MILLER’S WORKS. EVIDENCE FROM SCRIPTURE AND HISTORY OF THE SECOND COMING OF CHRIST, ABOUT TEE Tilt ISli; EXHIBITED IN A COURSE OF LECTURES. BY WILLIAM MILLER. EDITED BY JOSHUA V. HIMES. VOLUME II. BOSTON: PUBLISHED BY JOSHUA V. HIMES, 14 Devonshire Street. 1841. TO ALL THEM WHO ABE LOOKING FOB THE BLESSED HOPE AND GLOBIOUS APPEASING OF THE GBEAT GOD, AND OUE SAVIOB JESUS CHBIST AT HAND, THESE WORKS ARE RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED BY THE EDITOB. INTRODUCTION. I* presenting these Lectures to the public, the writer is only complying with the solicitations of some of his friends, who have ^quested that his views on the Prophecies of Daniel and John be made public. The reader is therefore requested to give fa subject a careful and candid perusal, and compare every part with the standard of Divine Truth j for if the explanation the writer , has given to the scriptures under consideration should prove correct, the reader will readily perceive that it concerns us all, and becomes doubly important to us, because we live on the eve of one of the m°st important events ever revealed to man by the wisdom of God "the judgment of the great day . In order that the reader may have an understanding of my man-°or of studying the Prophecies, by which 1 have come to the fol-j°*»og result, 1 have thought proper to give some of the rules of t^erpretation which I have adopted to understand prophecy. Prophetical soripture is very mueh of it communicated to us by figures and highly and richly adorned metaphors 5 by which I mean that figures SUch as boasts, bird!s, air or wind, water, fire, candlesticks, kutps, mountains, islands, &c., are used to represent things prophesied of*—such as .kingdoms, warriors, principles, people, judg-toents, ehurches> word of God, large and smaller governments. Itis n>utaphorical also, showing some peculiar quality of the thing proph-es>ed of, by the most prominent feature or quality of the figure used, as beasts—if,a Hon, power and rule ; if a leopard, celerity; if a fear, voracious; aa oar, submissive; a man, proud and independent. ^*re denotes justice and judgment in its figure; in the metaphor, denotes the purifying or consuming up the dross or wickedness ; as fire has a cleansing quality, so will the justice or judgments of God. ^ For when thy judgments are in the earth, the inhabitants of the. w°rid will leant righteousness.77 Therefore almost all the figures 4 INTRODUCTION. used in prophecy have their literal and metaphorical meaning; as beasts denote, literally, a kingdom, so metaphorically good or bad, as the case may be, to be understood by the subject in connection. To understand the literal meaning of figures used in prophecy, 1 have pursued the following method: — I find the word “beast” used in a figurative s0»s£ jjl take pe of the tried and tempted child of God centres, is for complete todomption from sin, for the justification and glorification promised to aH those who look for bis appearing, the destruction of the wicked told mystical Babylon, the abomination of the whole earth. Hisfirst coming was as a man, his human nature being only visible, bto Godhead known only in his miracles. His second coming will as God, his divine Godhead and power being most visible. He e°‘nes first, like the u first man of the earth, earthy:” his second i* 8 tprraoDUcirtofh coming is out of the temple, his disciples came to him for to show him the buildings of the temple, where Christ delivered his memorable prophecy, which was exactly fulfilled in little more than thirty-six years afterwards, “There shah not be left here one stone upon another that shall not be thrown down.” And it appears that, afterwards, as Jesus sat upon the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to him privately, having, as may reasonably be supposed, been rumi-nating in their minds, or conversing among themselves, on the prophecy, and had, perhaps, supposed tha* no Power on earth could destroy those strong buildings, and concluded that, when this was accomplished, it *ould be the judgment-day. They therefore inquire of him, “ saying, Tell us, when snail these things be ? n that is, what he had prophesied of; “and what shall he the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the *orld ? ” They might not have intended tp ask more than one question; yet they did ask three, and Christ answered them accordingly. He had before told them the destruction of Jerusalem, 4th, 5th, and 6th Verses; he cautions them against being deceived with false Christs, and not to be troubled at wars and rumors of wars, — and yet Jerusalem was destroyed in the hist war. of any note after this prophecy,—and then ^ys plainly, “The end is not yet.” Now, if this end the destruction of Jerusalem, then where are those spoken of by Christ? This cannot mean any hung less than the end of the world. Prom the 7th 40 the 14th verse, inclusive, he gives a prophetic history °f the trials, afflictions, and persecutions of his people, and also of the success of the gospel immediately Previous to the end, and says, “Then shall the end came# New, it must pe evident that this cannot mean the of Jerusalem, because, if so, be that endured unto the end was to be saved from all the ttpiibles which Christ had been speaking of; and it Was hot true that 2 14 LECTURE I. the disciples of Christ did not suffer afterwards the same things which Christ said they would. From the 15th to the 28th verse, Christ instructs his disciples into their duty during the siege of Jerusalem, and also down to the coming of the Son of Man. This, you will see, must mean Christ in person; because neither the Holy Spirit nor Father is any where called Son of Man. He likewise speaks of the signs which should follow the destruction of Jerusalem, From the 29th to the 35th verse, inclusive, Christ explains the signs in the heavens and on the earth immediately after'the tribulation of the people of God, which had been spoken of as the common lot of all his folldwers, and which he had promised to shorten for the elect’s sake, and of his coming , in the clouds with power and great glory; the. gathering of his elect from the four winds of heaven; gives his disciples the parable of the fig tree, as an illustration of the end; and then says to his disciples, “Verily, 1 say uhto you. This generation shall not pass till ajl these things he fulfilled; heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.” Here is the great stumbling-block to many. Christ is talking about his elect, his children, and his generation ; and not, as some will have it, about the generations that then lived on the earth; for they aid undoubtedly pass off, a large share of them; for it was about thirty-six years before the destruction of Jerusalem. But his kingdom has never been taken from the earth. Although they have been hunted from one part of the earth to another; although they have been driven into caves and dens of mountains; have been slain, burnt, sawn asunder; have wandered as pilgrims and strangers on the earth;—yet the “blood of the martyrs has been the seed of the church;” and Christ has had, and will have, a people on the earth, until hi® second coming. 1 Peter ii. 9: “ But ye are a chose® generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a peculi** people,” &c. The Psalmist says, “ A seed shall serve him; it shall be accounted to the Lord for a genera' tion.” Psalm xxii. 30. I humbly believe that Chf$ has quoted the sentiment contained in the 102d Psalm* Christ’s second coming. 15 25th to last verse: “Of old hast thou laid the foundation of the earth; and the heavens are the work of thine hands. They shall perish, but thou shalt endure; yea, all of them shall wax old like a garment; as a vesture shalt thou change them, and they shall be changed; but thou art the same, and thy years shall have no end. The children of thy servants shall continue, and their seed shall be established before thee.® Here we see the Psalmist has expressed the same sentiment that I understand Christ to have given in these two verses, which I conclude is the proper explanation. And then the parables which follow in the remainder of the 24th and 25th chapters, are easily understood as having reference to tile end of the world; and in that way will exactly compare. See the 31st verse of the 25th chapter: “When the Son of Man shall come in his glory, and •til the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory; and before him shall be gathered all nations,” &c. This verse was not fulfilled at the destruction of Jerusalem, for the “Son of Man” was Hot seen in the clouds with power and great glory; and yet the words are, “ every eye shall see him, and sudden and as visible “ as the lightning, that shineth from the east even unto the west, so shall the coming of the Son of Man be.” Can this have passed, and the history of the world have been silent ? Wo. Could all nations be gathered before him, and there be divided, tile righteous from the wicked, and the one part sent to overlasting punishment, while the other is received to life eternal, and none know it? No. Were the elect fathered from the four winds of heaven at the destruction of Jerusalem? No; they were commanded, to dee to the mountains; and history says they did leave that devoted city when the Romans encompassed it with their armies. Then, could the prophecies contained in these chapters have been fulfilled, and the world remain •gnorant of some