-sight." And, 4th: It was <i>unattended by any outward pomp</i>.
-The Jews knew nothing of it;&mdash;there was no alteration in
-the visible world; and even those who witnessed the event,
-beheld nothing save a bright cloud into which he passed
-and disappeared. The ascension of the Saviour was therefore
-to the world a <i>private</i> occurrence, so far as privacy
-consists in general ignorance respecting it. It was seen by
-none but his disciples; it was without pomp or show. Of
-those who afterwards heard of it, numbers gave no credit
-to the story. And the only visible proof that it had taken
-place, was the effect which followed&mdash;the extraordinary
-out-pouring of the divine influence.</p>
-
-<p>And if we keep to the literal sense of the words, <i>this</i> is
-<span class="pagenum">{38}</span>
-to be his descent from heaven: He is to come <i>in like manner</i>
-as He went up. If, then, this be the case, then such descent
-will be an occurrence unknown to the generality of
-mankind, or only known by its following effects. It will be
-unaccompanied by any destruction, and even by any commotion
-in the realm of material nature. And many of
-those who hear of it may be expected to deny it, according
-to his own words: "When the Son of Man cometh shall
-He find faith on the earth?"</p>
-
-<p>Such, according to the passage before us must be the
-manner of his Second Coming: but let us, if we can, reconcile
-this with the former descriptions. In the one case
-all nature is to be <i>destroyed</i>; in the other it is to remain
-unshaken. In the former instance He is said to descend
-with thousands of angels; in the latter, to come unattended.
-By the first description, He is to be seen visibly by all; in
-the second, He will be invisible to all except his followers.
-The two accounts thus stand in direct contradiction to each
-other. If He comes again in the same "manner" that He
-ascended, then the former passages cannot be literally understood:
-or if He comes literally in the manner they describe,
-the passage before us cannot be true.</p>
-
-<p>I might here, as in the former case, go through every passage,
-and show that each of them contains within itself accounts
-which are inconsistent with those of the others: in
-one it is said that the Lord shall descend from heaven in
-flaming fire: in another, in the clouds: in a third, on a
-great white throne. In one it is declared that, before his
-<span class="pagenum">{39}</span>
-face the earth and the heaven shall flee away, and their
-place be no more found: in a second, that <i>after</i> His coming
-the departed shall rise from the earth, and the grave and
-the sea give up their dead; consequently, if the latter part
-be true, the earth will not pass away at the time of His descent.
-In the whole there are inconsistencies which science,
-according to the literal meaning, may disguise, but can
-never reconcile.</p>
-
-<p>We now turn to the consideration of other passages
-which, taken even in their literal sense, militate strongly
-against the doctrine in dispute. After the destruction of
-the antediluvian earth by the flood, Jehovah affirmed, "I
-will not <i>again curse the ground any more</i>, though the imagination
-of man's heart is evil from his youth; neither will
-I again smite any more every living thing as I have done."
-This <i>curse</i> which the Lord is here inferred to have pronounced
-upon the former world, in whatever sense the
-terms be taken, was accomplished in its destruction; and
-the end of that world by a flood of waters, completed its
-fulfillment. The curse of the Lord, therefore, when pronounced
-upon the earth, leads to its dissolution. But God
-Himself affirms that He will not thus curse the ground any
-more,&mdash;that He will not again suffer it to be destroyed,
-neither will He again smite everything living. The declaration
-is absolute. It is not said that He will refrain
-from it during a <i>limited period</i>, but that He will not do it
-<i>any more</i>&mdash;to all eternity. Yet if the commonly received
-doctrine be correct, this declaration of Jehovah must be
-<span class="pagenum">{40}</span>
-untrue. If <i>again</i> everything living <i>is</i> to be smitten,&mdash;if
-again the earth is to be cursed with destruction as complete,
-if not more so than the former one; then it cannot be true
-that every living thing is <i>not</i> again to be smitten, nor the
-earth again to be cursed. In this instance the literal proofs
-clash with the solemn declaration of God.</p>
-
-<p>If, however, it be objected that these words refer not so
-much to the <i>destruction</i> of the globe, as to the <i>mode</i> of that
-event, I reply that no such qualifying language is found in
-the text. The words are general; they are not "I will not
-again curse the earth <i>with water</i>," but I will not curse the
-ground,&mdash;I will not destroy the earth "<i>any more</i>," either
-in this way or in any other. "I will not smite any more
-everything living as I have now done," by an universal
-destruction. And, in fact, the promise that <i>a flood</i> should
-no more destroy the world, would have afforded little consolation
-to Noah, had he understood that another destruction
-more awful than the former, was approaching, in which
-not this world only, but the whole universe would perish;
-and when not the greater part, but <i>all</i> things living, would
-be destroyed, without the preservation even of a remnant.
-The flood is certainly in the following chapter referred to
-particularly as the more recent danger, and a repetition of
-which would be most dreaded by the survivors; but the
-very same declaration of Jehovah, which interdicts a flood
-of waters, equally interdicts any other entire destruction:&mdash;"I
-will not in any way curse the ground any more."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{41}</span>
-There is another subject upon which I must touch, but
-very briefly, since the arguments arising out of it might be
-carried to a length far exceeding my prescribed limits.
-The prophetic writings abound with descriptions of what is
-called "the kingdom of David:"&mdash;a kingdom which was
-to arise in the latter day, and upon which every blessing of
-heaven was to descend. "In those days," says the prophet
-Amos, "I will raise up the tabernacle of David that is
-fallen, and close up the breaches thereof; and I will raise
-up his ruins, and I will build it as in the days of old." ix.
-"And in the days of these kings (that is, literally, in the
-latter times of the Roman power,) shall the God of heaven
-set up a kingdom which shall never be destroyed, and the
-kingdom shall not be left to other people; but it shall break
-in pieces, and consume all these kingdoms, and it shall stand
-for ever." Dan. ii.&nbsp;44. Again, the same prophet: "I saw
-in the night visions, and behold one like unto the Son of
-Man came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the
-ancient of days, and they brought him near before him.
-And there was given him dominion and glory and a kingdom,
-that all people, nations, and languages should serve
-him: his dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall
-not pass away; and his kingdom, that which shall not be
-destroyed." That these descriptions refer to the Redeemer,
-is evident. Isaiah when predicting his approach, and the
-establishment of his kingdom, says, "Of the increase of
-his government and peace there shall be no end upon the
-throne of David, and upon his kingdom to order it and to
-<span class="pagenum">{42}</span>
-establish it with judgment and with justice from henceforth
-even for ever." ix.&nbsp;7.</p>
-
-<p>Now the question is, to what authority or kingdom do
-these predictions refer? That it is not to the general government
-of God, is clear,&mdash;this had existed from eternity; but
-the dominion spoken of, was to commence at a definite period
-of time,&mdash;"at that time," and "in the days of those kings."
-The general subjection of all things to the Divine Being, is
-also something arising out of his very nature, and is neither
-given nor acquired; but this was something to be acquired.
-"The Lord God shall <i>give</i> unto him the throne of his
-father David:"&mdash;"The saints of the Most High shall take
-the kingdom." Nor can it refer to the kingdom of the
-just in glory, for the descriptions are such as can only apply
-to the state of men on earth. "He shall feed his flock
-like a shepherd; He shall gather the lambs with His arm,
-and carry them in His bosom." Isa. xl.&nbsp;11. "I will set
-up one shepherd over them, and he shall feed them, even
-my servant David." If, therefore, this kingdom be neither
-the general dominion over all, nor the state of the righteous
-in eternity, it can only relate to the kingdom of the
-church on earth. And that it does so, is plain from the
-very terms used. David is, by almost all professed Christians,
-acknowledged to have been a type and representative
-of the Messiah; and the Jewish nation over whom he reigned,
-most certainly prefigured the Christian church: the throne
-of David is therefore the authority of the Lord in his
-church on earth, and his kingdom is that church itself.
-<span class="pagenum">{43}</span>
-Now this kingdom and this throne,&mdash;this church and authority
-<i>are everlasting</i>; they shall "never be destroyed;"
-they shall "not pass away;" they shall "stand for ever."
-But if <i>the earth</i> on which this church exists, is hereafter to
-dissolve and pass away, the kingdom must pass away with
-it. For though it is true that the just in heaven would
-still constitute a kingdom of the Lord, yet that kingdom
-would no longer be "<i>the kingdom of David</i>." The very
-declaration that the kingdom of the Lord <i>on earth</i> will
-<i>never be destroyed</i>, supposes as a necessary consequence, that
-the earth on which it is erected will also continue to exist.</p>
-
-<p>In agreement with this are the words heard by John;
-"There were great voices in heaven, saying, the kingdoms
-<i>of this world</i> are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of
-his Christ, and He shall reign for <i>ever and ever</i>." Rev. xi.&nbsp;15.
-And over what is He thus to reign? Most certainly
-over the kingdoms which He is here said to have obtained&mdash;the
-kingdoms of <i>this world</i>; and over these He is to reign
-"for ever and ever." But how is He to reign for ever over
-the kingdoms of the world, if the world and its kingdoms
-are to be destroyed? Whenever the earth is dissolved, the
-kingdoms of the world will be no more; and he cannot
-reign over that which has no existence! If, then, the
-world and its kingdoms are to be destroyed, He can never
-reign <i>for ever</i> over them: or if He will thus reign for ever
-over the kingdoms of the world, then those kingdoms must
-exist for ever; and if the <i>kingdoms</i> exist for ever, <i>the world</i>
-on which they are founded must exist for ever with them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{44}</span>
-And exactly in accordance with this assertion are the
-words of the Psalmist: "He (the Lord) built his sanctuary
-in high places, like <i>the earth</i> which He hath established <i>for
-ever</i>." And those of Solomon:&mdash;"One generation passeth
-away, and another cometh, <i>but the earth abideth for ever</i>."
-The same is declared of the heavens: "His name shall endure
-<i>for ever</i>; His name shall be continued <i>as long as the
-sun</i>." Psalm lxxii.&nbsp;17. "His seed shall endure <i>for ever</i>,
-and his throne <i>as the sun</i> before me; it shall be <i>established
-for ever as the moon</i>, and as a faithful witness in heaven."
-lxxxix.&nbsp;36.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can be more directly opposed to the common
-opinion than these explicit declarations of the Bible. It is
-certain that these passages refer to the visible earth and to
-the material heaven; and these it is expressly declared are
-to continue not for a limited time, but for ever: while in
-the passages adduced to prove the opposite, we are left to
-struggle among difficulties, without any certainty that the
-visible earth is at all intended, since even those commentators
-who believe the tenet are compelled, in most instances,
-to abandon the proofs of it.</p>
-
-<p>I have now established, as far as is necessary, my second
-proposition. I have shown that the literal sense of the
-passages brought forward to confirm the doctrine of the
-earth's destruction, are inconsistent with each other, as well
-as with other parts of the Sacred Volume; and therefore,
-that such literal meaning cannot be the true one. I have
-shown that the words of Jehovah assert that the world
-<span class="pagenum">{45}</span>
-shall not be smitten any more. I have further shown that
-the duration of the kingdom of God, runs parallel with
-that of the visible world, and that therefore both must endure
-for ever. And lastly, that the sacred writers declare
-in explicit language the endless duration both of the earth
-and the heavens.</p>
-
-<p>3. I now proceed to consider the third part of the subject:
-that the passages brought forward, when taken in
-their proper connexion, give no countenance to the popular
-doctrine, but on the contrary, afford evident proofs that
-they have no reference to it. In doing this, I shall adduce
-them one by one in the order they are laid down. And
-first, the passage in the Gospel of Matthew: "Immediately
-after the tribulation of those days the sun shall be darkened,
-and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall
-fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens shall be
-shaken. And then shall appear the sign of the Son of
-Man coming in the clouds of heaven; and then shall all
-the tribes of the earth mourn when they see the Son of Man
-coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great
-glory."</p>
-
-<p>I have already noticed the inconsistencies which arise
-from adopting the literal meaning of the passage; and I
-now remark further, that in their literal and obvious application,
-the words refer not to any destruction of the
-world in general, but to the approaching overthrow of the
-Jewish nation and polity. I admit that they have a spiritual
-reference to the state of the Christian church of which
-<span class="pagenum">{46}</span>
-the Jews were a type; but of this we shall speak hereafter.
