PREFACE
Because of our connection with a certain school of
Christian thought, we once held the erroneous opinion that most of the
prophecies of the Old Testament were fulfilled, and that its present use was simply to feed the faith of devout men. Also, that
any nourishment for faith which could be drawn from that source was not
wholesome food for the soul, unless we were in possession of such an exalted
type of spirituality that we would be able to rise above the somewhat prosy
details of its histories, and find our soul-food in a surely accompanying
spiritual influence, which, in its action upon us, was superior to the mere
literalness of the subject matter.
We were also led to suppose that the unfulfilled
prophecies of "Moses and the
prophets" were of no special moment to Christianity, because the
great momentous question, the coming of a Saviour, was settled forever. Consequently, when, perchance, we found some
prophetic utterance therein, which we were forced to admit had not become a
historic verity, and since this was the dispensation of the Spirit, we felt at
liberty to give the reins to our somewhat vivid imagination, and let it run
unchecked through the verdant and fruitful fields of speculation in search of
some rare and deeply spiritual truth which we might lay against that seeming
rhetorical figure of Holy Writ.
But this roaming through those alluring fields always
resulted in failure, for when those fanciful and random conjectures, no matter
how lofty, were brought before our quickened conscience, they were soon condemned,
because that judge who sits at the bar of our spiritual integrity not only
revealed their insincerity, but also convinced us that they did not contain the
real import, thought and purpose for which those words of God were
written. Thus defeated, we could only
bemoan our lack, not only of the mental power to grasp the true meaning of
those holy words, but also the depth of spirituality which was supposed to be
essential to the possession of that intense spiritual power which could pierce
through the density of earthly things into the rarity of those which were
heavenly. For the spiritual standards which we had erected for ourselves
demanded the attainment of a soul life which would give us power to soar in the
spirit into such rarefied heights of divine enlightenment that we could discern
the graceful curves, the symmetrical outlines, the non-earthly shadows, the
heavenly half-tones and the divine highlights of that wonderful picture -- that
spiritual masterpiece -- which lay behind the coarseness of the letter.
These errors so blinded us, that, in our ignorance,
we even considered that the twelve apostles, whom our Lord had chosen and
enlightened, were in gross error when they understood Christ and the Scriptures
to teach that there was to be a literal and visible kingdom of God on the
earth with the Lord as king of all the earth when that day came. We assumed
that their conception of the promised kingdom, when contrasted with our own,
was carnal in the extreme, and that the superiority of our conception lay in
the fact that it was free from all such mortal grossness. And we really thought that this spirit of
moral groveling among the apostles had reached its climax, when James, who
afterward became a martyr, and his brother John, he whom the Master loved,
took their mother to Christ, and had her make a request of Him for them which
they did not dare make for themselves.
But, thank
God, such conceptions of divine truth were only our spiritual swaddling
clothes, and the daydreams of spiritual babyhood. For, as we grew in grace, and became less presumptive, the Holy
Ghost lifted the veil from our mind, and illuminated the following portion of
the Saviour's reply to the request of the mother of James and John: "To
sit on my right hand, and on my left, is not mine to give, but it shall be given to them for whom it is
prepared of my Father."
In this work
we have followed the history of the two families, or kingdoms, into which the
seed of Abraham were divided, through the intricate paths of their Biblical
history, and the prophecies concerning them, which have thus far become
history, down to the present day, without the loss of any single connecting
link.
We have been
moved by the Holy Spirit to thus write concerning the earthly history of God's
chosen race, because so very little of it is known by the masses of our people,
and yet it is the foundation upon which the entire structure of Christianity
must rest. A knowledge of these earthly
things not only renders the claims of Christianity impregnable, but they are
also the basis upon which we must rest our faith for better things. For Jesus
has said, "If I have told you of earthly things, and ye believe not, how
shall ye believe, if I tell you of heavenly things?" The truth of this
saying of our Lord has been demonstrated in our own ministry; for in the past
seven years, during which time we have been able to demonstrate the special features
of truth as set forth in this book — i.e., the
realization of the promises made to ISRAEL, by THE PEOPLE OF ISRAEL — the
Lord has used us to bring more skeptics to the light of his truth, than in all
our previous ministry of twenty-one years. Also during this seven years, while
we have seen the faith of some fail, the Lord has helped us to save the
tottering faith of many. We are also sure, from the very reasons which are
given, that the faith of those who have made shipwreck could not have failed,
if they had known these things. Hence
we have written this time concerning the earthly
things which are the subjects of Divine inspiration, praying that God will
use them to strengthen the faith of some, and to bring others into the faith in
the inspiration of the Bible. But if
there seems to be a demand for it we will write again, and then we will write
on THE HEAVENLY THINGS.