of the most important events? I answer, No. Then the “ Son of Man” did not come to the destruction of Jerusalem. If he did, where is the evidence ? None, none, not a particle. But if lie did 16 LECTURE I. come to the destruction of Jerusalem, then it must have been his second coming; for Paul says, Heb. ix. 28, “And unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without sin unto salvation.” Can this be true if he came to Jerusalem ? The passage certainly implies that his people would have no more sin, or afterwards would be “ without sin.” Experience teaches us to the contrary. Again it is said, X Thes. iv. 1G, 17, “ For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with*the trump of God; and the dead in Christ shall arise lirst; then we, which are alive and remain, shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air; .and so shall we ever be with the Lord.” Who saw this great transaction at Jerusalem? Were there no witnesses? Yes, the apostle John lived many years after this, and wrote his Gospel, his Epistles, and his Revelatiory long after the destruction of Jerusalem* And what does he testify ? In his Gospel, 14th chapter, 3d verse, “ And if I go and prepare a place for you, 1 will come and receive you to myself, that where I am there ye may be also.” Again, 28th and 29th verses, “ Ye have heard how I said unto you, I go away, and come ogam unto you. If ye loved me, ye would rejoice, because I said, I go onto the Father; for my Father is greater than I. And now I have told you before it come to pass, that when it is come to pass, ye might believe,” Again, 1 John ii. 28, “ And now, little children, abide in turn, that, when he shall appear, we may have confidence, and not he ashamed before him at his coming.” And iii. 2, “Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be; but we know that when he shaft appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is.” And, again, in Rev. i, 7, “ Behold, he cometh with clouds, and every eye shall see him; and they also which pierced him, and all kindreds of the earth, shall wail because of him.” Many more places might be mefl-tioned in John’s testimony, but not one wora that he had already come agpin, as some supposed. Let this, then* suffice to prove, that the “glorious appearing,” spoken of in our text, is still future. Christ’s second coming. 17 And now we will examine some of the evidence of toe certainty of his coming, which' is our second proposition. IL The certainty of it: 1st Because the ancient prophets all spake of it Jude tells us that Enoch, the seventh from Adam, prophesied, saving, Behold the Lord cometh, with ten thousands of his saints, &c. * Balaam was constrained to admit, “ Out of Jacob shall come he that shall have dominion, and shall destroy him that remaineth of the c,ty,” plainly referring to the judgment-day; for he ^ys, “Alas! who shall live when God doth this?” ^ Numbers xxiv. 17—23. And Moses as plainly ^fers to this day in Deut xxxii. 43, “ Rejoice, O ye jettons, with his people, for he will avenge the blood of hw servants, and will render vengeance to his adversa-and will be merciful to his hind and to his people.” totvid says, Psalm L 3, 4, u Our God shall come, and ®uall not keep silence; a fire shall devour before him, aQd it shall be veiy tempestuous round about him; he 8hall call to the heavens from above, and to the earth, (toat he may judge his people.”) And Isa. xl. 5, “ And toe glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh ®haU see it together; for the mouth of the Lord hath ®Poken it” In the 39th chapter of Ezekiel, you will ** the same day of judgment prophesied of in a clear told plain manner. In Dan. vii. 9,10, “ I beheld till the tofones were cast down, and the Ancient of days did whose garment was white as snow, and the hair of Jis head like the pure wool: his throne was like the 6ery flame, and his wheels as burning fire* A fiery 8tream issued and came forth before him: thousand toousands ministered unto him, and ten thousand times teQ thousand stood before him: the judgment was set, told the books were opened.” Joel iu. 14, “ Multitudes, Multitudes in the valley of decision, for the day of the is near in the valley of decision.” Zeph. i. 14, l The great day of the Lord is near; it is near, and Jjasteth greatly, even the voice of the day of the Lord; toe mighty men shall cry there bitterly.” Zech. xiv. 5, And the Lord thy God shall come, and all the saints .LECTURE I, K- with theetf Mai. iv. % “ But unto you that fear my name shall the Sun of kighteous&ess arise with healing in his wings, and ye shall go forth, and grow up as calves in the stall.” And Christ himself says, in Matt. xvi. 27, “ For the Son of Man shall come in the glory of his Father, with his angels; and then shall he reward every man according to his works.” ‘The angels that stood by the disciples at the time Jesus ascended up, and a cloud received him out of their sight, said, “Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing op into heaven ? 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.” Let us take particular notice of the phrase this same Jesus, and compare with other parallel passages, as, our Cod shall come, and it will prove to our satisfaction that Jesus Christ is God, as well a® man, and we may have strong consolation for our hope in his appearing, for his promises can never fuiL “Heaven and earth may pass away, but not one jot or tittle of his word shall fail.” Also take notice of the words “ like manner” which agree with the often expressed sentence, “ He shall, come in the clouds *f heaven.” We shall be led to admire the general haf' mony of the Scripture^ and the agreement of the prophets in their descriptions of future events. Agahb Christ says to the church of Philadelphia, Rev. iii. Ih “ Behold, I come quickly .: hold that fast thou hast, that no man take thy crown,” « For yet a little while and he that shall come will come, and will not tarry,” Heb» x. 37. And will.not,the evidence I have brought from the word of God be sufficient to prove the certainty of his future coming ? And if I should argue the tradition of nations that never saw the word of God, the conviction on the mind of men generally, that there must bo & day of retribution; could 1 open the breast of the reader, and show the thundering of your conscience} yes, could. 1 see and expose the tremblings and failing® . of heart, which you have had, while you have been looking with fear for those things that are coming oD the earth — of what use would it be ? Would you believe it if I could raise a dead friend who would tell Christ’s skcoitd coming. 1» vle heard his voice and saw the fire; witness all the decorations of the prophets which I have read; witnetf Jesus Christ himself in the parable of the tares and wheat, and the harvest; witness, also, the destruction of the old world by water, and Sodom and Gomorrah ty fire; Jerusalem by famine, sword, and fire. These are all set forth as samples to warn us of the approaching judgment And yet who believes the report ? Who is wining to examine the evidences—to reason candidly and to reflect seriously on these things ? Who among u® . puts implicit confidence in the word of God, especially in that which is unfulfilled? Any may believe in 00 much as has been accomplished; but where is the virtu® in-such faith? Where is the blessedness of our hop® in the glorious appearing of Jesus Christ? If we a*® “ looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Savior Jesus Christ,” we Christ’s second coming. shall examine the word of God faithfully; we shall compare scripture with scripture; we shall take notice of the signs which Christ has given us of his coming. That the day may not overtake us as a thief, we should hve with a steady reference to that day, and rejoice owre and more as we see the day approaching. 3d. I will now give some of the evidences concerning the glorious reign which must follow his coming. The earth, being cleansed by fire, will, like the phoenix, be revived from its own ashes. The destniction of the kicked, the end of death, sin banished, it will lighten the world of a load of crime which has made it reel to and fro like a drunkard; the internal fires will have 8pent their force on all combustible matter, and have gone out; volcanoes will cease; earthquakes, tornadoes, and whirlwinds can no more be experienced or needed, tor the cause is gone; the earth or the heavens can no more be shaken, “ that those things that cannot be shaken may remain. Wherefore we receiving a kingdom which cannot be moved, let us have grace, whereby may serve God acceptably, with reverence and godly fear; for our God is a consuming fire,” Heb, xii. p^-29. Then, when this earth shall become new, by being cleansed and purified, the New Jerusalem will Income down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. And I heard a great joice out of heaven, saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they ^ftll be his people, and God himself shall be with them *od be their God,” Rev. xxl 2,3. “And he carried Ote away in the spirit to a great and high mountain, and ritowed me that great city, the Holy Jerusalem, descend-^ out of heaven from God, having the glory Of God,” Wth verse. “And the city had no need of the sun, ^itber of the moon, to shine in it, for the glory of God lighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof.” And I saw thrones and they that sat upon them, and judgment was given unto them; and I saw the souls of jbem that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and wr-the word of God, and which had not worshipped the b^ust, neither his image, neither had received his mark 84 LECTURE T. in their foreheads, or in their hands; and they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years; but the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand years were finished.” Much more evidence might be brought to prove the personal reign of Jesus Christ with his people; but this is enough to prove the glorious and personal reign after the resurrection; but few dispute it But, say some, do ou not believe in a spiritual reign of a thousand years efore the resurrection ? I answer, I believe in a reign of grace, by the influence of the divine Spirit, for more than 1800 years past; but when you speak of a thousand years, I suppose you mean the same time that 1 call the glorious reign after the resurrection of the righteous, and before the resurrection of the wicked. 