-It is with the literal meaning we have now to do, since on
-the literal meaning the doctrine is founded.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_5" id="Ref_5" href="#Foot_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Our Lord had been addressing the multitude in the temple;
-and in that address He had solemnly warned them of
-their approaching danger. On his departure, his followers
-pointed to its stately and magnificent buildings; and He
-again seized the opportunity to repeat to them the prediction
-of its final destruction. Naturally anxious to learn
-the fate of their country, and, perhaps, too uneasy on their
-own account, they came to Him privately and asked,
-"When shall these things be?" and "what shall be the
-sign of thy coming, and of the consummation of the
-age?"<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_6" id="Ref_6" href="#Foot_6">[6]</a></span>
-&mdash;that is, the period of the Jewish government and
-religion. In reply, He delivered the splendid prophecy
-before us; first warning them against those pretenders to
-Messiahship, who, soon after His ascension, overrun the
-land of Judea; and then going on to describe the miseries
-which were coming upon the Jews, and the final overthrow
-of their temple and city;&mdash;He delivers to them this prediction,
-not in the common language of narrative, but, in
-the magnificent figures of the ancient prophecy. A method
-of speaking which, while it pointed out the mutation of
-earthly things, had a further reference to things spiritual.
-And thus while He pointed out the overthrow of the Jewish
-power, He referred likewise to the degraded state and
-<span class="pagenum">{47}</span>
-corruption of the Christian church,&mdash;the spiritual Jerusalem,&mdash;when,
-having lost its love or charity, it sunk down
-into a state of formal observance as lifeless as the departed
-spirit of Judaism.</p>
-
-<p>In neither of these senses, however, does the passage
-point to any destruction of the visible universe. If we
-take it in its outward reference to the Jewish nation, then
-the darkening of the sun and the withdrawing of the moon,
-together with the other parts of the description, can only
-be representative images of their multiplied distresses.
-This view of the subject is taken by most of those who
-have commented on the words. "The sun shall be darkened,"
-"that is, (says one,) all their glory and excellency
-shall be eclipsed; all their wealth and prosperity shall be
-laid waste;&mdash;the whole government, civil and ecclesiastical,
-shall be destroyed; and such marks of misery found upon
-them, as never were seen upon a people."<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_7" id="Ref_7" href="#Foot_7">[7]</a></span>
-But among the believers of the tenet in dispute, we presume there is
-not one more highly celebrated for learning than Dr. Adam
-Clarke; yet he, in commenting upon this passage, gives up
-all idea of a literal destruction. The following is the doctor's
-explanation:</p>
-
-<p>"Immediately after the tribulation."&mdash;Commentators
-generally understand this and what follows, of the end of
-the world and Christ's coming to judgment. But the word
-<i>immediately</i> shows that our Lord is not speaking of any
-distant event, but of something immediately consequent on
-<span class="pagenum">{48}</span>
-calamities already predicted; and that must be the destruction
-of Jerusalem. The <i>Jewish heaven</i> shall perish and
-<i>the sun</i> and <i>moon</i> of its glory and happiness shall be
-darkened,&mdash;brought to nothing. <i>The sun is the religion of
-the church; the moon the government of the state</i>; and <i>the
-stars</i> are the <i>judges and doctors of both</i>. In the prophetic
-language, great commotions upon earth are often represented
-under the notion of commotions and changes in the
-heavens. The fall of Babylon is thus represented by the
-constellations of heaven withdrawing their light, and the
-sun and the moon being darkened:&mdash;the destruction of
-Egypt by the heaven being covered, the sun enveloped with
-a cloud, and the moon withholding her light: the destruction
-of the Jews by Antiochus Epiphanes, is represented
-by <i>casting down some of the host of heaven</i> and <i>the stars</i> to
-the ground. And this very destruction of Jerusalem is
-represented by the prophet Joel, by showing wonders in
-heaven and in earth,&mdash;<i>darkening the sun, and turning the
-moon into blood</i>. This general mode of describing these
-judgments, leaves no room to doubt the propriety of its application
-in the present case." (<i>Commentary on Matthew.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>Thus, in the hands of one of the most learned advocates of
-the doctrine, does one of its principal proofs vanish into air.
-According to his showing, there is nothing in the whole passage
-referring at all either to the material earth, or the
-visible heavens; and the whole is a figurative account of
-the overthrow of the religion and government of the
-Jews,&mdash;"the <i>sun</i> and <i>moon</i> of the <i>Jewish heaven</i>." We
-<span class="pagenum">{49}</span>
-might follow the doctor through the whole chapter, and
-show that in almost every point he confirms what has been
-formerly advanced. "The sign of the Son of Man was,
-(he says,) the signal manifestation of Christ's power and
-glory," in the destruction of Jerusalem. The "angels sent
-forth to gather the elect, the apostles and their successors
-in the Christian ministry." The sound of a trumpet, "the
-earnest affectionate call of the Gospel:" and "<i>the elect</i>,"
-"the Gentiles who were now chosen or elected, in place of
-the rebellious obstinate Jews." In the same manner he
-explains the whole of this and the following chapter; and
-in the latter declares that the whole of the accounts up to
-the thirty-first verse, may be properly applied to the destruction
-of Jerusalem. And here we may leave him; for
-if there is nothing from the first verse of the twenty-fourth
-chapter, to the thirty-first verse of the twenty-fifth, which
-relates to the destruction of the world, surely nothing respecting
-it will be found in the remainder.</p>
-
-<p>Thus does this passage, so often brought forward to add
-to the terror of the world's dissolution, which has been
-sounded forth from pulpits and re-echoed from the press,
-when calmly examined, prove to have no connexion with
-the subject: but to refer to an event as different from the
-general conflagration, as light from darkness.</p>
-
-<p>But some may be ready to say, "Although it has not
-this reference in its outward meaning, yet you have already
-confessed that it relates to Christianity and the church;
-and is not the doctrine contained in this internal application?"
-<span class="pagenum">{50}</span>
-I answer, no! The doctrine only stands upon the
-supposition that the heavens and the earth referred to in
-the passage, are the literal and visible portions of nature.
-We have seen that in its relation to the Jews, no such
-things are intended; still less, therefore, can it point to
-these in its <i>internal</i> meaning. As the sun and moon in the
-literal application are, (to use the words of Dr. Clarke,)
-"the sun and moon of the <i>Jewish</i> heaven" or state, so in
-spiritual reference, they are the sun and moon of the <i>Christian</i>
-heaven, or state of the church; and, as pointing to
-spiritual principles and spiritual states, have nothing to do
-with the outward machinery of nature. As no destruction
-of the world, then, can be found in the <i>internal</i> sense of the
-prophecy, it is confessed, even by the advocates of the doctrine,
-that there is nothing respecting it in the <i>outward</i>
-sense. And if nothing is found relating to it either in the
-<i>spiritual</i> or <i>literal</i> meaning of the words, then it is not there
-<i>at all</i>; and the passage as a proof of the dissolution of all
-things, must be abandoned for ever.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_8" id="Ref_8" href="#Foot_8">[8]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The next passage which claims attention, is that in the
-sixth chapter of the Revelation; for the words in the first
-chapter being those of the apostle previous to his prophetic
-visions, may be classed among the apostolic passages of
-which we shall speak hereafter. The text before us reads:
-"And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal, and lo,
-there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black
-<span class="pagenum">{51}</span>
-as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood, and
-the stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a fig-tree
-casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken of a
-mighty wind: and the heaven departed as a scroll when it
-is rolled together, and every mountain and island were
-moved out of their places." In this part of the subject I
-say nothing of the evidently figurative nature of the passage,
-nor of the absurdities before alluded to, as existing in
-the sense of the letter; but I shall make one remark obvious
-to the minds of all, and borne out by the connexion
-of the words themselves. The vision of the <i>seals</i> (as well
-as that of the vials,) is one continued prophecy, which is
-not concluded until the breaking of the seventh seal in the
-eighth chapter. Now the events above described, whether
-representative or literal, happen under the <i>sixth</i> seal; yet
-the descriptions of the <i>seventh</i> as well as those of the others,
-refer to events which were to occur in the church and on
-this visible earth. The sealing of the hundred and forty-four
-thousand,&mdash;the prohibition of the wind to blow on
-the earth,&mdash;the seven trumpets and their consequences,
-evidently relate to states of the church in this world; yet
-all these things which were to be transacted in the visible
-world, happen <i>after</i> the description above quoted.</p>
-
-<p>If, then, various and multiplied events are described as
-occurring <i>on the earth, after</i> the heavens had departed like
-a scroll, and the islands were moved out of their places,
-nothing can be more clear than that the destruction of the
-earth is not here alluded to; for if the world is to be destroyed
-<span class="pagenum">{52}</span>
-under the <i>sixth</i> seal, then no events can happen
-<i>upon it</i> under the <i>seventh</i>, since it will then have no existence;
-but as such events <i>are</i> described as passing <i>in the
-world</i> under the <i>seventh</i> seal, then that world cannot previously
-be destroyed under the <i>sixth</i> seal.</p>
-
-<p>And in this opinion we are, as before, supported by the
-advocates of the doctrine themselves. The sealing of the
-tribes is almost universally acknowledged to signify the
-preservation of the church, under those heavy and forthcoming
-calamities represented by the effects of the seven
-trumpets. And as this preservation, and these calamities,
-occur <i>after</i> the darkening of the sun, and the falling of the
-stars, the latter event is generally supposed to prefigure (not
-the destruction of visible nature, but) some great change
-in the political or religious constitution of the world. The
-precise period to which this change is to be referred, has,
-however, divided the opinions of the learned. Some apply
-it altogether to the Jews, and suppose that their destruction
-in Judea and at Jerusalem was so dismal that it was represented
-to John as the darkening of the sun, and the moon
-looking like blood, and the stars falling. Others apply it
-to the overthrow of Paganism and the destruction of the
-heathen emperors; and accordingly by the earth quaking,&mdash;the
-sun becoming black,&mdash;the moon becoming blood, and
-the stars falling from heaven to earth, is to be understood
-the great changes that were made in the Roman empire by
-the overturning of the Pagan state. Others again apply it
-to "the great and horrible confusion of the Christian world
-<span class="pagenum">{53}</span>
-under Antichrist, when Christ the Sun of Righteousness
-began to be obscured; that is, his doctrine darkened,&mdash;the
-moon or church turned into blood,&mdash;the stars or pastors
-fallen from heavenly offices, the Scriptures, like the
-heavens rolled up, forbidden to be read, the mountains,
-(king and princes) in jeopardy,&mdash;and the islands brought
-under Antichrist's yoke and tyranny." Very few venture
-to apply it to what is commonly called the "end of the
-world;" and none can do it without charging the apostle
-with inconsistency, by affirming that it shall take place at
-a definite period of time; and then speaking of events that
-are to occur in the world <i>after</i> that time, that is, after the
-world shall have been destroyed!</p>
-
-<p>On this passage the commentator whom we have already
-quoted observes,</p>
-
-<p>"A great earthquake," that is, "a most stupendous change
-in the civil and religious constitution of the world." "The
-<i>sun</i>"&mdash;the ancient Pagan government of the Roman empire,
-"<i>was totally darkened</i>; and like a black hair sackcloth,
-was degraded and humbled to the dust. The <i>moon</i>&mdash;the
-ecclesiastical state of the same empire, <i>become as blood</i>, was
-totally ruined; their sacred rites abrogated; their priests
-and religious institutions desecrated; their altars cast down;
-their temples destroyed, or turned into places of Christian
-worship. The <i>stars of heaven</i>&mdash;the gods and goddesses,
-demi-gods and deified heroes, of their poetical and <i>mythological
-heaven</i>, prostrated indiscriminately, and lay as useless
-as the figs or fruit of a tree shaken down before ripe by a
-<span class="pagenum">{54}</span>
-tempestuous wind. <i>And the heaven departed as a scroll.</i>
-The whole system of Pagan and idolatrous worship, with
-all its spiritual, secular, and superstitious influence, blasted,
-shriveled up, and rendered null and void as a parchment
-scroll when exposed to the action of a strong fire. And
-every mountain&mdash;all the props, supports, and dependencies
-of the empire; whether regal allies, tributary kings, dependent
-colonies, or mercenary troops, were all moved out
-of their places, so as to stand no longer in the same relation
-to that empire and its worship, support, and maintenance,
-as they formerly did. And <i>island</i>:&mdash;The heathen
-temples, with their precincts and inclosures, cut off from
-the common people, may be here represented by <i>islands</i>."<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_9" id="Ref_9" href="#Foot_9">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Like the former passage, therefore, this is rendered nugatory
-as a proof of the dissolution of the universe; and
-rendered so, too, by the admission of its friends. As that
-referred to the <i>Jewish heaven</i> which passed away at the destruction
-of the city of Jerusalem, so this is affirmed to
-apply to the <i>mythological heaven</i> of the Pagans, which was
-dissolved at the conversion of Constantine to Christianity;
-and to have no allusion to the system of material nature.
