
Milton S. Terry
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The Consummation of
the Pre-Messianic Age and the Parousia of Christ
By
Milton S. Terry
It remains to notice a
few things peculiar to Matthew's report of this discourse of Jesus.
According to his gospel the form of the disciples' question was, "When shall
these things be, and what shall be the sign of thy coming (parousia)
and of the consummation of the age (sunteleia tou aionos)?" They
seem to have already inferred or assumed that his coming and the
consummation of the age would be connected in some way with the desolation
of the temple. The closing words of chap. 23 were of a nature to imply all
this.
If it were not to be, and Jesus knew it, it is inconceivable that he should
have confirmed them in such a belief as the language of
Matt. 25 was certainly adapted to do. What significance, then, are we to
attach to the words coming, and consummation of the age?
The words parousia,
commonly translated coming, is so constantly associate, in current
dogmatics, with the ultimate goal of human history, that ordinary readers
lose sight of its simple meaning in New Testament usage. The word means
presence as opposed to absence. For example, we read in
Phil. 2:12, "So then, my beloved, even as ye have always obeyed, not as
in my presence (en te parousia mou) only, but now much more in my
absence (en te apousia mou), work out your own salvation with fear
and trembling." But as the personal presence of any one implies a previous
coming, so this word is not improperly rendered coming in many passages, and
the verb erchomai, to come, is often employed to denote
the appearance and kingdom of Christ. (2)
But to assume that this coming or presence of Christ must needs be
spectacular in any physical sense, a literal display of his person in the
atmosphere of this earth, is to involve the doctrine in great confusion. Why
must the coming of the Son of man on the clouds to execute judgment on that
generation be understood or explained in any other way than we explain
Jehovah's "riding upon a swift cloud," and coming to execute judgment on
Egypt, as prophesied in
Isa. 19:1? Whatever the real nature of the parousia, as
contemplated in this prophetic discourse, our Lord unmistakably associates
it with [p. 245] the destruction of the temple and city, which he represents
as the signal termination of the pre-Messianic age. The coming on clouds,
the darkening of the heavens, the collapse of the elements, are, as we have
shown above, familiar forms of apocalyptic language, appropriated from the
Hebrew prophets.(3)
That other expression in
Matthew, "the consummation of the age," is a phrase that has been much
abused and widely misunderstood. The common translation, "end of the world,"
has been a delusion to many readers of the English Bible. It has helped to
perpetuate the unscriptural nation that the coming and kingdom of Christ are
not facts of the past, present, and future, but of the future only. The
fundamental and distinguishing doctrine of all branches of the "Adventists,"
so-called, is that the coming of the Son of man to set up his kingdom is
this world is solely an event of the future. Christ has as yet no
kingdom among men! Even the parables of our Lord, illustrative of the
spiritual character of the kingdom, are forced to harmonize with the concept
of a spectacular advent and a political organization.(4)
Those who maintain the doctrine, and, indeed, not a few who oppose it, fall
into error and inconsistency by failing to apprehend the true meaning of the
phrase "the end of the age."
For, first of all, they do
not determine clearly what age (aion) is contemplated in such a
text as
Matt. 24:3. They quite generally assume that the period of the Gospel
dispensation is meant. But nothing is more familiar in the Jewish
terminology of our Lord's time than the current phrases this age
and the age to come. The period which preceded the coming of the
Messiah [p. 246] was spoken of as this age; that which followed his
coming was the age to come. (5)
It is not important to consider what various and often contradictory notions
the rabbins associated with the age to come. Their notions were as various
as those concerning the character of the Messiah himself. But by this
age they meant and could mean nothing else than the current period in
which they were living, the then present age. The question of the disciples,
as recorded, could therefore only refer to the pre-Messianic age, and its
consummation was, as we have seen, associated in their thought with the
overthrow of the temple. But even were it admitted that their nation of the
"consummation of the age" was erroneous, the teaching of Jesus was emphatic
beyond all rational question that that generation should not pass away
before all those things of which they inquired should be fulfilled.