1 know of no spiritual reign, mentioned in the word of God, and especially of that duration. We argue that there oannot be a reign of peace and glory until the world is cleansed from all wickedness, Satan is chained, and righteousness fill our world; nor until “ the glorious appearing of the great God and our Savior Jesus Christ,” even the anti-Christian beast will not be destroyed, (according to the texts we have already quoted,) until they are destroyed by “ the brightness of his appearing.” All those passages which speak of this happy period of rest to the people of God, or which in any manner allude to it, describe it as being after the resurrection of the saints, Or after righteousness fills the earth, and after the anti-Christian beast is destroyed. And even our text more than implies that we shall not realize any great or glorious results from our hope, or collectively in a body the church will not receive any important deliverance until the* “ glorious appearing of the great God and our Savior Jesus Christ” Is this true ? I say the passage* of Scripture already named fix it beyond a doubt And any one who will examine the scripture for himself, will find that the second coming of Christ is the poiu* to which Jesus Christ, the prophets, and the apostles directed their disciples, as the termination of their trials persecutions* and afflictions; and Jesus Christ says, the world ye shall have tribulation.” I say, I can fifl® Christ’s second coming. 25 Drifting in the word of God to warrant me to believe that we ought to look for or expect a happier period than we now enjoy, until he who has promised to come shall come the second time without sin unto salvation, and cleanse us, the world, and make all things new. These things are abundantly proved in the unerring word of God. And now, Christians, if these things are so, what manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation and godliness, looking for and hasting unto the day of God, u looking for that blessed hope and the glorious appearing of tne great God and our Savior Jesus Christ ” ? Then let our conversation be in heaven, from whence we expect our Savior, and stir up each other’s pure minds by way of remembrance of these things; for the time of the promise draweth nigh, when he will come and receive us to himself, that we may be with him. How necessary, my brethren, we should examine the word of God diligently; see if it does not give some indications, some signs, by which we may for you make no pretence to divination. But I say> What if it does come ? Where will you be ? No space then for repentance. No, no—too late, too late; the harvest is over and past, the summer is gone, the door is shut, and your soul is not saved. Therefore it can do you no harm to hear, and believe, and do those thing8 Christ’s second coming. 27 which God requires of you, and which you think you would do, if you knew he would appear. First, I ask you to repent of your sins. Would this be right? Yes. Next, I ask you to believe in God. Is this right? Yes. And I ask you to be reconciled to his will, love his law, forsake sin, love holiness, practise his precepts, obey his commands. Would these things be right? Yes, yes. And last of all, and not least, I ask you to “ look for that olessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Savior Jesus Christ” Amen. LECTURE II. KEV. II. 6. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection } on such the second death bath no powerj but they shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him a thousand years. The term “ blessed and holy ” is often used in Scripture, and in many places is applied to man; but in no place without giving some characteristic mark of his being bom of God, or inheriting the fruits of the divine Spirit; and very often the word blessed is used standing in immediate connection with the resurrection ana coming of Christ, either expressed or implied, as in Isa* lxii. 11,12, “ Behold, the Lord hath proclaimed unto the end of the world, Say ye to the daughter of Zion, Behbld, thy salvation cometh; behold, his reward is with him, and his work before him. And they shall call them The holy people, The redeemed of the Lord; and thou shall be called, Sought out, A city not forsaken.” Isa. xxx* 18, “ And therefore will the Lord wait,* that he may he gracious unto you, and therefore will he be exalted, that he may have mercy upon you; for the Lord is a God of judgment Blessed are all they that wait for him.” Daniel says, xii. 12,“ Blessed is he that waiteth, and cometh to the 1335 days.” John says, Rev. xiv. 13, “Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord.” "Write, Blessed are they which are called to the marriage supper of the Lamb.” “Behold, I come quickly; blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the prophecy of this book* a Blessed are they fiat do his commandments, that they Christ’s second coming. 29 may have right to the tree of life, and may enter iD through the gates into the city.” By these passages 1 show you that all the children of God are included in this blessing, and not the martyrs only, as some will have it The next thing which will claim our attention *ill be to explain the resurrection spoken of in our text, called the first resurrection. The word resurrection signifies to revive, or resuscitate, or bring to life again, one now dead, who was once alive. It nowhere in the *ord of God conveys an idea of a new creation, and the word is nowhere used in the Bible expressing any thing less or more than a union of soul and body, and deliverance from natural death. The word resurrection is nowhere used in a figurative sense; it in all places has its own simple meaning, unless our text is an exception. And without the objector can show some rule of interpretation by which we shall be warranted to understand the word in a different sense, we must beg leave to attach to it the simple meaning, coming to life from the grave. I know some have supposed that regeneration is resurrection; but 1 cannot believe this unless they show some rule. I know some pretend to show us,, jn John v. 25, “Verily, verily, I say unto you, The hour is coining, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that hear shall live,” a rule; but in order to make this a rule, they must prove that Christ meant regeneration; until this is shown, cannot admit it as any proof. We shall, therefore, consider the word resurrection 88 coming up out of the grave, and pass to the word Ml “ The first resurrection.” The resurrection of the ^nts is first as it respects order and time. Wherever fte word resurrection is used in connection with life or formation, the one unto life always comes first; as in Daniel xii. 2, “ Some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt;” John v. 29, “They have done good, unto the resurrection of life; and Jcy that have doiie evil, unto the resurrection of damnation ” Here are two samples as it respects order, or two as it respects time: 1 Cor. xv. 23, “ Christ first fruits, theh afterward thev that are Christ’s at 3* 90 LECTURE II. his coning. Then cometh the end.” And againi 1 These, iv. 16, “ For 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” And then our context and text shows that the blessed and holy are raised a thousand years before the re6t of the dead. If we a^e correct tJtiSfl, L^.cqgo^forethe^ afe; _______________________________________J our next proposition m pr^^' AW^first, we will examine the 20th chapter of Revelation, 1st verse: “And I saio &n angel come deum from heaven; ” — this angel I consider no less a being tnan the Lord Jesus Christ; for it only can be said of him; — “ having the hey of the bottomless pit and a greed chain in his hand” See Rev. i. 18: u I am he that liveth and was dead; and behold, I am alive for evermore, amen, and have the keys of hell and of death.” And Christ only has power to bind Satan. “ That he might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil,” Heb, ii. 14. 2d verse: “And he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is the devil, and Satan, and bound him a thousand years.” 1 suppose this verse needs no explanation. It can only be understood in a literal sense, for it explains itself to the figures used; as dragon and serpent, often used as figures, are explained to mean the devil and Satan> If the thousand years had been used, in this chapter, or any where else in the word of God, in a mystical or figurative sense, it would have been somewhere explained ; but, as it is not, I consider we are to plm# upon it the most simple construction, and I shall therefore understand it literally. 