-Here are two of the strongest passages thrown aside as useless
-in the controversy; and we shall quickly perceive that,
-when closely examined, the advocates of the doctrine
-equally cast off, if not the whole, at least the greater part,
-of the remainder.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, as I have already remarked, the connexion of
-<span class="pagenum">{55}</span>
-the passage is such as will by no means admit of any literal
-burning of the earth; so that, even though its inapplicability
-to the subject had <i>not</i> been allowed, yet would the
-inconsistency attendant on such a meaning, have pleaded
-loudly for its rejection.</p>
-
-<p>We pass now to consider the next proof, which occurs in
-the twentieth chapter of the same book: "And I saw a
-great white throne and Him that sat on it, from whose face
-the earth and the heaven fled away, and there was found no
-place for them. And I saw the dead small and great stand
-before God; and the books were opened," etc. In connection
-with this stands the first verse of the twenty-first chapter:
-"And I saw a new heaven and a new earth; for the
-first heaven and the first earth were passed away, and there
-was no more sea."</p>
-
-<p>Upon this passage we may repeat the remark which we
-applied to the foregoing: that the events which follow
-this descent of the Saviour, and which are stated as its consequences,
-are such as apply only to the church of God on
-earth; and that, therefore, the words before us cannot
-point to any dissolution of the universe. The immediate
-effects of the passing away of the heaven and the earth,
-are the formation of a new heaven and a new earth, and
-the descent of "the holy city New Jerusalem." This latter
-event the celebrated Dr. Hammond declares cannot refer to
-the state of glorified saints in heaven, but must signify
-some peculiar benefit bestowed upon the church on earth.
-The expression "descending out of heaven from God," at
-<span class="pagenum">{56}</span>
-once determines its reference to a state of things below;
-and it no doubt relates to the restoration of Christianity to
-its primitive purity. In the very same manner does Dr.
-Clarke explain the passage, though he evidently betrays a
-wish to find within it a proof of the dissolution of all
-things. "The New Jerusalem," says he, "doubtless means
-the Christian church in a state of great prosperity and purity:"
-and alluding to the description given of her, he observes,
-that "it has been <i>most injudiciously</i> applied to <i>heaven</i>."
-If, then, the consequence of the passing away of the first
-heaven is to usher in (not eternal glory, but) a prosperous
-state of the church on earth, it must follow in course that
-such a passing away of the heavens must refer to a change
-and alteration in the church, and not in the natural world;&mdash;to
-the conclusion and departure of a state of darkness,
-and the commencement of a new state of light and affection.
-As the former <i>Jewish heaven</i> of types and shadows departed
-at the first coming of the <span class="smcap">Son of God</span>, and as the <i>mythological
-heaven of Paganism</i> was "shriveled up" at the triumph
-of the Gospel, so must the <i>modern Christian heaven</i>
-of ignorance and evil pass away at the Second Coming of
-the <span class="smcap">Son of Man</span>; and to it will succeed a <i>new heaven</i> of
-purity and peace.</p>
-
-<p>In this application of the passage, we are supported by
-the explanation of the above commentators. They agree
-in defining heaven and earth figuratively, to mean the state
-of the world and of the church;&mdash;of the Jewish world,
-when applied to the Jews;&mdash;of the Pagan world, when applied
-<span class="pagenum">{57}</span>
-to the Heathen: and by the self-same mode of interpretation,
-we are justified in applying it to the <i>Christian
-world</i> in its reference to Christians. In no case can it be
-explained of the visible world of matter; for the passages
-being acknowledged to be figurative, it must, as in the other
-instances, bear the figurative meaning.</p>
-
-<p>Having thus noticed the only two texts in the Revelations,
-which seem, in the least, to bear upon the subject, I
-may be allowed again to repeat my surprise, that persons
-should be found attempting to support a doctrine by the
-literal sense of this book. Those among the advocates of
-the popular belief, who have most carefully studied the
-prophecy, protest their ignorance of its meaning and application.
-"I cannot pretend to explain the book," says the
-writer above quoted; "I do not understand it. I repeat it,
-I do not understand the book; and I am satisfied, that not
-one who has written on the subject, knows anything more
-of it than myself."&mdash;"What the prophecies mean, and
-when and <i>how</i> they are to be fulfilled, God in heaven alone
-knows." It "is termed a <i>Revelation</i>; but it is a revelation
-of <i>symbols</i>;&mdash;an exhibition of <i>enigmas</i>, to which no particular
-solution is given; and to which God alone can give
-the solution." "To pretend to say, (observes Calmet,) what
-this new heaven and new earth mean, and what are their
-ornaments and qualities, is, in my opinion, the greatest of
-all presumptions." Yet, into this presumption do the generality
-of Christians fall, who, amidst this candid confession
-of learned ignorance, bring forth with the greatest
-<span class="pagenum">{58}</span>
-confidence the literal sense of the book, to support a doctrine
-which length of time has seemed to render sacred.</p>
-
-<p>The words of the apostles now demand our attention;
-and with respect to these we notice a fact which is necessary
-to the proper understanding of their ideas; that is,
-that the apostles were themselves ignorant both of the time
-when, and the manner how, the second coming of the Lord
-would be accomplished; and that they have, therefore,
-when speaking upon this subject, carefully abstained from
-giving any opinion of their own, confining themselves entirely
-to the words of the Saviour, or paraphrasing them
-without altering the symbolic images.</p>
-
-<p>This circumstance in no degree detracts from that extraordinary
-illumination with which the apostles were endowed.
-They were men raised up by God, and filled with
-the Divine influence, in order that they might propagate
-in the world, and among all nations, the religion of Christ;
-but it does not appear that among the supernatural gifts
-which they received, the gift of <i>prophecy</i> was included,
-except in the case of the apostle John. Yet, even if we
-allow, for the sake of argument, that they did <i>possess</i> this
-gift, it would by no means follow that they perfectly understood
-their own predictions. It is the peculiar nature of
-prophecy, that its proper meaning is not known until the
-time of its fulfillment; and this was especially the case with
-the Jewish writers who foretold the first advent of the Saviour.
-Although their predictions seem now so clear and
-strong, yet both the prophets themselves and their followers,
-<span class="pagenum">{59}</span>
-were at the time ignorant of their precise meaning; and
-hence arose the absurd notions which the Jews entertained of
-a temporal salvation and an earthly Saviour. The gift of
-prophecy was, therefore, except in very rare instances, accompanied
-by entire ignorance of the manner of its fulfillment.
-It does not, however, appear that this gift was bestowed
-in general upon the apostles; their knowledge of
-the second coming of the Saviour was derived entirely
-from the words of the Saviour; and of the express meaning
-of these words, as referring to a future event, they
-were completely ignorant. In quoting his prediction they,
-therefore, seem to have held a persuasion that this second
-coming was very speedily to be accomplished. Thus they
-speak of the "day of the Lord" as "at hand,"&mdash;of "the
-Judge standing at the door:" and Paul, in particular,
-seems to have believed that some of the Christians of that
-day, if not himself among them, would live to see its
-approach.</p>
-
-<p>Whether this latter opinion be true or not, certain it is
-that the words of the apostles had such an effect upon the
-first Christians, that they were in momentary expectation
-of the appearance of the Lord. During the first nine
-centuries after his ascension, a general idea prevailed that
-his second coming would speedily take place; and when,
-after waiting nine hundred years, they found their expectations
-disappointed, they still looked to the one thousandth
-year to usher in this great event; and so powerfully did
-this opinion operate upon the world, that rich and poor
-<span class="pagenum">{60}</span>
-flocked in great numbers to the Holy Land, there to await
-his appearance. The wealthy sold their possessions, or
-gave them away to charitable institutions; kings quitted
-their thrones, and subjects their employment, under the impression
-that "the end of all things was at hand," and
-that the world was of no further value. Such, then, was
-the effect of a misapplication of prophetic language; and
-though nearly nineteen hundred years have gone by, yet
-are the Christian churches still following in the steps of
-their predecessors, holding the literal sense of the Word in
-defiance of reason, and looking for the Lord's personal
-appearance in the clouds of heaven, though common sense
-proclaims its improbability.</p>
-
-<p>But to return. From a comparison of the descriptions
-of the apostles with the predictions of the Lord, it is easy
-to perceive whence they quoted. In many instances the
-two accounts are almost word for word the same; in others
-they are enlarged; but in none is the connexion of events,
-or the prophetic symbols, disturbed. "The day of the
-Lord (says Peter,) shall come as a <i>thief in the night</i>, in
-which the heavens shall <i>pass away</i> with a great noise."
-Here it is easy to perceive whence the words of the apostle
-were drawn; for we have only to compare them with those
-of our Lord, to be convinced that it was from these the description
-is taken. "Heaven and earth (says the Saviour)
-shall <i>pass away</i>, but my words shall not pass away."
-"Know this, that if the good man of the house had known
-at what hour <i>the thief</i> would come, he would have watched,
-<span class="pagenum">{61}</span>
-and not have suffered his house to be broken through."
-Again, Paul declares, "The Lord Himself shall descend
-from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the <i>archangel</i>
-and <i>the trump</i> of God; and the dead in Christ shall rise
-first." Here, too, the prophecy is quoted from the Saviour's
-declaration: "He shall send his angels with a <i>great
-sound</i> of a <i>trumpet</i>, and they shall gather together his elect
-from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the
-other." Once more the Apostle John says: "Behold, he
-cometh <i>with clouds</i>; and every eye shall <i>see</i> him, even they
-that pierced Him; and all <i>the tribes of the earth</i> shall wail
-because of Him:" where the allusion is to these words:
-"Then shall appear the sign of the coming of the Son of
-Man in <i>heaven</i>; and then shall all the <i>tribes of the earth
-mourn</i>, when they <i>see</i> the Son of Man <i>coming in the clouds</i>
-of heaven, with power and great glory." "Behold, (says
-the Lord) I <i>stand at the door</i> and knock;" "Behold,"
-says the apostle, echoing the Saviour's words, "the Judge
-<i>standeth at the door</i>."</p>
-
-<p>It would exceed my present limits to enter fully into this
-subject. Suffice to say, that in most passages the reference
-to our Lord's predictions may be plainly discerned; and in
-all the prophetic representatives are retained: The sun,&mdash;the
-moon,&mdash;the stars,&mdash;the earth,&mdash;the heavens, darkness,
-dissolution, and fire&mdash;the very images which are used by the
-Saviour, are likewise used by the apostles, and used, too, with
-a reference to the <i>same period</i>&mdash;the last days of the Christian
-church. If these images, when used by the prophets
-<span class="pagenum">{62}</span>
-and by the Redeemer, are figurative, then, as the same
-<i>images</i> applied to the <i>same period</i>, they are figurative when
-employed by the apostles. Or, if the dissolution and burning
-of the earth described by the latter are literal facts,
-then the burning of the earth and its dissolution described
-by the former, are literal facts likewise; for the <i>same images</i>
-applied to the <i>same period</i>, must have the <i>same meaning</i>.</p>
-
-<p>If, then, these observations be correct, and I see not how
-they can be fairly controverted;&mdash;if the apostles did not,
-except in one instance, possess the power of foretelling
-future events, and if their descriptions of the second coming
-of the Lord are gathered from his own words, or from
-the prophetic writings, then we must judge of their meaning
-by that of the prophecies whence they are derived.
