God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
In Romans 3:23 we read, “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” Everyone experiences guilt because everyone is guilty of violating God’s law. James 2:10 says, “For whoever keeps the whole law and yet stumbles in one point, he has become guilty of all.” Everyone deserves God’s just condemnation in hell. But God in His love and mercy sent us a Redeemer. He sent us One that would take our sins upon Himself. He sent us Jesus Christ. And after receiving our sins, the Father spent His wrath upon Him. The punishment for all our sins was received by Him. Thus with the penalty of sin now taken away for those in Christ, we can receive a full pardon for our sins. Remove our sins from God’s presence in Christ and naturally you remove the guilt as well.
(Acts 10; 11:1-18)
IN our previous discourse we traced the unfolding of
the scheme of redemption from the creation to the
giving of the law at Mt. Sinai In this discourse we
will trace the same from the giving of the law through
Moses to the admission of Cornelius and his household
into the church. With the admission of the Gentiles
into the household of faith, the plan of the ages was
perfected. Soon afterwards the complete written "Word
was given to man.
II. The Jewish Dispensation. The giving of the
law upon Mount Sinai. The old covenant renewed
through the mediation of Moses. Written upon tables
of stone (Gal. 3:19; Deut. 5:5; Ex. 21:18; Deut. 5:
22).
Why was the law added? (Gal. 3:19.) It was
added because of the transgressions of the people, until
the seed, or Christ, should come (Gal. 3 : 16 ; Gal. 3 : 24,
25). It was the schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ.
The Jews were organized into a commonwealth, and
given a code of laws. This system of law, made by
the Almighty and given to the people of Israel through
Moses, came to an end with the establishment of the
new institution on Pentecost (Col. 2:14).
The tabernacle was the institution of worship dur-
ing the Jewish dispensation, previous to the erection
of the temple. While the Jews were a wandering peo-
ple, they needed a portable institution of worship. The
tabernacle served this purpose. "When they became
firmly settled in Canaan, the temple was built during
the reign of Solomon. After the captivity, synagogues
were erected for places of worship.
The tabernacle was a type of the church (Heb. 9).
The outer court typified the world. It contained the
altar of burnt-offering, which typified faith in Jesus
Christ as the Son of God and the sin-offering of the
ages; and also the laver, before the entrance to the
Holy Place, which typified the ordinance of baptism.
The Holy Place typified the church on earth. It con-
tained the table of the showbread, which typified the
communion; the golden candlestick, which typified the
word of God; and the altar of incense, which typified
prayer. The Holy of Holies was a type of heaven —
and of it we can not now speak particularly (Heb. 9:
3-5).
The rule of the judges, followed by the setting up
of the kingdom. The reigns of Saul, David and Sol-
omon. The division of the kingdom and subsequent
decline and fall of the Jewish commonwealth bring us
down to
3. The gospel in prophecy. The prophets occupy
the major portion of the later history of Israel. They
began to point forward to the advent of the Messiah
and the establishment of His kingdom. This is the
gospel in prophecy.
Among the important facts prophesied are these:
The character and power of the Messiah (Isa. 9:6, 7) ;
the nature of His priesthood (Ps. 110:4) ; that He is
to be the Son of God (Ps. 2:7); that His power and
dominion are to be unlimited (Ps. 110:1); that His
coming is to be heralded by a special messenger, re-
ferring to John the Baptizer (Isa. 40:3; Mai. 3:1);
that He is to be born in Bethlehem of Judea (Mic. 5:
2) ; that He is to be born of a virgin (Isa. 7:14) ;
that He is to be rejected by the Jews (Isa. 53:2, 3) ;
that His mission is also to include the Gentiles (Isa.
49:6) ; that He is to attest His ministry by miracles
of mercy (Isa. 35 : 5, 6) ; that He is to be betrayed by
one of His companions for thirty pieces of silver (Ps.
41: 9; Zech. 11: 2) ; that He is to be scourged, pierced
and crucified (Isa. 50:6; Zech. 12:10; Isa. 53:4-7);
that He is to make His bed with the wicked and the
rich in His death (Isa. 53:9) ; that His garments are
to be parted (Ps. 22: 18) ; that He is to be resurrected
by the power of God (Ps. 16: 8-10). The preaching of
the gospel is also prophesied (Isa. 2:2, 3); as well
as the establishment of the kingdom (Dan. 2:44; 9:
24-27). Over seventy prophecies of the Old Testa-
ment are fulfilled in the New. Thus we have a gospel
in prophecy (1 Pet. 1:10, 11; 2 Pet. 1:21).