3d verse: “And cast hi# into the bottomless pit; ” — by bottomless pit, I have shown, by the proot on our first verse, that it is hell; see Rev. i. 18; — “ and shut him up and set a seal up<# him, that he should deceive the nations no more, till tm thousand years should be fulfilled; and after that he vea# Christ’s second coming. 31 be looted a little season.” This passage must be understood in its simple, plain meaning; no mystery in this. 4th verse: “And I sate thrones, and they sat on (hem, and judgment was $iven unto them;”—here we have a prophecy of the fulfilment of a promise that Christ made to his disciples, in Matt xix. 28: “And Jesus aaid unto them, Verily, I say unto you, that ye which have • followed me in the regeneration* when the Son of Man shall sit in the throne of his glory*' ye also •hall sit upon twelve thrones* judging the twelve tribes of Israel;”—“and I saw Me souls of (hem that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God, ana which had not worshipped the beast, neither his nnage, neither had received his mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands; and they lined and reigned with Christ o thousand years” In this description we have the whole family of the redeemed; for all that had not Worshipped the beast or his image, or received a mark,% and, in one word, all that were not the servants of Satan or sin, lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years. f 5th verse: u But the rest of the dead lined not again the thousand years were finished. Tins is (he first Hsurredion.” The rest of the dead means the wicked dead, who do not have part in the first resurrection; toted not again, showing conclusively that it is a natural life and death spoken of. The first resurrection is the ftturrection of the saints at his coming. Then comes m our text, which has and will be explained in the lecture. 7th verse: u And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison” We may reasonably expect that, when Satan is let loose, all the damned spirits are let loose with him; and it has been strongly implied they were to live again in the body, at the end of the thousand years. 8th verse: uAnd shall go out” — that is, Satan—“to deceive the lotions which are in the four quarters of the earth” — w ashes under the feet of the saints,” as Malachi tells 08: “ And ye shall tread down tfie wicked; for they 8hall be ashes under the soles of your feet in the day that I shall do this, saith the Lord of hosts ” — u Gog Magog” — the armies of the wicked that were 32 LECTURE II* slain at the commencing of the thousand years, or coming of Christ, at the supper of the great God, and battle of Armageddon; see Ezekiel xxxviii., xxxix. — “to gather them together to battle;” — this is their design, but there is no battle, for God himself is with his people to defend them; and he destroys the wicked host, “the number of whom is as the sand of the sea;” evidently including the whole number of the wicked; for the figure, sand of the-sea, ib never used, only to express the whole class of the people named; as; the children of Israel the whole host of Jacob. 9th verse; “And they went up on the breadth of the earth;” — that is, this army of Gog and Magog were raised up out of the surface of the earth, that only being the breadth of a globular body; — “ and compassed the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city; ” — jlainlv showing that the New Jerusalem, the b^ove(fc1!fvSt^'19? wicked host encompass it about ? tney have not climbed the celestial walls of heaven—no; for it says, “and fire came doton from God out of heaven and devoured them.” This is the second death, represented under the figure of fire coming down from God out of heaven; not the conflagration of the world,—for that was in the commencing of the thousand years, when Christ came and cleansed the world from all the wicked, and the works of wicked men,—but the justice of God, under the figure of fire; “ for our God is a consuming fire.” Heb. xii. 29. 10th verse: “ And the devil that deceived them teas cast into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the beast and false prophet are, and shall be tor-mented day and night forever and ever” In this verse, the final condemnation of the wicked, sonl and body, is given ; and the last that God has seen fit to reveal concerning them to us is, that they are cast into everlasting torment In the next verse, John has another vision’ of the same things which he had before told us, only in a different point of view, or some circumstance not before clearly described. And I saw always im- ?lics a new view, or another vision. 11th verse: “Arm Bono a great white throne, and him that sat on it, fiw* Christ’s second coming. 38 trio* face the heavens and earth fled away; and there iso* no place found for themThis is the same throne that Daniel saw, vii. 9—14: u I beheld till the throned were cast down and the Ancient of days did sit, whose garment was white as snow, and the hair of his head like the pure wool: his throne was like the fiery flame, and his wheels as burning fire.” 12th verse: uAna ieawihe dead, small and great, stand before God; ana the books ware opened; and another book was opened, which is the book of life; and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works” This is the same as Daniel saw, viL 10: “A fiery stream issued and came forth from before him ; thousand thousands ministered unto him, and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him. The judgment was set, and the books were opened.” It id vuiy evident that this is the beginning of the judgment* when Christ comes in the clouds of heaven, with power and great glory, to raise and judge his saints, and to tew&rd every man as his work shall be. 1st, because tt is when the judgment first sets; 2d, because the book °f life is there, and open; and, 3d, because it was at the time or before antichrist was destroyed; and no °ne can believe that the antichristian beast can be on the earth during or in the millennium. 13th verse t ‘‘•'hid the sea gave up the dead which were in it; ana jfoft and heU delivered up the dead tcfnch were iri them,” 1 conclude the apostle, after he had seen the righteous unad raised, small and great, and stand before God, *ud saw the book of life open to justify them, and saw them judged and rewarded, he then glides down to the eud of the thousand years, and beheld the wicked dead Sven up by those elements and places wherein they . d been confined during the millennial period, to be judged in the flesh, every man according to his works. Inis only can reconcile some of those conflicting Passages (or seemingly so to us) concerning the resur-flBction; and 1 cannot see any impropriety in thus under-funding these prophecies; for it is the common manner the prophets, a little here and a little there. In all U* descriptions of the resurrection of the righteous 84 LECTURE II. dead, they are represented as being1 gathered by tbs angels of God, from the four winds of heaven, when the seventh or last trump shall sound; and it is equally as evident that their works are brought into judgment Although they may not be justified by their works, but out of the book of life, yet the apostle Paul says, speaking of his brethren, “We must all stand before the judgment seat of Christ.” Rom. xiv. 10. And again, 2 Cor. v. 10, “ For we must all stand before the judgment seat of Christ; that every one may receive.the things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad.” And, 1 Cor. iii. 13—15, “Every man’s work shall be made manifest; for the day shall declare it, because it shall be revealed by fire; and the fire shall try every man’s work, of what sort it is.’ If any man’s work abide which he hath built thereupon, he shall receive a reward. If any man’s work shall be burned, he shall suifer loss: yet he himself shall be saved, so as by fire.” We see, by these texts, that the books of every man’s works will be open, as well as the book of life, in the first resurrection; but, in the second resurrection, there is no book of life open in that part of the judgment, neither are they gathered by the angels of God; but the sea, death, ana hell, delivered up the dead which were in them, and they were judged every man according to their works; and Satan is the means of gathering them around the beloved city, where they are judged in the flesh. By the sea, death, and hell, I understand the sea, grave, and place of punishment The sea and the grave would give up the dissolved particles of the body, and hell (or Hades) would give up their departed sprits; this would constitute the second resurrection* “ And they were judged every man according to thfff works” They had chosen, in this life, to stand on their works; they had refused to believe in a Mediator; they had not followed his commands, neither had they pro fessed his name before men, or suffered persecution for the sake of his testimony. They had treated hi® word with total neglect, or called his grace tyranny* They had said he was a hard master, and buried their chrmt’s second coming. 