-This is a plain and self-evident conclusion. If I quote the
-words of any writer, the meaning of the quotation must be
-gathered from the works of that writer; and more especially
-if I quote for a similar purpose, and profess myself
-one of his disciples and admirers. The passages,
-therefore, which occur in the apostolic writings, are by no
-means decisive proofs of the doctrine in debate. As quotations
-and paraphrases of the Lord's words and those of the
-prophets, they must, by every rule of fair criticism, have a
-similar meaning. We have seen that the former are, by
-the acknowledgment of the most learned writers, figurative
-and correspondent; the just inference therefore is, that
-the latter, as quotations and paraphrases of them, must be
-figurative also.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{63}</span>
-4. The last part of our proposition comes now before us,
-namely: that the doctrine of the destruction of the universe
-is opposed to the end of creation, and to the character of
-God as a Being of unbounded love and infinite wisdom.
-I may here be told of the tendency of matter to dissolution;
-of its mutability and constant change; of the elements
-of destruction which nature herself engenders; and
-of all those by which reason and science have sought to
-gloss over the popular tenet. But the <i>mutability</i> of nature
-is no proof of final dissolution. <i>Mutability</i> is liability to
-change, or a continual tendency to remove from one state
-to another. Whatever is changeable, or whatever can experience
-alteration, is, therefore, mutable. But this mutability
-attaches not to material nature alone, but to all creation;
-the highest archangel in the highest heaven, as well
-as every spirit embodied on earth, is a mutable creature.
-The state of glory in the eternal world, as well as the state
-of man below, is a state of <i>mutability</i>,&mdash;a state in which
-there are continual changes either for the better or the worse.
-This will appear plain if we consider that, whatever is immutable
-cannot be acted upon by any higher power; for the
-action of such a superior cause supposes a corresponding
-<i>effect</i> and that effect supposes a <i>change</i> in the object acted
-upon, in one way or another; and, consequently, any object
-upon which an effect can be produced, must be a mutable or
-changeable object. Now, in the case of angelic beings, God,
-the First Cause of their existence, is continually acting upon
-them by his love and wisdom, and thus raising them eternally
-<span class="pagenum">{64}</span>
-in the scale of blessedness: such alteration of their state
-from glory to glory is a change,&mdash;an effect produced upon
-them by an Almighty Cause; and this effect is at once a
-proof that angels themselves are <i>mutable</i> creatures, or liable
-to change. The same may be said of the state of blessedness;
-it is continually receiving fresh supplies of glory from the
-Fountain of life, and is thus <i>changing</i>&mdash;becoming more and
-more blessed: and it equally applies to the spirit of man.
-This, like the mind, is never "at one stay;" nor, perhaps,
-does the state of the mind remain precisely the same for
-two hours together. The angels of heaven, the state of
-the blessed, the spirit of man, are all changeable. God
-is the <i>only immutable Being</i>; for He alone cannot be
-acted upon or changed by any higher power; and hence it
-is one of his exclusive prerogatives to be "without variableness
-or shadow of turning." If, then, the angelic hosts,
-as well as heaven itself, are mutable, while yet they endure
-for ever, the mutability of nature is no proof at all that
-she, any more than the former, is approaching dissolution.</p>
-
-<p>"Nature herself," as one well observes, "effects her renovation
-from her decay." Matter, though decomposed and
-subjected to ten thousand changes, loses none of its essential
-properties; but continually assuming new forms, gives
-variety to the world, without being at all altered from its
-original nature. Indeed, it has been strongly asserted that
-there has not been a particle of matter lost from the creation
-to the present moment; changed every particle may
-have been, but still there is not one wanting; and if this
-<span class="pagenum">{65}</span>
-be the case, such continual change is no proof of approaching
-destruction.</p>
-
-<p>We are accustomed to look upon God as a Being of infinite
-Love; and, perhaps, at this stage of the subject it
-may be well to inquire, what motive induced the Lord first
-to create the visible universe; and what was the end proposed
-in its creation. In the breast of the Divine Being
-there could exist but one motive from which creation could
-spring; and this was Love. But the Love of God being
-infinite, could only have respect to an eternal work; hence
-the end of creation was to make as many beings as possible
-happy, and this to all eternity. In order to accomplish
-this, infinite <i>Love</i> clothing or embodying itself in <i>wisdom</i>,
-made the worlds. According to the words of the apostle,
-"By the Word (or the wisdom of God,) were the heavens
-made;" intending these as the habitations of rational
-beings, who after having passed through a short state of
-probation, might finally enter upon a spiritual state and
-enjoy perfect happiness. The wisdom of God, being the
-manifestation of his love, in completing this work, arranged
-everything in the most perfect order; and accordingly
-every part of the universe is formed in the manner best fitted
-to promote the end of its existence,&mdash;the everlasting happiness
-of man. In our own world, where evil has produced
-a corresponding change in outward things, even that change
-itself is good, since, while it reminds man of his corruption,
-it leads him to seek a better habitation.</p>
-
-<p>Thus far our assertions are easy of proof. <span class="smcap">God Is Love</span>;&mdash;not
-<span class="pagenum">{66}</span>
-merely <i>loving</i>, but <span class="smcap">Love</span>, the Spring and Fountain
-of all derived existence. And love, even in its derivative
-form in the bosom of man, is an active passion, continually
-seeking for objects on whom to bestow its affection.
-As is the stream, then, so is the fountain: God being Love
-in its Infinite Essence, must ever have sought to form creatures
-capable of being rendered eternally happy; and hence
-the motive that led to creation. But <i>love</i> always manifests
-itself in the understanding or thought; and by the thought
-is brought into outward action. It is the thought or wisdom
-of man in which his love first takes a definite form;
-this serves it for a guide, and directs its operations: and so
-again is it with the Being in whose "image" we are formed.
-The manifestation of infinite Love, is infinite Wisdom; and
-this brings the power into outward act: by infinite Wisdom,
-therefore, as the acting form of infinite Love, were
-rational beings and their varied habitations created. But
-this perfect wisdom can never produce anything unlike itself;
-for, as is the <i>cause</i>, so is the <i>effect</i>; hence the frame of
-nature which that wisdom calls into being, must be like
-itself, the most perfect and complete that could possibly
-exist. The <i>motive</i>, therefore, which led to creation was
-<i>Love</i>; its <i>cause</i>, Wisdom; its <i>end</i>, continued and eternal
-happiness.</p>
-
-<p>And further, as the love and wisdom of God once operated
-in bringing the universe into existence, so from that
-period have they been unceasingly employed in preserving
-the creatures which they formed; for, as the <i>end</i> of creation
-<span class="pagenum">{67}</span>
-was the "bringing of many souls into glory," so, to
-the present, has that end been answered by the constant
-exercise of the Divine protection over the universe of
-matter and its rational inhabitants; that the one might
-continue a fit habitation for the creatures of God; and that
-by the constant procreation of the human race, a succession
-of men might be brought into being as candidates for
-everlasting glory. But the expected dissolution of the universe,
-and the end of human succession, will at once put a
-stop to this infinite design. If, after a certain number of
-persons have been born into the world, the procreation of
-man must end, then the purpose of creation cannot be <i>infinite</i>;
-for that which has reference to a certain number
-and a definite period of time, is not an <i>infinite</i> purpose;
-and that which is not an infinite purpose, is not the off-spring
-of <i>infinite love</i>. Or, if the purpose of God in creation
-<i>did</i> spring from infinite love, then it must be an infinite
-purpose; and if the purpose of creation be infinite,
-then it is not bounded by a few thousand years, nor will it
-end with a few generations.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is the popular doctrine more consistent with the
-character of God than with the infinity of his designs.
-We have seen that <i>love</i> was the cause of the world's creation;
-but what motive, I ask, can lead to its destruction?
-There is nothing in the Almighty contrary to love; therefore,
-if it is destroyed at all, <i>love</i> must be still the motive.
-But love never works except for the good of its creatures;
-therefore, if the universe is dissolved, it must be because
-<span class="pagenum">{68}</span>
-such dissolution will confer a benefit upon mankind. And
-the question then arises: What benefit can mankind derive
-from the destruction of this material world? The answer
-of some will be ready. "The world" they tell us, "has
-been changed by sin, and it will be dissolved in order that
-it may be restored to its pristine glory and beauty;&mdash;that a
-new heaven and a new earth may spring from its ashes."
-But does the change here supposed in the constitution of
-the world, require its dissolution? When sin entered into
-the universe, and the mind of man was contaminated, an
-immediate and corresponding effect was produced upon the
-world of matter; but the production of that effect was not
-accompanied by a <i>dissolution</i> of the material system; it
-operated surely indeed, but slowly, and without any outward
-destruction. Why, then, should not the change from
-evil to good, be effected in like manner as the change from
-good to evil? When the earth is "filled with the knowledge
-of the Lord,"&mdash;when all shall experimentally "know
-Him from the least even unto the greatest,"&mdash;when man is
-again restored to his former state of peace and purity, a
-corresponding change must once more take place in his material
-habitation; but that change requires no destruction
-of the world to effect it. Similar causes produce similar
-effects; and as a change in man from good to evil, produced
-an alteration in the system of the world, but without
-any dissolution, so a change in the souls of men from
-evil to good, must likewise produce an alteration in the
-earth, but without dissolution.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{69}</span>
-But this destruction, it is said, is to usher in "a new
-heaven and new earth." We are, therefore, justified in
-asking, for what purpose is this new material system created?
-Since it is believed that the succession of man will cease
-with <i>this</i> earth, why should <i>another</i> earth be formed? Is
-another race of men to be created? This, the strongest
-advocates of the doctrine do not even suppose. Is it, then,
-to be the habitation of the righteous of the present earth?
-This, it cannot be, for the bodies of the departed will no
-longer be material, but <i>spiritual</i>; and to assert that a
-<i>spiritual</i> substance can dwell and walk on a material earth,
-however pure that earth may be, is to assert what every one
-sees to be preposterous. Since, then, it will not suit the departed
-righteous, and another race is not to be formed, why,
-we continue to ask, will this new earth be created? Here
-we are left completely in the dark; nor amidst all the reasoning
-of the advocates of the popular doctrine, can we find
-a single clue to direct us to an answer.</p>
-
-<p>And here the former inquiry properly comes in. Since
-there is nothing in the nature of God contrary to <i>love</i>, and
-since that love only works for the temporal or everlasting
-benefit of man, what motive can induce the Almighty to
-destroy this visible universe? We have seen that the state
-of mankind in time will not be improved by it; for a
-change in the constitution of the earth has been already,
-and may again be, effected without it: and, besides, whenever
-such an event takes place, time and the temporal existence
-of man will be no more: and the eternal happiness
-<span class="pagenum">{70}</span>
-of the blessed can in no degree be increased by an overthrow
-of material nature; for when the spirit has left this
-sphere, it has done with matter, and no longer depends upon
-it for its feelings or its pleasures. If, then, such a dissolution
-of the earth as Christians in general look for, will
-neither benefit mankind in time nor in eternity, then it is
-contrary to the character of God that He should bring such
-an event to pass; for He never operates unless to effect
-some benevolent purpose; and this will effect none, either
-here or hereafter.</p>
-
-<p>The same reasons which induced the Almighty to call
-the universe into existence, will therefore induce Him to
-continue its existence. The desire which He felt to make
-as many rational beings as possible happy, led to creation.