The age to come, the
Messianic time, would accordingly be the period that would follow
immediately after the termination of the pre-Messianic age. that time had
not yet come when Jesus spoke. According to the whole trend of New Testament
teaching that age and the Messianic kingdom were near or at
hand. Christ's ministry fell in the last days of an aion. The
gospel of his kingdom must be firmly established in the world before the end
of that age. The gospel of his kingdom must be firmly established in the
world before the end of that age. So we read, inZ
Heb. 9 26 "Now, once, at the end of the ages (epi sunteleia ton
aionon) hath he been manifested to put away sin by the sacrifice of
himself." Also in
Heb. 1:1 it is written: "God...hath at the last of these days spoken
unto us in his Son." Similarly Peter (1 Pet.1:20) speaks of Christ as
"foreknown before the foundation of the world, but manifested at the end of
the times for your sake." Paul, too, speaks of himself as living near the
consummation of an age: "These things happened unto them by way of example;
and they were written for our admonition upon whom the ends of the ages are
come" (1
Cor. 10,11) The ministry both of Jesus and his disciples must,
therefore, be recognized as occurring in the latter days of an aion,
or near the end of the pre-Messianic age. The New Testament writers, as well
as Jesus, are clear on this point. They never represent themselves as
already entered upon the first days, or the beginning of the age, but rather
in the last days.
If, now, we ask with the
disciples, WHEN shall these things be? or at what point are we to recognize
the end of the pre-Messianic age? we are to find the answer in the
eschatological discourse of [p. 248] Jesus, and at some point before that
generation passed away. "The ends of the ages" may have a definite point of
contact and transition from one age to another. The coming age may, like the
morning twilight, cast its beams into the foregoing night, and so the
preceding age may partake in its last days of many things which belong to
the age to come.(6)
But such facts do not affect the question of the signal crisis which may
conspicuously mark the end of one age and the opening of another. Was there
such a crisis between the Jewish and Christian dispensations, that we can
point to it and say, "That was preeminently and conspicuously an event which
marked an epoch in the history of both Judaism and Christianity?"
Some writers find such a
crisis or end in the crucifixion of Jesus, and the moment when he said, "It
is finished." (tetelestai). Others say it was at the resurrection; some few
designate the ascension; but many have taught that the outpouring of the
Spirit on the day of Pentecost was the coming of Christ in his kingdom, the
end of the old and the beginning o the new age. To all of these theories
there are two insuperable objections:
(1) They are irreconcilable
with the statement of Jesus that the Gospel must first be preached "in all
the habitable earth" (oikonmene), and
(2), long after the day of
Pentecost, the apostles speak of their work as taking place in the last
days, or near the end of the age.
Is it not strange that any
careful student of our Lord's teaching should fail to understand his answer
to this very question? The disciples asked, definitely, WHEN shall it be?
And Jesus proceeded to foretell a variety of things which they would live to
see - all preliminary to the end. He foretold the horrors of the siege of
Jerusalem, and an intelligible sign by which they might know the imminence
of the final catastrophe of Judaism. And having told them of all these
things, and of his own coming in the clouds and its glorious significance,
he added: "When ye see these things coming to pass, know that it is nigh, at
the door. Verily I say unto you, this generation shall not pass away until
all these things be accomplished." The ruin of the temple was, accordingly,
the crisis which marked the end of the pre-Messianic age. [p. 249]
Matthew's gospel appends to
the eschatological discourse three parables of admonition, which occupy the
whole of the twenty-fifth chapter. The parable of the ten virgins and the
picture of the judgment are peculiar to this gospel, but the parable of the
talents appears to be in substance identical with that of the pounds (mnas,
minas) in
Luke 19:11-27. The three parables as they stand in Matthew, whether
originally uttered in this connection or not, are every way appropriate to
the context. They are admonitions to watch and be ready for the coming of
the Lord, and are not essentially different from the counsels already
noticed in the fourth section of the preceding discourse (for example,
Matt. 24:32-51). The lesson of the parable of the virgins is, "Watch,
therefore, for ye know not the day nor the hour." The great lesson of the
parable of the talents is that the Lord's servants have also something more
to do than merely to watch. They must be diligently employed in the service
and interests of their owner during his temporary absence from them, whether
the time be long or short. There is, then, no difficulty as to the import of
these parables, and no question as to their relevancy to the subject of
which Jesus spoke on the Mount of Olives.