35 talent in the earth. They had placed their supreme affections on the world, and made fine gold their trust They had persecuted the children of God in this world, and showed that they were the children of that wicked one who slew his brother. They had prostituted their bodies to whoredom, and sacrificed to Bacchus and Venus their first-fruits. They had professed damnable heresies, and filled the world with their delusive schemes and sects. They had worshipped the creature, and neglected prayer to the Creator. They had filled the world with their lies and abominations, and gloried in their shame. 14th verse: u And death and hm were *at into the lake of fire. This is the second death.11 By bath and hell I understand the body and spirit 15th verse: “ And whosoever was not found written in the Lamb's book of life, teas cast into the lake of fire." u But the fearful and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in the lake *hich bumeth with fire and brimstone, which is the aecond death.” Rev. xxi. 8. u Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the rity. For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie,” Rev. xxii. 14,15. Then our text says, “Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection.” This we have proved is the resur-vection of the righteous dead, who died in faith in Jesus Christ, and who should live with him at his coming; on them the second death should have no power, “ but they shall be priests of God and of Christ, shall reign icith him a thousand years ” To be priests unto God and unto Christ, is to be holy; te be a kingdom of priests of a peculiar people, that should show forth his praises by declaring to the uni-^teree that out of nature’s darkness they had been redeemed by his blood, called by his grace unto his glorious, happy, and holy kingdom, and that they should dwell on the earth. See Rev. v. 9, 10, “ And they sung a new song, saying, Thou art worthy to take 36 LECTUIUC II. the book end to open the seek thereof; for thou wart slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood, out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation; and hast made us unto our God kings and priests, and we shall reign on the earth.” See, also, Rev. i. 6, “And hath made us kings and priests unto God, and his Father.” Again, 1 Pet il 5, 9, “Ye also, as lively stones, are built up a spiritual house, a holy priesthood.” “But ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a peculiar people.” The passages to which I have cited your minds, prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the thousand years sp^ ken of in the text is between the two resurrections • * state of happiness, of glory, of holiness, and that it shall be on the earth. It is a state of immortality, as abundant scriptures evidently prove. Where, then, you may inquire, is the spiritual millennium which our theorists, in the present age, are teaching us to expect ? } answer, There is not a thousand years spoken of in Scripture, except in 2 Pet, 3d chapter, and in which tbo judgment day is the subject of discussion, and in tho chapter of which our text is a part; and in neither of these places is any thing said about spiritual reign; neither can we find any thing in the word of God by which we could fairly draw the conclusion of such * reign ; and as it is not proper for me to show the negative, I call on all of you to show where we may fine the evidence, that is, all of you who believe in * spiritual reign. If there is such a reign, it must be before the second coming of Christ; for when he comgfr hewiU receive ns tohinaelf^hat where be IsTKere^^u may He also; no*more away from his people, for the. will be with them, and make his abode am fie will be wifl iwefi j$jj} Hh^make his abode v^’ fl^pa^^ey\SjWf ftrHowthe idea ® tfllfltM^reigii of a thousand years should or could obtain a place in our faith, having the word of God qjB our evidence, I cannot telL Some say that tbs prophets speak often of times or things which have not been fulfilled in our day, or under the present dispense* Christ’s second coming. 37 tjpo. and which would be too gross to be adopitted into a state of immortality. There may be sudh—yet I M no difficulty in understanding all those passaged 'Which have been presented,, or come under my consideration, to refer to the gospel day. But how long do the prophets say that time shall be ? Do they designate anytime? No; neither one, ten, one hhncfred, or one thousand years are mentioned in any of thosb passages* Why then call it & millennium? Because Peter and John have mentioned a thousand years. This cannot he admitted to mean any state this side of the stale of immortality; for Peter says plainly; * Yet, nevertheless, *alook for a new heaven and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness.’’ This would be ft'new state, steel? — nothing gross or vile in this kingdom, whoever may be king; and John expressly says,M They lived and signed with Christ a thousand years,” and says, “This is the first resurrection.” Now, admit there is such a time, how or by what rule shall we call it a thousand years? Again, where, in all the prophecies, can any one show me that the church will be blessed and holy, or happy ' mid righteous, as it may be rendered, until be comes^ tint is, at Christ’s second appearance r And where in tiie word are we to learn that the kingdoms of this world Je to be destroyed before the coming of the Ancient of days? Do we betiere that the anti-Christian beast, or mystical Babylon, will be on, the earth during this millennial reign ? No, it cannot, be; yet all muirt acknowledge that she is only destroyed by the brightness of ms coming. Who can read the 19th chapter of Revocation, without being convinced that the marriage supper of the Lamb, the treading of the wine-press of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God, and the supper of the great God, are events which must take place “afore the millennium ? And if so, who can believe that ?fter the marriage of the Lamb to the bride; alter she ** arrayed in linen clean and white, which is the ngbteousness of the saints; after they have received & crown of righteousness, which the righteous Judge shall Pve to all them who love his appearing in that 4 36 LECTURE II. Christ will not be with her in person ? None. But our text tells us he will live and reign with them, and they shall be priests to God. Again : while in this state of mortality and trial, we are called the servants and ministers of Christ; but then, ip the millennial blessedness, we shall be called priests of God and of Christ You may ask, “ Why this distinction in the language ?n I answer, There is a great difference between the kingdom of Christ, as it was established when Christ was here on earth, and the kingdom given up to God, even the Father. The subjects of Christ’s kingdom, in this state of things, may be, and in fact are, imperfect Hypocrites and false professors may and do obtain an entrance into it; for an enemy hath sown tares. But the kingdom of God, no man, says Christ, can see, or enter, without being born of God. Here they may deceive the sentinels which guard the kingdom of Christ; but in the kingdom of God “there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination or maketh a lie; but they which are written in the Lamb’s book of life.” Here the children of the kingdom arc t persecuted, tormented, perplexed, cast down; but in the Kingdom of God their enemies are all slain; they are comforted, glorified, justified, exalted; and not a dog to move his tongue. Here they weep, hut there will rejoice: here they sin and repent; they there will be holy without fault before his throne. “Blessed and holy fe he that hath part in the first resurrection.’’ Amen. v LECTURE III. DANIEL Till. 13,14. "Then I heard one saint speaking, and another saint said Unto that certain saint which spake, How long shall be the vision concerning the daily Sacrifice, and the transgression of desolation, to £'ve both the sanctnary and the host to be trodden under foot f nd he said unto me, Unto two thousand three hundred days: then shall the sanctuary be cleansed; ” or justified, as it might have been translated. The hearer will, at the first view of our text, perceive that there is something very important communicated in the question and answer given; or why are saints commissioned (as we may reasonably suppose) from the courts of heaven, to ask and answer the question contained in the text, in presence of the prophet? And that it concerned Daniel, and us for whom the prophet Wrote his prophecy, to understand, is evident from the answer being given to Daniel — “ and he said unto me” —-mate ad of being given to the u saint,” who made the inquiry. Then we are not treading on forbidden ground, my dear hearer, to search to understand the meaning and truth of our subject I shall then treat our subject in the following manner: L Explain some of the figures and expressions used in the text IL Show what the “daily sacrifice vision” is; and, IIL The time or length of the vision “ unto two thou-**nd three hundred days: then shall the sanctuary be cleansed.” ' ' L I am to explain some of the figures used m the text; and, 40 LECTURE III. 1st, the “ daily sacrifice? This maybe understood, by some, to mean the Jewish rites and ceremonies; and by others, the Pagan rites and sacrifices. As both Jews and Pagans had their rites and sacrifices both morning and evening, and their; altar? -were kept smoking with their victims of beadts, and their holy fire was preserved in their national altars and