-The same feeling has preserved the world in existence to
-the present moment. And as God is unchangeable, that
-desire must operate as powerfully ten thousand ages hence,
-as it does now; and the operation of that desire must, as a
-necessary consequence, lead to the preservation of this
-earth, from which a succession of rational creatures is to
-spring. If, then, at a future period the world is destroyed,
-and the multiplication of the human race ceases, it must
-be either because the Lord is unable to save more, or is
-unwilling to do it. The first supposition is impious, and
-the other supposes a change in the Almighty; for then
-that desire which led to creation must have ceased to exist
-in the Divine bosom; the infinite love of God must have
-ceased to operate; and of consequence, the Lord Himself
-<span class="pagenum">{71}</span>
-must have changed both his desires and his operations.
-The destruction of the world is, therefore, opposed to the
-character of God, as a Being of infinite Love and unbounded
-power.</p>
-
-<p>We may now sum up the arguments which have been
-adduced.</p>
-
-<p>1. When the literal sense of a passage of Scripture is
-opposed to common sense and reason, such literal sense
-must be laid aside, as not containing the true meaning.
-But the literal sense of those passages which speak of a
-destruction of the earth, is both absurd and unreasonable.
-Therefore the literal sense of these passages must be abandoned,
-and does not contain the proper interpretation.
-Again: when two prophecies are found couched in the
-same language, and referring to a similar event, one of
-which is fulfilled while the other remains unaccomplished;
-the manner in which the latter will be fulfilled, must be
-judged of by the previous fulfillment of the former. But
-the first prophecies relating to the first coming of the Lord,
-are exactly similar to those which refer to His second
-coming; yet they never were <i>literally</i> fulfilled: therefore
-we have no just reason to look for a literal fulfillment of
-the latter. 2. When any text of Scripture is, in the letter,
-inconsistent with itself, or with other plain and express
-passages of the Word, the interpretation must be sought
-for in the spiritual meaning of the words. But the proofs
-of this earth's destruction are inconsistent with themselves,
-and are opposed to other plain and direct portions of the
-<span class="pagenum">{72}</span>
-Word of God; therefore the meaning of those alleged
-proofs must be found, not in the literal sense, but in their
-spirit. 3. In the explanation of every part of the Sacred
-Scriptures, a due regard must be had to the connexion in
-which it stands; and any mode of explanation which tends
-to break such connexion, or is at variance with it, may be
-beautiful but cannot be <i>true</i>. But the connexion in which
-the passages referred to are found, is completely at variance
-with the doctrine derived from them; nor can they in any
-way support that doctrine until severed from this connexion.
-Therefore that explanation which the generality of Christians
-gives them, cannot be correct. 4. And, lastly, whatever
-doctrine is opposed to the character of God, as a God of
-unbounded love and infinite wisdom, is not a doctrine of
-the Bible. But the doctrine before us is thus opposed
-both to his nature and perfections; therefore it cannot be
-true.</p>
-
-<p>The arguments arising out of these propositions might
-be carried to a great extent. If, however, they have been
-supported by reason as well as Scripture,&mdash;if we have no
-right to expect a literal fulfillment of the prophecy relating
-to the Lord's second coming; and if the literal sense
-of the passages must be abandoned; then we have no reason
-to look for an overthrow of the universe, and the improbability
-of such a destruction has been fairly established.</p>
-
-<p>Having thus gone through the principal part of the subject,
-and having shown that the common interpretation,
-against which so many and serious objections lie, cannot be
-<span class="pagenum">{73}</span>
-the true meaning; I proceed, as a necessary conclusion, to
-notice briefly the spiritual meaning of the prophetic symbols
-used in the passages that we have noticed, and their
-connexion with each other. That the whole of these passages
-relate to the Christian church, we have already stated;
-and that they are of importance to us, may be fairly
-inferred from their being found in the Sacred Volume. It
-is, therefore, scarcely possible to conceive that even learned
-and pious men have been able to perceive nothing within
-them but earthly concerns,&mdash;mere temporal events; the
-destruction of Jerusalem; the conversion (whether real or
-pretended) of Constantine; wars in Italy; the irruption
-of the Goths; and the famine of the Antonines; as if these
-events were either able, or likely, to give that saving wisdom
-which it is the object of God by his Word to bestow.
-Everything in the Sacred Volume is intended to contribute
-to our salvation; but transactions like these do not tend
-to make us wiser or better. It is to the Christian church,
-and to its principles and practice, therefore, that these
-descriptions refer; and as they relate to the general body,
-they apply to every individual of which that body is composed,
-and thus demand our most serious attention.</p>
-
-<p>The principal symbol used in these prophecies is, "the
-sun;" and this is said to "become black," and to be "turned
-into darkness." Our first inquiry, therefore, is, what principle
-in the spiritual world of Christianity, corresponds
-with this luminary in the world of matter. And in this
-inquiry we shall be aided, if we consider the functions it
-<span class="pagenum">{74}</span>
-performs. The sun is the source of all natural heat and
-splendor; and without his influence, the worlds in the
-solar system, now glowing in light and beauty, would
-be dead and unattractive masses of matter. He is the
-cause of all vegetable and animal life: deprived of his
-beams, vegetation would decay, and the animal kingdom
-sink in death. He is the principal agent in the production
-of sight; the eye without him, would be a useless organ.
-In a word, if we were called upon to name the most important
-agent in the material world, our thoughts would turn
-at once to the sun. Now, in the spiritual world, including
-both the church of God and the individual spirit of man,
-what is that which produces the same effects as the natural
-sun does in the system of matter? What is the source of
-love and wisdom, spiritual heat and spiritual light?&mdash;What
-is it that produces in the mind those fruits of righteousness
-which are the characteristics of true religion? What gives
-to reason (the eye of the mind) its power of discerning spiritual
-things? and invests the soul, naturally dark and lifeless,
-with spiritual life and glory? It is Divine Love that
-does this. This is the Sun of the spiritual universe,&mdash;the
-Fountain of all heavenly light and life,&mdash;the Cause of
-every good word and work. And in giving this meaning
-to the natural image, we are supported throughout by the
-Sacred Scripture. The Lord is called "the Sun," and,
-"the Sun of Righteousness." He is said to <i>rise</i> upon the
-mind, when the spirit turns itself toward Him; and to
-<i>turn away</i> from man, when he departs from his Maker. In
-<span class="pagenum">{75}</span>
-the same manner, whenever the prophets or apostles were
-favored with a visible representation of the Divine Majesty,
-they describe the face of God as shining like <i>the sun</i>.
-Now the face of God is his Love. Hence the Psalmist says,
-"Lift upon us <i>the light of thy countenance</i>, and cause thy
-face to shine upon us." And this love of God is described
-as the sun, rising, shining, and giving light. Thus, too, in
-the visions of John, when the apostle beheld an image of
-the pure church of Christ, he describes her as "a woman
-<i>clothed with the sun</i>;" or encompassed on every side by the
-Divine Love. By the sun, then, in the internal sense of
-prophecy, we understand the infinite and unbounded love
-of the Almighty, which alone is the cause of life and light;
-and which gives strength, support, and beauty, to the spiritual
-system of man.</p>
-
-<p>Having obtained the meaning of this principal symbol,
-we shall be at no loss to determine that of the other.
-"<i>The moon</i>," as regards apparent splendor, is the second
-great luminary in the visible heavens. In herself, however,
-she is a dark body, and possesses no power of communicating
-light except by the reflection of the sun's beams.
-In this case, therefore, we have to seek a second principle
-in the heaven of the church, corresponding with this second
-light in the heaven of matter; a principle which, though
-it enlightens and cheers the soul, has no brightness in itself;
-but derives all its usefulness and beauty from a conjunction
-with <span class="smcap">LOVE</span>. And this principle we find in <span class="smcap">FAITH</span>; that
-faith which springs from charity. As the moon derives all
-<span class="pagenum">{76}</span>
-her light from the sun, so does true faith draw all its glory
-from love. As the moon separated from the sun's influence,
-is dark and lifeless, so is faith without love, dead and useless.
-And as the light proceeding from the moon is but
-the rays of the sun reflected from her surface, so is the
-faith that springs from a modification of the love of God,
-a reflection of his infinite benevolence.</p>
-
-<p>And here, again, the apostle confirms this idea. While
-he represents the church of God as being <i>clothed with the
-Sun</i>, he also describes her as standing upon the moon, or
-having "the moon under her feet:"&mdash;pointing out the love
-with which she is continually encompassed, and the faith
-upon which she is securely founded. Thus Paul, speaking
-of the universal church of Christ, declares that it is
-"built upon the <i>foundation</i> of the apostles and prophets:"&mdash;that
-is, upon their doctrines, and upon the truth which
-they made known; "Jesus Christ Himself," as <span class="smcap">the Truth</span>
-Itself, being "the chief corner stone." Eph. ii.&nbsp;20. With
-this, too, agrees the sublime prophecy of Isaiah. When
-speaking of the church restored to its full perfection and
-glory, he says, "<i>Thy sun</i> shall no more go down, neither
-shall thy <i>moon</i> withdraw herself; for <span class="smcap">Jehovah</span> shall be
-thine <span class="smcap">Everlasting Light</span> and the days of thy mourning
-shall be ended." ix.&nbsp;20. That is: Thy love shall no more
-depart, neither shall thy faith and charity decay; for God
-shall dwell in every soul by his love, and his beams shall
-be reflected from every bosom.</p>
-
-<p>We might go through the whole of those predictions
-<span class="pagenum">{77}</span>
-which relate to this subject; and in all cases we should
-find that this interpretation of the figures not only makes
-a complete and consistent sense, but that the passages so interpreted
-would stand in the most complete agreement with
-the general tenor of the Scriptures, and with the hopes of
-the best and wisest among men.</p>
-
-<p>The third symbolic figure is, "the stars:" and these, as
-regards the quantity of light transmitted to the earth, are
-secondary luminaries in the visible system. They shine not
-with any borrowed radiance, but with their own native
-splendor. And here, again, we must repeat the inquiry,
-what are those luminaries in the <i>mental heaven</i>, which hold
-a secondary place in the concern of salvation, to love and
-faith; yet shine, not with reflected light, but with the real
-brightness of the Divine Glory? The answer is easy: They
-are the doctrines of religion or the <i>knowledges</i> of truth;&mdash;those
-portions of the eternal reason, which <span class="smcap">the manifested
-Truth</span> has Himself revealed. But some may be ready to
-observe, that these are already included in the Faith of
-which I have just spoken. A single remark, however, will
-obviate this objection. That <span class="smcap">FAITH</span> and the <i>knowledge of
-truth</i> generally go together, is certainly true,&mdash;even as the
-moon and stars shine at the same time. But to <i>know</i>
-the truth is one thing, and to have faith in God is another
-and widely different thing; as different as the light of the
-stars is from that of the moon. And as the stars frequently
-shine when the moon is not seen, so does the knowledge of
-truth frequently exist in the mind when true faith has no
-<span class="pagenum">{78}</span>
-existence. I am, therefore, consistent in declaring that the
-<i>light</i> of the stars,&mdash;the knowledge of doctrines, though a
-valuable acquisition, is secondary in importance both to
-Christian <i>faith</i> and to Divine <i>Love</i>. Yet the doctrines or
-truths which are the objects of this knowledge, are not derived
-from any source lower than divinity itself; they are,
-as just observed, portions of eternal wisdom designed for
-the guidance of the church of God; and derived from the
-"Father of lights," from whom proceeds "every good and
-every perfect gift."</p>
-
-<p>In thus mentioning <i>doctrines</i>, (or the term which I have
-used as synonymous, <i>truths</i>, for pure doctrines are but truths
-embodied) I by no means refer to the tenets of a sect or
-party, but to the eternal wisdom of the Almighty, as revealed
-in his word: and with respect to this, the parallel
-between it and the natural image may be carried through
-all its parts. As the stars are of the same nature with the
-sun, and like him shine with their native and proper light,
-so is the wisdom of God of the same nature with his love;
-both being essential attributes of Divinity. As the stars,
-however, though in themselves splendid bodies, communicate
-no heat to the earth, and are but of secondary importance
-in comparison with the sun and moon, so does the
-mere knowledge of truths, (although the truths in themselves
-possess the nature of divinity,) leave the soul as
-cold and lifeless as before; and is of far less importance in
-the spiritual system than the love of God, or faith, its reflection
-on the soul. Carry the comparison as far as we
-<span class="pagenum">{79}</span>
-may, still the stars of the natural heaven correspond exactly
-to the <i>truths</i> of the church; and the light which they
-emit, to the <i>knowledge</i> of that truth.</p>
-
-<p>And this interpretation of the symbol agrees, too, with
-the vision of the apostle. The church clothed with the Sun
-of love, and standing upon faith; the symbolic <i>moon</i> had
-upon her head (the seat of intelligence and wisdom) a
-crown of twelve <i>stars</i>;&mdash;denoting the knowledges of pure
-truth which should ornament that church in her last state
-of peace and holiness. So the great red dragon, who is described
-as fighting with Michael and his angels, is said to
-have drawn the third part of the stars from heaven;&mdash;pointing
-out the almost total extinction of real truth in the
-corrupted Christian churches. We might again trace this
-meaning in every passage where the natural image occurs,
-and we should still find that the sense it gives to each of
-them is consistent both with the Word of God, as referring
-to the great concern of salvation, and with the connexion
-in which the passages are found.</p>
-
-<p>In these symbolic representations we, therefore, perceive
-the three sources of light in the Christian heaven, love,
-faith, and knowledge. The first being the diffused affection
-of the Father of spirits; the second, its reflection in
-the soul of man; the third, the truths of doctrine which
-enliven and ornament the church, proceeding immediately
-from the Source of all Wisdom. The glory of each is the
-same in substance, as the light of the sun, moon, and stars,
-is the same in nature; but it differs in degree, as the luminary
-<span class="pagenum">{80}</span>
-whence it springs is of more or less importance to the
-eternal happiness of man. Knowledge is the least important;
-of itself merely, it produces nothing. Faith rises
-above knowledge; yet even faith by itself is useless. Love
-is the chief; this quickens, animates, and renders fruitful,
-the church of God, and the soul of each individual member.</p>
-
-<p>I press this interpretation on no one; yet I may say,
-without breaking the bounds of Christian liberty, that it carries
-probability on its very face. The parallel between the
-natural image and its spiritual correspondent, is complete
-throughout; but this can by no means be said of the various
-constructions which have generally been put upon
-them. The sun, it is said, is the civil government of a
-state; and the moon, its ecclesiastical policy. But in vain
-shall we attempt to draw a comparison here between the
-natural figure and the object said to be signified by it.