Greater difficulty is
supposed to attach to the sublime picture of Judgment recorded in
Matt. 25:31-46 and most expositors have thought that the picture must
needs refer to a general and formal judgment of all nations of men at the
conclusion of human history. But the language of Matthew is explicit in
referring it to the time "when the Son of man shall come in his glory, and
all the angels with him," and when "he shall sit on the throne of his
glory." There would be obvious inconsistency in making this coming of the
Son of man different from that of
Matt. 24:30, and
Matt. 16:27, 28. How, then, it is asked, can this sublime ideal be
brought within the time-limits of the prophecy of
Matt. 24?
The difficulties which are
here suggested arise either from the assumptions of a literalizing exegesis
or from a failure to keep in mind that the coming and kingdom of Christ are
in their nature a process, which has definite historical beginning,
but stretches on indefinitely into future ages of ages. Consequently, while
most of the things enumerated in the foregoing discourse had fulfillment in
the fall of Judaism and the beginning of Christianity, other things, from
their very nature, are such as must needs be of repeated or continual
occurrence. Such especially is the execution of judgment, a function of
every reigning king. The scriptural doctrine of Messiah's reign is not that
God, the father Almighty, vacates his throne at the accession of Christ.
Neither the concept of
Psalm 2:7-9 [p. 250] nor
Psalm 110, nor
Dan. 7:13, 14 implies that the eternal God is any less the ruler and
sovereign of the world after he sets his anointed Son at his right hand, and
"gives him dominion and glory and a kingdom." From thence onward he judges
the world by Jesus Christ, and the sublime picture of
Matt. 25:31-46 is a parable of this great fact. Hence the force and
propriety of the words: When the Son of man shall come in his glory, and all
the angels with him, then shall he sit on the throne of his glory." But how
long he shall continue to sit thus on his glorious throne of judgment - how
long "he must reign until he hath put all enemies under his feet" - is not a
matter of specific revelation. The ideal of judgment presented in
Matt. 25:31-46 is therefore no single event, like the destruction of
Jerusalem. It is not to be explained literally as a formal assize not to
open until the end of human history on earth. It is, rather, a most
impressive parabolic picture of the age-long administration of Jesus Christ,
form the hour of the signal overthrow of Jerusalem until "he shall deliver
up the kingdom to the Father" (1
Cor. 15:24). the anointed King of glory is judge of the living as well
as of the dead, and it is a grave error to represent "the day of the Lord"
or "the day of judgment" as something deferred to the end of time. We have
shown over and over again in the preceding portions of this volume that "the
great and terrible day of the Lord " is a prophetic phrase of remarkable
fullness of meaning. The Old Testament doctrine is that "the kingdom is
Jehovah's, and he is ruler among the nations" (Psalm
22:28). "Say ye among the nations, Jehovah reigneth; he shall judge the
peoples with equity. he cometh, he cometh to judge the earth; he shall judge
the world in righteousness, and the peoples in his truth" (Psalm
22:10-13. The day of judgment for any wicked nation, city, or individual
is the time when the penal visitation comes; and the judgment of God's
saints is manifest in every signal event which magnifies goodness and
condemns iniquity.(7)
[p. 251]
But this divine
administration of the world, which in the Hebrew Scriptures is the work of
Jehovah, is portrayed in
Dan. 7:13, 14 and represented in the New Testament as committed unto
Christ. The Father has given him "authority to execute judgment because he
is Son of man" (John
5:27). And the Son of man came, in accord with the apocalyptic pic5ture
of
Dan. 7:13 and
Matt. 25:30, and executed judgment upon Jerusalem, guilty of "all the
righteous blood shed upon the earth, form the blood of Able the righteous
unto the blood of Zachariah" (Matt.
23:35, 36). That was the first conspicuous exhibition of his judicial
power, and it marked the crisis and end of the pre-Messianic age. Christ is,
therefore, now King and Judge; but all things are not yet subjected unto
him, and he must reign until he shall have put all things in subjection
under his feet. And this no other than the decree,
Jehovah has said to
me, My Son art thou; I have this day begotten thee. Ask of me, and I will
give thee the nations for thine inheritance, And the uttermost parts of the
earth for thy possession. (Psa.
2:7, 8)
We conclude, then, that the
additions peculiar to Matthew's version of our Lord's discourse on the Mount
of Olives contain nothing inappropriate to the occasion, and nothing
inconsistent with the definite time-limit of the prophecy and the analogy of
New Treatment eschatology. [p. 252]
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