temples devoted to their several deities or gods, we might be at a loss to know which of these to apply this figurative expression to, did not our text and context explain the meaning. It is very Evident, when we carefully examine our text, that it is to be understood as referring to Pagan and Papal rites, tor it stands cotipled with “the abomination of desolation,” tod performs the same acts, such as are ascribed to the pa]^ abomitotion, ?tp give both the sanctuary and host to be trodden under foot” See, also, Rev. xi. % u But the court which is without the temple leave out, and measure it not; for it is given Unto the Gentiles; and the holy city shall they tread under foot forty and two months.” This last text only has reference to the Papal beast, which was the image of the Pagan; but the text in consideration has reference to both Pagan and PapaL That is, How Jong shall the Pagan transgression and the Papal transgression tread under foot the sane* tuary and tost? This must be the true and literal mean* ing of our teat; it coirid not naean the anti-Christian abomination alone, for: they never desolated the Jewish church; neither could it mean Antiochus, the Syrian king; for be ana his kingdom were made desolate and destroyed before Christ; and it is evident that Christ had an allusion to this very power, when he told hi3 disciples, Matt. xxiv. 15, “When ye therefore shall see the abomination of desolation,; spoken of by Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy place.” I believe all com-mentators agree that Christ meant the Roman power-if sq, then Daniel has the same'meaning; for this is the very passage to which. Christ alluded. Then the “ daily sacrifice” means Pagan rites, and sacrifices, and the transgression of desolation, the Papal; and bothtogethei shall tread, under foot the “sanctuary and host,” which hrings me to show what may be understood >y u saBOV Christ’s second coming. 41 tuaiy and host”) By sanctuary, we must understand the temple at Jerusalem, and those who worship therein, which was trodden under foot by the Pagan kingdoms of the world, since the days of Daniel, the writer of our text; then by the Chaldeans; afterwards by the Medes and Persians; next by the Grecians; and lastly hj the Romans, who destroyed the city and sanctuary, levelled the temple with the ground, and caused the plough to pass over the place. The people of the Jews, too, were led into captivity and persecuted by all these kingdoms successively, and finally by the Romans were taken away and destroyed as a nation. And as the prophet Isaiah, lxiii. 18, says, “ The people of thy holiness have possessed it but a little while: our adversaries have trodden down thy sanctuary.” Jeremiah, also, in Lam. j h 10, « The adversary hath spread out his hand upon all i her pleasant tilings; for she hath seen that the heathen entered into her sanctuary, whom thou didst command that they should not enter into thy congregation.” The word to is applied to the people who worship in the outer court, and fitly represents the Christian church, who are said to be strangers and pilgrims on the earth, naving no continuing places, but looking for a city whose bunder and maker is God. Jeremiah, speaking of the gospel church, says, iii. 19, “But I said, How shall I put thee among the children, and give thee a pleasant land, a goodly heritage of the host of nations ? ” evidently rneUn-fog-the church from the Gentiles. “Then shall the sanctuary be cleansed or justified ” means the true sanctuary which God has built of lively stones to his own acceptance, through Christ, of which the temple at Jerusalem was but a type, the shadows having long since fled away, and that temple and people now destroyed, and all included in unbelief! So whosoever looks for foe worldly sanctuary to be built again, will find themselves as much mistaken as the unbelieving Jews were, Jhen they looked for a temporal prince in the Messiah. ‘Or there is not a word in the prophets or apostles, after Zerubbabel built the second temple, that a third one *ould ever be built; except the one which cometh down ton heaven, which is a spiritual one, and which is the 42 LECTURE III. mother of us all, (Jew and Gehtile,) and which is free and when that New Jerusalem is perfected, then shall we be cleansed and justified; for Paul says to the Phillippians, iii. 20, 21, “For our conversation is in heaven; from whence also we look for the Savior, the Lord Jfesus Christ, who shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body, according to the working whereby he is able to snbdue all things to himself;19 that is, u they that are his at hw .coming.’’ Wo see by these texts — and many more might be quoted—that the spiritual sanctuary will not be cleansed until Christ’s second coming; and then all Israel shall be raised, judged, and justified in his sight 1L We shall now try to understand what is meant by the u visum? in the text The visiony spoken of in the text, alludes to three separate times in which God revealed unto Daniel all that may be considered a prophecy in the book of Daniel, which vision was explained to Daniel by a heavenly messenger, called Gabriel, at three separate times, the last of which closes the book of Daniel; which la* instruction will be the subject of a future lecture. Daniel’s first vision was the dream which Nebuchadnezzar had, and which troubled him; but when 1# awoke, the dream was gone from ftim. He then called lor the magicians, astrologers, sorcerers, and wise m®1 of Chaldea, to show him his dream, and the interpretation thereof; but they could not The king, being angry, commanded that all the wise men of Babylon should be destroyed. Then Arioch, the captain of the king’s guard, went forth to pxecute the king’s decree; amf among the rest he sought for Daniel and. his three friends, young captive Jews, to execute the purpose of king Nebuchadnezzar upon them also. Daniel then, ft* the first time, being made acquainted with the decree, went in unto the king, and desired time, and promise tfiat he would make known the dream, and the interp#' tation thereof. Time being granted, he and his threo Hebrew friends held a prayer-meeting, (not a cold and formal one, as we may reasonably suppose,) for the** Christ’s second coming <43 lives and thfe lives of their fellow-creatures were in danger. They cried for mercies from the God of heaveij. God heard and answered their prayers, and repealed tb Daniel the dream and interpretation. After rendering suitable thanksgiving, Daniel went in unto the king and told the dream and visions of the king. “ As tor thee, O king, thy thoughts came into thy mind upon thy bed, what should come to pass hereafter; and he that reveal-oth secrets maketh known to thee what should come to pass; but # for me, this secret is not revealed to me for any wisdom that 1 have more than any living, but for the intent that the interpretation mav be made known to the king, and that thou mightest know the thoughts of thy heart Thou, O king, sawest, and behold, a great Image. This great image, whose brightness was excellent, stood before thee, and the form thereof was terrible. This image’s head was of fine gold, his breast and his arms of silver, his belly and his thighs of brass, bis legs of iron, his feet part of iron and part of clay. Thou sawest till that a stone was cut out without hands, *hich smote the image upon his feet that were of iron and clay, and brake them to pieces. Then was the iron, the clay, the brass, the silver, and the gold, broken to pieces together, and became like the chaff of the summer threshing-floors, and the wind carried them away, that no place was found for them; and the stone that smote the image became a great mountain, and filled the *hole earth,” Daniel ii. 29—35. This was the dream, and the interpretation was clear given by Daniel; and the history of the world proves it to be true, a large share having already been fulfilled. All that remains to be accomplished is for the stone to smite the image upon his feet, and to become a great mountain, and fill the whole earth. “ The head of gold ” represented the Chaldean kingdom; “the breast and arms of silver” represented the Medes and Pereians; “the belly and thighs of brass, which were to hear rule over all the earth, the Grecian. Alexander, a Grecian king, conquered the world; the legs of iron, and the feet part of iron and port of clay,” fitly represent the Roman kingdom, which still exists, although in a broken statq 44 LECTURE III. ljke iron and clay. This kingdom has been divided between Pagan Rome, the.