-The civil government of an empire is not the source of all
-wisdom, love, and prosperity, as the sun is of heat, light,
-and fruitfulness. It does not give to the ecclesiastical all
-its power, glory, and beauty, as the sun does to the moon;
-nor would the church become dead and lifeless if separated
-from the state, as the moon would if severed from the sun.
-The pastors of the church, which it is affirmed are the
-stars, do not, like the stars, shine with their own native
-splendor. The comparison, therefore, does not in any degree
-hold good: while in the meaning we have given above,
-consistency both with Scripture and reason, as well as with
-the best interests of man, is preserved throughout.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{81}</span>
-Now if this signification of the sun, moon, and stars, be
-correct, we need not employ much time in fixing the meaning
-of the terms "heaven," and "earth," when applied to
-the church of God. <i>Heaven</i>, or the atmosphere, is that in
-which the sun, moon, and stars appear; and by means
-of which they produce their effects. It is the grand reservoir
-of those particles, which, acted upon by the sun, and
-thus set in motion, cause heat; and preserve on the earth,
-life and vegetation. And the earth is that body, on the surface
-of which vegetation flourishes and life appears. This
-at once points out the figures as applying to the <i>inward feelings</i>
-and <i>outward life</i> of an <i>individual</i>; or, to the internal
-state of the church and its outward forms and ceremonies.
-It is in what the apostle calls "the inward man," that <i>love</i>,
-<i>faith</i>, and <i>knowledge</i> produce their first effects; and by
-operating upon the feelings and affections of the mind,
-cause spiritual light and heat&mdash;true wisdom and divine
-love. And these produce a corresponding effect in the outward
-conduct, bringing forth "fruits meet for repentance,"&mdash;the
-living forms and witnesses of religion. As the sun
-shines in the atmosphere and produces fruit on the earth,
-so love shines in the soul and brings forth effects in the
-conduct, either in the case of an individual, or of the
-church as an assembly of individuals. By the same rule
-of analogy we may perceive what is meant by <i>the clouds</i>.
-These in the natural world, are vapors exhaled from the
-earth by the heat of the sun; and which condensed into
-form in the atmosphere, serve to perform their important
-<span class="pagenum">{82}</span>
-functions. They temper and lessen in some degree the
-heat of the sun; they serve to beautify the appearance of
-the heavens; they are the great depository of rain, and
-the principal agents in the production of tempests. That
-which corresponds to them must, therefore, be something
-springing from the outward state of man, which is the
-grand depository of truth (spiritual water), behind which
-the glory of the Divine Love and Wisdom is seen, and
-which accommodates this wisdom to the capacity of mankind.
-And this we find in the outward letter of the Word
-of God. The historical narratives, the figures of prophecy,
-the parables of the Saviour, are all images rising from the
-world and the temporal state of mankind; and thus, like
-the <i>clouds</i>, they have their origin from the earth. Within
-this outward body of image and narrative are contained
-the treasures of wisdom and knowledge; it is the grand
-source from which truth must be drawn. And the glory
-of God shines through the whole, imparting to every
-natural form the splendor of divinity. And as the material
-images of the Bible serve to accommodate the wisdom
-of God to the capacity of his creatures, so have they often
-been the cause of those convulsions in the church, which
-seemed even to threaten her existence. "The <i>letter</i>" has
-often killed, when unaccompanied in the mind with the
-"<i>spirit</i> which giveth life." We cannot, therefore, find in
-the figure before us anything which so completely accords
-with its origin and design, as the outward letter of the
-Word of God&mdash;the clouds of the Christian heaven.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{83}</span>
-The meaning of the principal symbols being thus stated,
-we pass to the connexion which they bear to each other in
-the predictions of the Saviour. We have already noted
-that the prophecy contained in Matthew, and recorded by
-the other Evangelists, refers in its primary application to
-the destruction of Jerusalem by the Roman armies; but in
-its more extensive meaning it points to the state of the
-Christian church in her period of decline and corruption,
-of which Jerusalem in her last days was a fitting type.
-With respect to this it is declared "<i>the sun</i> shall be darkened"&mdash;the
-Divine Love obscured and lost; "and the
-moon shall not give her light"&mdash;faith and charity shall
-sink in darkness; "and the stars"&mdash;the knowledge of truth
-"shall fall from heaven,"&mdash;no longer exist in the minds
-of her members; "and the powers of heaven"&mdash;the whole
-internal state of the church "shall be shaken"&mdash;shall be
-thrown into complete disorder and confusion. This meaning,
-to which we are led by the connexion and correspondence
-of the natural symbols, points to a time (not when the
-universe shall be destroyed, but) when true religion shall
-have ceased to exist in the church:&mdash;"when the love of
-many shall wax cold:" when true faith will no longer be
-found; and when knowledge&mdash;the knowledge of genuine
-spiritual truth&mdash;shall have passed away. The same things
-are described in the vision of the apostle. "There was a
-great earthquake"&mdash;a shaking and disorder in the state of
-the church; "and the sun became black as sackcloth of
-hair, and the moon became as blood, and the stars of heaven
-<span class="pagenum">{84}</span>
-fell to the earth,"&mdash;the knowledge of truth which once
-shone in the <i>mind</i>, sunk into mere outward <i>creeds</i> and confessions
-of faith; "and the heaven departed as a scroll
-when it is rolled together"&mdash;the whole internal state of the
-church was thrown into confusion, and every inward feeling
-of religion perished.</p>
-
-<p>The event immediately following is the appearance of the
-Son of Man in the clouds, with a trumpet; and since it is
-confessed that a trumpet signifies "the call of the Gospel,"
-or as I would express it, the manifestation of truth; and
-as the <i>clouds</i> correspond to the <i>outward form</i> of the Word,
-the appearance of the Lord in the clouds and attended by
-trumpets, must signify the manifestation of spiritual love
-and truth in the letter of Scripture: and this is supported
-by what is afterwards said to be the consequence; "a new
-heaven and a new earth,"&mdash;a new state of the church both
-internal and external, both as regards inward feelings and
-outward conduct.</p>
-
-<p>That this interpretation is true, I call upon no one to
-believe; but that it is probable will, I think, be confessed
-by all; and that it is in perfect harmony with the infinite
-designs of God toward his rational creatures, as well as with
-his character as a Being of infinite Love, will be equally
-acknowledged. Whether there has been a period in the
-Christian church (as there certainly was in the Jewish)
-when the above description was applicable to her; when
-religion had sunk into mere formality; when bigotry and
-intolerance both in priests and people, cut up charity by
-<span class="pagenum">{85}</span>
-the roots; when faith was a mere body from which the
-spirit had departed; when the clergy were mere formalists,
-and the people were sensualized; when sacred knowledge
-was neglected by the one and unknown to the other:
-whether, I say, such a period <i>has</i> yet arrived, and if so,
-whether it was <i>eighty</i> years ago, or eight hundred, it is not
-my province now to inquire. My object is to show that
-the images used by the sacred penmen have reference to
-such a state, and to a subsequent restoration; and this I
-have shown by the rule or law of analogy existing between
-spiritual and natural things, as well as by the grand
-design of the Word of God in which those images occur.</p>
-
-<p>And if it be probable that such is really the fact, then
-the design with which I commenced my task is completed.
-If the natural sense of the words of Scripture is absurd&mdash;if
-the best commentators themselves admit that in their
-outward application the words have no reference to the destruction
-of the natural world&mdash;and if, considered in their
-internal meaning, they relate to the church, its decline,
-and restoration; then there is no proof in the Scriptures of
-the dissolution of the visible universe; but strong evidence
-that it will never take place.</p>
-
-<p>Let us, however, before leaving the subject, take a hasty
-glance at the two doctrines which have been presented.
-The first declares that after creating the universe, and endowing
-it with life and beauty; after forming man as a
-candidate for eternal glory, and after raising up a church
-which it is said was to endure "for ever," God will at a
-<span class="pagenum">{86}</span>
-future time (for what reason, or to answer what purpose, is
-unknown,) destroy the fabric he has created; throw the
-whole universe into confusion and reduce it to ashes. That
-He will, for some reason equally unknown, put an end to
-the human race, and no more bring rational creatures to
-eternal happiness; that heaven will be closed, and not
-another candidate admitted; and that the church will then
-cease on earth, and never again be restored. And this
-supposition is founded on vague and mysterious texts of
-Scripture, and on a literal interpretation of figures which
-the most learned confess they cannot comprehend.</p>
-
-<p>The other doctrine maintains that God, having created
-the world and peopled it with inhabitants, will continue
-it in existence; and that though religion will in the
-"latter ages" decline, yet at length "the Lord will appear
-in the brightness of his glory," will destroy evil and false-hood
-among men,&mdash;restore the world to its first state of
-purity; and that it shall then for ever become one vast
-temple, from which a ceaseless song of praise shall continually
-arise; while its inhabitants, prepared and preparing
-for a higher state, shall pass in succession into the eternal
-rest of God; and that the earth shall therefore be a
-nursery for glory,&mdash;a place of trial for a continual race of
-candidates for heaven.</p>
-
-<p>This is a consummation worthy of the Creator,&mdash;worthy
-of the infinity of his nature and perfections,&mdash;worthy of
-the plan of redemption which He became incarnate to
-effect. It is agreeable to the dictates of the soundest
-<span class="pagenum">{87}</span>
-reason, and in accordance with the hopes and wishes of
-every man who has not bowed down his reason to the idol
-of popular opinion. While the opposite tenet sets reason
-at defiance, makes the Bible teach what is practically
-absurd, and stands in opposition to the opinion of some of
-the most learned among its own advocates.</p>
-
-<p>We cannot conclude this little treatise more appropriately
-than in the words of a writer often quoted in these pages.</p>
-
-<p>"The doctrines or principles which I have stated and
-defended in this work, I believe to be the truths of God.