This period was that of the Babylonian captivity,
followed by the varying fortunes of the children of
Israel until they finally were brought under the rule
of imperial Rome. By this time we have
4. The gospel in preparation (Heb. 2:3). The
time was at hand for the advent of the Messiah.
Roman roads connected every part of the civilized
world, and transportation facilities were better than
ever before. The Greek language, the most flexible
of all tongues, was the recognized language of classic
literature. The Jews were scattered among the prin-
cipal colonies of the Mediterranean world. There was
also a universal condition of religious unrest; the
people were dissatisfied with their old systems of
philosophy and mythology, and were groping about
blindly in search of the truth.
The appearance of John the Baptizer. His ministry
was to herald the advent of the Christ (Matt. 3; Mark
1:1-8; Luke 3:1-22; John 1:1-34).
The birth of the Messiah in Bethlehem. The flight
into Egypt. The return to Nazareth. The baptism
in the Jordan. The personal ministry of Christ. The
transfiguration. The crucifixion. The resurrection.
The forty-day period, ending with the ascension.
The personal ministry of Christ was under the
Jewish law. He kept the law, and not ' 6 one jot nor
tittle" passed away until all was fulfilled upon the
cross, where, dying, He exclaimed, "It is finished,"
and the veil of the temple was rent in twain, a
pictorial significance of the division between the old
and the new. He fulfilled the old institution. He
completed it, or brought it to an end. When I make
an appointment to preach at a certain place at a
certain time, and go there and preach at the
appointed time, I fulfill the appointment. Christ
came not to destroy the law nor the prophets, but
to fulfill, or bring to an end (Matt. 5 : 17, 18) ; we
still have the law and the prophets untaken away
in the reading of the Old Testament, although the
authority of the law was done away in Christ (2
Cor. 3:14; Eom. 15:4).
The forty days following the resurrection were
spent by the Master with His disciples, teaching them
the things concerning the kingdom of God (Acts 1:3).
Then, and not until then, could He claim all authority
in heaven and upon earth (Matt. 28:18). He com-
manded the apostles to tarry in Jerusalem until endued
with power from on high (Luke 24:49). He as-
cended, and was crowned Lord of all. The coronation
ceremonies lasted ten days. Fifty days after the
resurrection the Spirit descended upon the apostles
at Jerusalem, on the day of Pentecost, and the gospel
was proclaimed as a fact (Acts 2).
5. The gospel in fact. The three facts of the gospel
— the death, burial and resurrection of Christ (1 Cor.
15:1-4) — could not have been preached as facts until
they had actually taken place. Hence Matthew, Mark,
Luke and John merely treat of the gospel in prepa-
ration.
The day of Pentecost, the end of the Jewish dis-
pensation and the beginning of the Christian. Peter
preached the first gospel sermon in the history of the
world; three thousand Jews became the charter mem-
bers of the church of Christ (Acts 2).
III. The Christian Dispensation. For several
years the gospel was preached to Jews only. The
conversion of Cornelius marked the completion of
the remedial system, and the consummation of the
eternal purpose of God. Cornelius was the first Gentile
Christian (Acts 10). Peter opened the door of the
church to the Gentile world in the conversion of Cor-
nelius ; and from that time Jews and Gentiles alike
were admitted into the kingdom upon compliance with
the Scriptural terms of pardon.
The sunlight age was ushered in on the day of
Pentecost. The old patriarchal era is known as the
" starlight age"; the Jewish, as the " moonlight age";
the Christian, as the "sunlight age." We are living
to-day under the gospel of Christ. The church, which
is His body, is the spiritual institution which He left
behind for the evangelization of the world.
God has done all that He can do. Man must do
the rest. The devil sought to defeat the purpose of
God all along the way. He stirred up the wrath of
Herod; he incited the Jews to crucify the Christ;
but he lost in everything. He had one personal en-
counter with God and lost; one with Christ and lost;
he is now in a personal encounter with the church.
There is a great campaign being waged for your
soul. Christ is voting for you; the devil against you;
and you, yourself, must cast the deciding vote. Which
shall it be?