^ead wounded to death, and Papal Rome, the deadly wound healed, both “ mixing themselves with the seed of men^thatTi^uniting churcn and state, ecclesiastical and. civil, in the government The stone denotes Christ, the God of heaven; and the mountain the kingdom of God. His breaking the image to pieces, shows that all the: kingdoms of this world are to be utterly destroyed and carried away, so that no place can be found for them. And the kingdom of, God filling the whole earth teaches us that the beloved city, the New Jerusalem, will fill the world, and God will dwell with his people on the earth. Read Dan. ii. 37— 45. This dream was in the second year of Nebuchadnezzar’s reign, 603 B. C. Forty-eight years afterwards, in the first year of Belshazzars reign and 555 B. C, Daniel had another dream, yet the same in substance. u Daniel spake and said, I saw in my vision by night, and behold, the four winds of heaven strove upon the great sea, and four great beasts came up from the sea, diverse one from another. The first was like a lion, and had eagles’ wings ; I beheld till the wings thereof were plucked, and it was lifted up from the earth, and made to stand upon the feet as a man, and a man’s heart was given to it. And behold, another beast, a second, like unto a bear, and it raised up itself on one side, and it had three ribs in the mouth of it between the teeth of it; and they said thus unto it, Arise, devour much flesh. After this* beheld, and lo, another like a leopard, which had upon the back of it four wings of a fowl; the beast had also four heads, and dominion was given to it After this I saw in the night visions, and behold, a fourth beast, dreadful, and terrible, and strong exceedingly, and it had great iron teeth ; it devoured and brake in pieces, and stamped the residue with the feet of it; and it was diverse from all the beasts that were before it, and it had ten horns. I considered the horns, and behold, there came up among them another little horn, before whom there were three of the first horns plucked up by the roots; and behold, in this horn were eyes like the eyes of man, and a mouth speaking great things. I beheld Christ’s second coming. 45 till the thrones were cast down, and the Ancient of days did sit, whose garment was white as snow, and the hair of his head like the pure wool; his throne was like fhe fiery flame, and his wheels as burning fire. A fiery 8tream issued and came forth from before him; thousand thousands ministered unto him, and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him: the judgment was set, and the books were opened I beheld, then, because of the voice of the great words which the horn spake. I heheld, even till the beast was slain, and his body decoyed and given to the burning flame. As concerning the rest of the heasts, they had their dominion taken my, yet their lives were prolonged for a season and time. I saw in the night visions, and behold, one like 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 glo ty, and a kingdon^ that all people, nations, and langnages Bhould serve him; his dominion is an everlasting do-tttinion, which shall not pass away, and his kingdom that which shall not be destroyed,” Daniel vii. 1—14. This ends Daniel’s night vision, except the instruction be received from some one standing oy. “ So he told tee, and made me know‘the truth of all this/ or the Me$petation of the things. These great beasts, which •fe. four, are fbur kings which shall arise out of the grth. But the saints of the most high shall take the kingdom, and possess the kingdom forever, even forevdr ever.” We see in this instruction that this vision ?ed Nebuchadnezzar’s dream agree in the most prom-jent parts; the; four beasts representing the four kingdoms, and the saints possessing the kingdom, the same the stone becoming a great mountain and filling the *hole earth; “forever ana ever” shows ns that it i$ ah Immortal state in everlasting life; “ the saints” evidently deludes all saints, “for they shall live and reign with bjm pn the earth,” Revelation v. 10, 20. iv. 6. ‘‘Then,” JHuriel says, vii 19,20, “I would know the truth of the fomth beast, which was diverse from all me others oxcopding dreadful, whose teeth were of iron, and his *^*1* bf brass, which devoured, brake in pieces, and 46 LECTURE IIL stamped the residue with Ms feet; and of the ten horns that were in his head, ana of the other which came up, and before whom three fell, even of that horn that had eyes, and a mouth that spake very great things, wiiose look was more stout than his fellows.” In these verses we learn that the fourth beast would be diverse from the others. This was true with Rome; that kingdom first rose from a small colony of adventurers settled in Italy. Rome, also, had seven different forms of government, while the others had but one. We learn that tMs kingdom would devour, break in pieces, harass and perplex the people of God, whether Jew or Gentile ; that it would be divided into ten kingdoms, and afterwards there would arise another power which would swallow up three of the ten kingdoms. This was all true with the Roman government In A. R 476, the Western Empire fell, and was divided into ten kingdoms by the Goths, Huns, and Vandals, — “France, Britain, Spain, Portugal, Naples, Tuscany, Austria, Lombardy, Rome, and Ravenna. The three last were absorbed in the territory of Rome,” (E. Irwin,) and became the States of the Church, governed by the Papal chair, the little horn that had eyes and a mouth that spake very great things, whose look was more stout than his fellows*. This description cannot apply to any other power but the church of Rome* “ Had eyes,” showing that they made pretence at least to be the household of faith; “eyes” meaning faith, and “mouth that spake very great things,” showing that the church would claim infallibility; “ whose look would be more stout than hi* fellows,” showing that he would claim authority over all other churches, or even the kings, the other horns. See Rev. xvii. 18: “ And the woman which thou sawest ia that great city which reigneth over the kings of the eartfy? That the little horn is a part of the fourth kingdom in evident, for it was to come up among the ten horns which were upon the head of the beast; and there cannot be a shadow of a doubt, even in Scripture itself* but that Rome is meant by this fourth beast; for wha power but jthe Roman will .answer the description here and elsewhere given in Daniel ? “I beheld, and the Christ’s second coming. 47 ®une horn made war with the saints, and prevailed against them, until the Ancient of days came, and judgment was given to the saints of the Most High; and the time came that the saints possessed the kingdom.” Daniel vii. 21,22. In these verses we are taught clearly that anti-Christ will prevail over the church of Christ nntil the first resurrection and the first judgment, when the saints are raised and judged, which utterly destroys the modem idea of a temporal millennium, a thousand years before the dead are raised and judged This also agrees with the whole tenor of Scripture; as, “judgment must first begin at the house of God,” and “ whom he shall destroy with the brightness of his coming; ” when the Ancient of days shall come in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory, “ to give reward to his servants, the prophets, and them that fear his name, small *nd great, and destroy them who destroy the earth,” Scribed next verse, 23. “Thus he said, The fourth beast shall be the fourth kingdom upon earth, which shall he diverse from all kingdoms, and shall devour the *hole earth, and shall tread it down and break it in Pieces. And the ten horns out of this kingdom are ten kings that shall arise; and another shall arise after them, and he shall be diverse from the first, and he shall subdue three kings. And he shall speak great words Against the Most High, and shall weir out the saints of Most High, and mink to change times and laws; and they shall be given into his hand until a time and times, ana the dividing of time. But the judgment shall sit, and they shall take away his dominion to consume and to destroy it unto the end,” 24—26. In these verses We have the history of the fourth beast, or Roman power, during 1260 years of the close of this kingdom, which l 8hall, in some future lecture, show is the meaning of tone, times, and a half. We have also another clear description of the Papal power: “He shall speak great Words,” &c.—the blasphemies against God, in the pretensions of the Roman clergy to divine power, work-tog of miracles, canonizing departed votaries, changing ordinances and laws of God’s house, worshipping saints *nd images, and performing rites and ceremonies too 48 LECTURE III. fbolish and ridiculous to bp for a moment indulged in, and which any unprejudiced mind cannot for a moment believe to be warranted by divine rule, or example of Christ or his apostles. Ana we are again brought down to the time when the judgment shall sit: “And the kingdom, and the dominion, and the greatness of the kingdom under the whole heaven, shall be given to the people of the Most High, whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, (not temporal, as some say, or a thousand years, but an immortal and eternal,) and all dominions shall serve and obey him.” It is very evident that this verse brings us down to the time when thb kingdom of Christ will be complete “in the greatness of the kingdom.” Every word in Scripture lias a meaning, and its own proper meaning, unless used figuratively, and then explained by Scripture itself. “ Hitherto is the end of the matter. As for me Daniel, my cogitations much troubled me, and my countenance changed in me; but I kept the matter in my heart.” This ends Daniel’s night vision. Two years after- • wards, in the year 553 before Christ, Daniel vii., he had another vision in the day-time, at the palace of Shushan, like the one which we have just described, and Nebuchadnezzar’s dream. “ Then I lifted up mine eyes arid saw,, and behold, there stood before the river a ram which had two horns, and the two horns were high; but one was higher than the other, and the higher came up last I saw the ram pushing westward, and northward, and southward, so that no beast might stand before him, neither was there any that could deliver out of his hand; but he did according to his will, and became great” In the 20th verse, the angel Gabriel explains to Daniel what kingdom was represented by the “ ram. with two horns,” and says, “The ram which thou sawest, having two horns, are the kings of Media and Persia.” We see by this that the Chaldean kingdom is left out, for the reason that that kingdom wan then crumbling to ruin, and the glory of the Babylonish kingdom had faded; therefore he now begins his vision with the Mede and Persian kingdom, and that too, when at the height of their power ana conquests. The higher Christ’s second coming. 