-Those against which I have argued, I believe to be either
-false or unproved. The doctrine which cannot stand the
-test of rational investigation, cannot be true. We have
-gone too far when we have said 'such and such doctrines
-should not be subjected to rational investigation, being doctrines
-of pure revelation.' I know no such doctrine in the
-Bible. The doctrines of the Scripture are doctrines of
-<i>eternal reason</i>; and they are revealed because they <i>are such</i>.
-Human reason could not have found them out; but when
-revealed, reason can both apprehend and comprehend them.
-It sees their perfect harmony among themselves, their agreement
-with the perfections of the Divine Nature, and their
-sovereign suitableness to the nature and state of man: thus
-reason approves and applauds. Some men cannot reason,
-and therefore they declaim against reason, and proscribe it
-in the examination of religious truth."</p>
-
-<p>Men may incorporate their doctrines in <i>creeds</i>, or articles
-of faith, and sing them in <i>hymns</i>; and this may be both
-<span class="pagenum">{88}</span>
-useful and edifying if the doctrines be <i>true</i>. But in every
-question which involves the eternal interests of man, the
-<i>Holy Scriptures</i> must be appealed to in union with <i>reason</i>
-their great commentator. He who forms his <i>creed</i> or <i>confession
-of faith</i> without these, may believe anything or
-nothing, as the cunning of others or his own caprice may
-dictate. Human creeds and confessions have been often
-put in the place of the Bible, to the dishonor both of revelation
-and reason. Let <i>those</i> go away, let these be retained,
-whatever be the consequence.</p>
-
-<div id="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_1" id="Foot_1" href="#Ref_1">[1]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See on this subject, "The Plenary Inspiration of the Scriptures
-asserted," by Rev. S. Noble:&mdash;a work well worthy the perusal of
-every Christian, and which deserves a place in every library.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_2" id="Foot_2" href="#Ref_2">[2]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See Wesley's Sermons. Sermon xv. "preached before the Hon.
-Sir Edward Clive, one of the judges of his Majesty's court of common
-pleas, in St. Paul's Church, Bedford, on Friday, March 10, 1758."</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_3" id="Foot_3" href="#Ref_3">[3]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Dr. Clarke has a very curious note on this passage. He supposes
-that the "noise" will be occasioned by the action of electric fire, on
-the watery particles of the atmosphere. These, being divided into
-their two component <i>gases</i>, the one will ascend into the higher regions,
-and the other float on the earth's surface. Thus, he says, the
-account of the apostle is "philosophically correct." Whether this
-be the <i>apostle</i>, or whether such account is correct in any degree, let
-common sense judge.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_4" id="Foot_4" href="#Ref_4">[4]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-This passage in its mere outward application, refers to a temporal
-overthrow in the land of Idumea; it has also, however, an
-acknowledged relation to the triumphs of the Gospel, and the overthrow
-of its enemies. Still, it makes little difference in the strength
-of the argument, to which event it is referred. Such descriptions have
-been given, they have been fulfilled, yet in no case literally. This is
-all that need be proved.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_5" id="Foot_5" href="#Ref_5">[5]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See Sir Isaac Newton,&mdash;Locke,&mdash;Dr. A. Clarke,&mdash;Burkitt, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_6" id="Foot_6" href="#Ref_6">[6]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See Dr. Adam Clarke's remark upon this passage.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_7" id="Foot_7" href="#Ref_7">[7]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Birkitt's Notes on the New Testament.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_8" id="Foot_8" href="#Ref_8">[8]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-For further remarks on this text, see "Noble's Plenary Inspiration
-of the Scriptures."</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_9" id="Foot_9" href="#Ref_9">[9]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Dr. A. Clarke, in loc.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">THE END.</p>
-
- <h2>LIST OF PUBLICATIONS<br />
- <span class="smaller">OF</span><br />
- <span class="larger">J.&nbsp;B. LIPPINCOTT &amp; CO.</span><br />
- <i>PHILADELPHIA.</i></h2>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Will be sent by mail, post paid, on receipt of the price.</i></p>
-
-<div id="booklist">
-
-<p class="book">The Albert N'Yanza. Great Basin of the Nile,
-and Explorations of the Nile Sources. By <span class="smcap">Sir Samuel White
-Baker</span>, M.&nbsp;A., F.&nbsp;R.&nbsp;G.&nbsp;S., &amp;c. With Maps and numerous Illustrations,
-from sketches by Mr. Baker. New edition. Crown 8vo.
-Extra cloth, $3.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"It is one of the most interesting and
-instructive books of travel ever issued;
-and this edition, at a reduced price, will
-bring it within the reach of many who
-have not before seen it."&mdash;<i>Boston Journal.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"One of the most fascinating, and certainly
-not the least important, books of
-travel published during the century."&mdash;<i>Boston
-Eve. Transcript.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">The Nile Tributaries of Abyssinia, and the Sword-Hunters
-of the Hamran Arabs. By <span class="smcap">Sir Samuel White Baker</span>,
-M.&nbsp;A., F.&nbsp;R.&nbsp;G.&nbsp;S., &amp;c. With Maps and numerous Illustrations,
-from original sketches by the Author. New edition. Crown
-8vo. Extra cloth, $2.75.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"We have rarely met with a descriptive
-work so well conceived and so attractively
-written as Baker's Abyssinia, and we cordially
-recommend it to public patronage....
-It is beautifully illustrated."&mdash;<i>N.&nbsp;O.
-Times.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Eight Years' Wandering in Ceylon. By Sir
-<span class="smcap">Samuel White Baker</span>, M.&nbsp;A., F.&nbsp;R.&nbsp;G.&nbsp;S., &amp;c. With Illustrations.
-16mo. Extra cloth, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"Mr. Baker's description of life in Ceylon,
-of sport, of the cultivation of the soil,
-of its birds and beasts and insects and reptiles,
-of its wild forests and dense jungles,
-of its palm trees and its betel nuts and intoxicating
-drugs, will be found very interesting.
-The book is well written and
-beautifully printed."&mdash;<i>Balt. Gazette.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"Notwithstanding the volume abounds
-with sporting accounts, the natural history
-of Ceylon is well and carefully described,
-and the curiosities of the famed island are
-not neglected. It is a valuable addition to
-the works on the East Indies."&mdash;<i>Phila.
-Lutheran Observer.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Hints for Six Months in Europe. Being the Programme
-of a Tour through parts of France, Italy, Austria, Saxony,
-Prussia, the Tyrol, Switzerland, Holland, Belgium, England and
-Scotland, in the Summer of 1868. By <span class="smcap">John H.&nbsp;B. Latrobe</span>.
-12mo. Toned paper. Extra cloth, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"It has many of the best advantages of
-a regular guide-book, with the additional
-excellence of being reliable as to facts and
-trustworthy as to the opinions it utters."&mdash;<i>New
-York Christian Advocate.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"Mr. Latrobe had some capital qualifications
-for producing a good book about
-Europe.... The result is a highly
-satisfactory volume, which we commend
-and recommend to travelers, whether they
-go abroad or stay at home."&mdash;<i>The Philadelphia
-Press.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"Is a genuine treasure-book for every
-new European traveler.... And if this
-programme should be carefully studied by
-one about to start on a summer tour in
-Europe, and be substantially followed by
-the tourist, he would secure for himself
-manifold more enjoyment, and save himself
-from countless disappointments and
-vexations which he would be sure otherwise
-to experience."&mdash;<i>Boston Evening
-Traveler.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Lippincott's Treasuries of Literary Gems. Miniature
-4to. Choicely printed on the finest toned paper and beautifully
-bound in extra cloth, gilt and gilt edges. 75 cts. each; as
-follows:</p>
-
-<p>I. A Treasury of Table Talk. II. Epigrams and Literary Follies.
-III. A Treasury of Poetic Gems. IV. The Table Talk of Samuel
-Johnson, LL.&nbsp;D.&nbsp;V. Gleanings from the Comedies of Shakspeare. VI.
-Beauties of the British Dramatists. The six volumes in neat box, $4.50.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"A charming little series, well edited
-and printed. More thoroughly readable
-little books it would be hard to find: there
-is no padding in them: all is epigram,
-point, poetry or sound common sense."&mdash;<i>London
-Publishers' Circular.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Mizpah. Friends at Prayer. Containing a Prayer
-or Meditation for each day in the Year. By <span class="smcap">Lafayette C.
-Loomis</span>. 12mo. Beautifully printed on superfine tinted paper
-within red lines. Fine cloth, $2. Extra cloth, gilt edges. $2.50.</p>
-
-<p class="review">This work proposes Morning and Evening
-Scripture Readings, and an Evening
-Meditation. The Morning Readings embrace
-the Psalms twice, and the evening,
-the New Testament entire, during the
-year. The Meditations are not expositions
-of the text, but rather devotional
-reflections&mdash;generally upon the Evening
-Reading&mdash;and intended to follow the
-Scripture and precede prayer.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">The Wife's Messengers: A Novel. By Mrs. M.&nbsp;B.
-<span class="smcap">Horton</span>. 12mo. Tinted paper. Extra cloth, $1.75.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"The writer has produced a capital
-contribution to the cause of domestic truth,
-and one which will be read with delight
-in many a household."&mdash;<i>Ohio Statesman.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"This story is pervaded by a strong
-religious feeling. The story is well worth
-reading on its own merits, and some portions
-of it are written with a real power
-that cannot fail to command attention."&mdash;<i>Philada.
-Evening Telegraph.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Our Own Birds of the United States. A Familiar
-Natural History of the Birds of the United States. By <span class="smcap">William
-L. Baily</span>. Revised and Edited by Edward D. Cope, Member of
-the Academy of Natural Sciences. With numerous Illustrations.
-16mo. Toned paper. Extra cloth, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"The text is all the more acceptable to
-the general reader because the birds are
-called by their popular names, and not by
-the scientific titles of the cyclopædias, and
-we know them at once as old friends and
-companions. We commend this unpretending
-little book to the public as possessing
-an interest wider in its range but
-similar in kind to that which belongs to
-Gilbert White's Natural History of Selborne."&mdash;<i>N.Y.
-Even. Post.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"The whole book is attractive, supplying
-much pleasantly-conveyed information
-for young readers, and embodying an arrangement
-and system that will often make
-it a helpful work of reference for older
-naturalists."&mdash;<i>Philada. Even. Bulletin.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"To the youthful, 'Our Own Birds' is
-likely to prove a bountiful source of pleasure,
-and cannot fail to make them thoroughly
-acquainted with the birds of the
-United States. As a science there is none
-more agreeable to study than ornithology.
-We therefore feel no hesitation in commending
-this book to the public. It is
-neatly printed and bound, and is profusely
-illustrated."&mdash;<i>New York Herald.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">A Few Friends, and How They Amused Themselves.
-A Tale in Nine Chapters, containing descriptions of Twenty
-Pastimes and Games, and a Fancy-Dress Party. By <span class="smcap">M.&nbsp;E. Dodge</span>,
-author of "Hans Brinker," &amp;c. 12mo. Toned paper. Extra
-cloth, $1.25.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"This convenient little encyclopædia
-strikes the proper moment most fitly. The
-evenings have lengthened; and until they
-again become short parties will be gathered
-everywhere and social intercourse
-will be general. But though it is comparatively
-easy to assemble those who would
-be amused, the amusement is sometimes
-replaced by its opposite, and more resembles
-a religious meeting than the juicy entertainment
-intended. The 'Few Friends'
-describes some twenty pastimes, all more
-or less intellectual, all provident of mirth,
-requiring no preparation, and capable of
-enlisting the largest or passing off with the
-smallest numbers. The description is conveyed
-by examples that are themselves
-'as good as a play.' The book deserves
-a wide circulation, as it is the missionary
-of much social pleasure, and demands no
-more costly apparatus than ready wit and
-genial disposition."&mdash;<i>Philada. North
-American.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Cameos from English History. By the author of
-"The Heir of Redclyffe," &amp;c. With marginal Index. 12mo.
-Tinted paper. Cloth, $1.25; extra cloth, $1.75.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"History is presented in a very attractive
-and interesting form for young folks in this
-work."&mdash;<i>Pittsburg Gazette.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"An excellent design happily executed."&mdash;<i>N.Y.
-Times.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">The Diamond Edition of the Poetical Works of
-Robert Burns. Edited by <span class="smcap">Rev. R.&nbsp;A. Willmott</span>. New edition.
-With numerous additions. 18mo. Tinted paper. Fine cloth, $1.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"This small, square, compact volume is
-printed in clear type, and contains, in three
-hundred pages, the whole of Burns' poems,
-with a glossary and index. It is cheap,
-elegant and convenient, bringing the works
-of one of the most popular of British poets
-within the means of every reader."&mdash;<i>Boston
-Even. Transcript.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Cottage Piety Exemplified. By the author of
-"Union to Christ," "Love to God," etc. 16mo. Extra cloth. $1.25.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"A very interesting sketch."&mdash;<i>N.&nbsp;Y. Observer.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Stories for Sundays, Illustrating the Catechism.
-By the author of "Little Henry and his Bearer." Revised and
-edited by <span class="smcap">A. Cleveland Coxe</span>, Bishop of Western New York,
-and author of "Thoughts on the Services," etc. 12mo. Illustrated.
-Tinted paper. Extra cloth. $1.75. <span class="smcap">Fine Edition.</span>
-Printed within red lines. Extra cloth, gilt edges. $2.50.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"We are glad to see this charming
-book in such a handsome dress. <i>This</i>
-was one of our few Sunday books when
-we were a school-boy. Sunday books are
-more plentiful now, but we doubt whether
-there is any improvement on Mrs. Sherwood's
-sterling stories for the young."&mdash;<i>Lutheran
-Observer.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"The typography is attractive, and the
-stories illustrated by pictures which render
-them yet more likely to interest the
-young people for whose religious improvement
-they are designed."&mdash;<i>N.Y.
-Evening Post.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">An Index to the Principal Works in Every Department
-of Religious Literature. Embracing nearly Seventy
-Thousand Citations, Alphabetically Arranged under Two Thousand
-Heads. By <span class="smcap">Howard Malcom</span>, D.&nbsp;D., LL.&nbsp;D. <span class="smcap">Second
-Edition.</span> With Addenda to 1870. 8vo. Extra cloth. $4.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"A work of immense labor, such as no
-one could prepare who had not the years
-allotted to the lifetime of man. We
-know of no work of the kind which can
-compare with it in value."&mdash;<i>Portland
-Zion's Advocate.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"The value of such a book can hardly
-be overestimated. It is a noble contribution
-to literature. It meets an urgent
-need, and long after Dr. Malcom shall
-have left the world many an earnest pen-worker
-will thank him, with heartfelt
-benedictions on his name, for help and
-service rendered."&mdash;<i>Boston Watchman
-and Reflector.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">The Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man,
-with Remarks on the Origin of Species by Variation. By <span class="smcap">Sir
-Charles Lyell</span>, F.&nbsp;R.&nbsp;S., author of "Principles of Geology," etc.
-Illustrated by wood-cuts. Second American, from the latest London,
-Edition. 8vo. Extra cloth. $3.</p>
-
-<p class="review">This work treats of one of the most interesting
-scientific subjects of the day, and
-will be examined with interest, as well by
-those who favor its deductions as by those
-who condemn them.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">The Student's Manual of Oriental History. A
-Manual of the Ancient History of the East, to the Commencement
-of the Median Wars. By <span class="smcap">Francois Lenormant</span>, Sub-Librarian
-of the Imperial Institute of France, and <span class="smcap">E. Chevallier</span>, Member of
-the Royal Asiatic Society, London. 2 vols. 12mo. Fine cloth. $5.50.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"The best proof of the immense results
-accomplished in the various departments
-of philology is to be found in M.
-Francois Lenormant's admirable <i>Handbook
-of Ancient History</i>."&mdash;<i>London
-Athenæum.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Words in Season. A Manual of Instruction,
-Comfort and Devotion for Family Reading and Private Use. By
-<span class="smcap">Rev. Henry B. Browning</span>, M.&nbsp;A. 16mo. Toned paper. Extra
-cloth. $1.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"<i>Words in Season</i> is the title of a
-beautiful little volume of practical religious
-counsels of instruction, comfort and
-devotion for family reading and private
-use. It appears to be truly evangelical,
-and to be calculated, in style and spirit,
-to do the good at which it aims."&mdash;<i>Boston
-Congregationalist.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"<i>Words in Season</i>, a thoughtful,
-sweet-toned manual for family reading and
-hours of devotion, prepared by an English
-minister of the Established Church.
-Spiritual souls will read it with comfort
-and strengthening."&mdash;<i>Chicago Advance.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"A very good book."&mdash;<i>N.Y. Liberal
-Christian.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">The Scriptural Doctrine of Hades. Comprising
-an Inquiry into the State of the Righteous and Wicked Dead between
-Death and the General Judgment, and demonstrating from
-the Bible that the Atonement was neither made on the Cross nor
-yet in this World. By <span class="smcap">Rev. George Bartle</span>, D.&nbsp;D., Principal of
-Walton College, Liverpool. 12mo. Cloth. $1.50.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"Appears to be to demonstrate that
-Christ actually descended into hell after
-death: that the time intervening between
-his death and his resurrection was spent
-there not in preaching to the lost spirits,
-but in actually suffering their punishment:
-and that this actual and literal suffering
-of the 'second death' was necessary
-to complete the atonement and to make
-him a true and sufficient substitute for
-sinners. We shall not attempt to follow
-the elaborate argument by which the
-author endeavors to sustain this most
-extraordinary position.... Giving to
-the author credit for very considerable
-research and no little ingenuity in the
-construction of his argument, we must,
-nevertheless, rank his book as among
-the 'curiosities of literature.'"&mdash;<i>N.Y.
-Independent.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Our Children in Heaven. By <span class="smcap">William H. Holcombe</span>,
-M.&nbsp;D., author of "The Sexes," etc. 12mo. Tinted paper.
-Extra cloth. $1.75.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"Its sweet pathos and comforting sympathy
-at once warm and interest us."&mdash;<i>Albany
-Journal.</i></p>
-
-<p class="review">"It is written in the most devout spirit,
-and will interest even those who reject its
-doctrines."&mdash;<i>Buffalo Express.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">The Sexes: Here and Hereafter. By <span class="smcap">William
-H. Holcombe</span>, M.&nbsp;D., author of "Our Children in Heaven," etc.
-12mo. Tinted paper. Extra cloth. $1.50.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"Whatever one may think of the doctrines
-of the book, it would be impossible
-to deny that it breaths a pure and
-elevated spirit, and has many thoughts
-which will commend themselves sympathetically
-to the followers of all Christian
-faiths."&mdash;The Independent, N.Y.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">In Both Worlds. By Wm. H. Holcombe, M.&nbsp;D.,
-author of "Our Children in Heaven," "The Sexes: Here and
-Hereafter," etc., etc. 12mo. Tinted paper. Extra cloth. $1.75.</p>
-
-<p class="review">"While likely to prove of the deepest
-and most thrilling interest to all whose
-minds are elevated above materiality and
-the grosser elements of nature, it is in
-no sense irreverent."&mdash;<i>Boston Evening
-Traveler.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Mistaken; or, The Seeming and the Real. By
-<span class="smcap">Lydia Fuller</span>. 12mo. Fine cloth, $1.50.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Moody Mike; or, The Power of Love. A Christmas
-Story. By <span class="smcap">Frank Sewall</span>. Illustrated. 16mo. Extra
-cloth, $1.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Talks with a Philosopher on the Ways of God to
-Man. By the author of "Talks with a Child on the Beatitudes."
-16mo. Cloth.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Lessons from Daily Life. By Emily E. Hildreth.
-12mo. Tinted paper. Extra cloth, $1.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">The Other Life. By Dr. W.&nbsp;H. Holcombe, author
-of "The Sexes," "In Both Worlds," etc. 12mo. Cloth.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Who was Swedenborg? By O.&nbsp;P. Hiller. 16mo.
-Paper cover, 25 cents. Cloth, 50 cents.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Letters to a Man of the World. By J.&nbsp;F.&nbsp;E.
-<span class="smcap">Le Boys Des Guays</span>, ex-sous Prefect in Department du cher. Revised
-edition. 16mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Doctrine of Life for the New Jerusalem; from
-the Commandments of the Decalogue. By <span class="smcap">Emanuel Swedenborg</span>.
-24mo. Extra cloth, gilt, 75 cents.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Heroism. By Horace Field. 12mo. Extra cloth,
-$1.50.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Thoughts in my Garden. By Mary G. Ware,
-author of "Elements of Character," etc. 16mo. Cloth, $1.25.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Death and Life. By Mary G. Ware, author of
-"Thoughts in my Garden," etc. 16mo. Cloth, $1.25.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Lectures on the New Dispensation signified by the
-New Jerusalem; designed to unfold and elucidate the leading doctrines
-of the New Church. By Rev. <span class="smcap">B.&nbsp;F. Barrett</span>. 12mo.
-Cloth, $1.50.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Letters on the Divine Trinity, addressed to Henry
-Ward Beecher. By Rev. <span class="smcap">B.&nbsp;F. Barrett</span>. New and enlarged
-edition. 12mo. Extra cloth, $1.25.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">The Divine Attributes. Including also the Divine
-Trinity. A Treatise on the Divine Love and Divine Wisdom, and
-Correspondence. From the "Apocalypse Explained" of Emanuel
-Swedenborg. 12mo. Extra cloth, $2.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Angelic Wisdom Concerning the Divine Love and
-Wisdom. By <span class="smcap">Emanuel Swedenborg</span>. From the original Latin
-as edited by Dr. J.&nbsp;F.&nbsp;I. Tafel. Translated by R.&nbsp;N. Foster. Demi
-8vo. Extra cloth, $2.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Heaven and its Wonders, and Hell. From Things
-Heard and Seen. By <span class="smcap">Emanuel Swedenborg</span>. From the Latin
-edition of Dr. J.&nbsp;F.&nbsp;I. Tafel. Translated by B.&nbsp;F. Barrett. Demi
-8vo. Extra cloth, $2.50.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Angelic Wisdom Concerning the Divine Providence.
-By <span class="smcap">Emanuel Swedenborg</span>. From the original Latin as
-edited by Dr. J.&nbsp;F.&nbsp;I. Tafel. Translated by R. Norman Foster.
-Demi 8vo. Tinted paper. Extra cloth, $2.25.</p>
-
-
-<p class="book">True Christian Religion. Containing the entire
-Theology of the New Church, foretold by the Lord in Dan vii.&nbsp;13,
-14 and Rev. xxi.&nbsp;1, 2. By <span class="smcap">Emanuel Swedenborg</span>. From the
-Latin edition of Dr. J.&nbsp;F.&nbsp;I. Tafel. Translated by R. Norman Foster.
-2 vols. demi 8vo. Tinted paper. Extra cloth, $5.</p>
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-Barrett. 12mo. Extra cloth, $1.50.</p>
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-etc. First American Edition. 12mo. Extra cloth, $2.25.</p>
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-Crown 8vo. Extra cloth, $2.50.</p>
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-<p class="review">"Perhaps no book has appeared from
-the scholars of the New Church that has
-promised more light to the inquirer or bestowed
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-Magazine.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="book">Emanuel Swedenborg as a Philosopher and a Man
-of Science. By <span class="smcap">R.&nbsp;L. Tafel</span>. Crown 8vo. Extra cloth, $2.25.</p>
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-<pre>
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