49 hom denoted the Persian line of kings, under and following the reign of Cyrus, the Persian, son-in-law to Darius the Mode. “ And as I was considering, behold, a he-came from the west, on the face of the whole earth, jtod touched not the ground; and the goat had a notable horn between his eyes.” In the 21st verse the angel says, “And the rough goat is the king of Grecia: *nd the great horn that is between his eyes is the first king.” This king was Alexander, that conquered the Persians. He was not the first king of Macedonia, but the first that had all Grecia under his control, and that conquered the world. “ And he came to the ram that b&d two horns, which 1 had seen standing before the jiver, and ran unto him in the fury of his power. And 1 saw him come close unto the ram,, and he was moved *kh choler against him, and smote the ram, and brake bis two horns; and there was no power in the ram to Btand before him, but he cast him down to the ground, stamped upon him, and there was none that could Oliver the ram out of his hand. Therefore, the he-goat Jtted very great' and when he was strong, the great born was broken, and for it came up four notable ones, towards the four winds of heaven.” We have in these J&ses a plain description of Alexander’s life, conquests, death, and division of his kingdom into four ports, to-**rds the four points of heaven—Persia in the east, Syria to (he north, Macedon and Europe in the west, Egypt Jtol Africa in the south. And the angel, when he gives Jbmiel instruction, says, 22d verse, “Now that being tobken, whereas four stood up for it, four kingdoms shall ®tond up out of the nation, but not in his power.” Then toe vision seems to slide down to the little horn. “ And tok of one of them (that is, out of Europe) came forth a lit-tfehorn, which waxed exceeding great, toward the south, toward the east, and toward the pleasant land. .And it waxed great even to the host of heaven; and it past down 6ome of the host and of the stars to the ground, ®tod stamped upon them. Yea, he magnified himself to the prince of the host, and by him the daily sac-flfice was taken away, and the place of his sanctuary **8 cast down, and a host was given him against the 50 LECTURE III. daily sacrifice by reason of transgression, and it cast down the truth to the ground, and it practised and pros-pered.*’ Two or three things in the above description clearly show that, by the little horn, in this passage, we are to understand the Roman power, viz., Its conquering to the south, and east, and pleasant lands, stamping on the host, magnifying himself against Christ, and destroy* ing Jerusalem, the place of his sanctuary, and his practising and prospering. All this description agrees with the history of Rome, and cannot apply to AntiochOs, as some writers have supposed. But let us see what Gabriel says, 33: “And in the latter time of their kingdom, (that is, the four kingdoms,) when the transgressors are come to the full, a king of fierce countenance, and understanding dark sentences, shall stand up, and his power shall be mighty, but not by his own power ; and he shall destroy wonderfully, and shall prosper and practise, and shall destroy the mighty and the holy people. And through his policy, also, he shall cause craft to prosper in his hand; and he shall magnify himself in his heart, and by peace shall destroy many; he shall also stand up against the Prince of princes; but he shall be broken without hand. And the vision of the evening (in the first year of Belshazzar, Daniel vii.) and the morning (in the third year of Belshazzar, Daniel viii.) which was told, is true; wherefore shut thou up the vision, for it shall be for many days." How many days? Our text answer^ “ Unto two thousand three hundred days; then shall ths sanctuary be cleansed. And it came to pass, when t even I, Daniel, had seen the vision, and sought for the meaning, then, behold, there stood before me as the appearance of a man. And I heard a man’s voice between the banks of Ulai, which called and said, Gabriel, make this man to understand the vision. So he came near where 1 stood, and when he came, I was afraid, and fell upon my face; but he said unto me, Understand, O son of man, for at the time of the end shall be the vision* Now, as be was speaking with me, I was in a deep sleep on my face toward the ground ; but he touched me, and set me upright And he said, behold, I will make thee know what shall be in the last end of the indignation5 for at the time appointed the end shall be." Christ’s second coming. 51 Then comes the instruction of Gabriel, which we have before given. . " HL The time or length of the vision—the 2^300 days. What must we understand by days? In the prophecy of Daniel it is invariably to be reckoned years; for God bath so ordered the prophets to reckon days. Numb, xw. 34, “ After the number of days in which ye searched the land, even forty days, each day for a year, shall you hear your iniquities, even forty years.” JEzek. iv. 5,6, “ For } have laid upon thee the years of their iniquity, according to the number of the days, three hundred and ninety days; so shalt thou bear the iniquity of the house of Israel. And when thou hast accomplished them, lie again on thy right side, and thou shalt bear the iniquity of the boose of Judah forty days; I have appointed thee each day for a year.” In these passages we prove the command of God. We will also show that it was so called in the days of Jacob, when he served for Rachel, Gen. xxut. 27: M Fulfil her week (seven days) and we will give thee this also, for the service which thou shalt serve with toe yet other seven years.” Nothing now remains to make it certain that our vision is to be so understood, but to prove that Daniel has followed this rule. This we will do, if your patience *31 hold out, and God permit Now turn your attention to the ninth chapter of DaU-jol, and you will there learn that fifteen years after Dan-tel had his last vision, and sixty-five years after Daniel explained Nebuchadnezzar’s dream, and 538 years B. C., Daniel set his face unto the Lord God by supplication and prayer; and by confession of his own sins, and the sins of the people of Israel, he sought God for mercy, for him-«elf and all Israel. And while he was speaking and Praying, as he tells us, Daniel ix. 21, “ Yea, while I was speaking in prayer, even the man Gabriel, whom I had Jeen in Me vision at the beginning, Daniel viiL 16,17, being caused to fly swiftly, touched me aboftt the time of the evening oblation. And he informed me and talked *ith me, and said, O Daniel, 1 am now come forth to give thee skill and understanding. At the beginning of thy •Application the commandment came forth, and 1 am 53 LECTURE nr. come to show thee; for thou art greatly beloved; therefore understand the matter, and consider the vision. Seventy weeks are determined upon thy people, and upon thy holy city, to. finish the transgression, and to make an end of sins, and to make reconciliation for iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness, and to seal up the vision and prophecy, and to anoint the Most Holy. Know, therefore, and understand, that from the going forth of the commandment to restore and .build Jerusalem unto the Messiah, the Prince, shall be seven weeks, and threescore and two weeks; the street shall be built again, and the wally even in troublous times And after threescore and two weeks shall Messiah be cut off, but not for himself; and the people of the Prince that shall come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary; and the end thereof shall be with a flood, and unto the end of the war desolations are determined. And he shall Confirm the covenant with many for one week; and u the midst of the week, (or last half, as it might have been rendered,) he shall cause the sacrifice ana the oblation to cease, and for the overspreading of abomination he shall make it desolate, even until the consummation and that determined shall be poured upon the desolate. What do we learn from the above passage? Wf learn our duty in prayer, and God’s goodness in a®’ swering. We learn that the angel Gabriel was sent to instruct Daniel, and make him understand the visit#- ' You may inquire what vision ? I answer, The one Da®' iel had m the beginning, for he has had no other. Wo also learn that seventy weeks, which is 490 days, (<* years, as we shall show,) from the going forth of a certain decree to build the streets and walls of Jerusalem ij troublous times, to the crucifixion of the Messiah should be accomplished. We also learn that this seventy weeks is divided into three parts; seven weeks being employed in building the streets and walls in troublous times, which is forty-nine years, sixty-two weeks, four hundred and thirty-four years to the preaching John in the wilderness, which two, put together, mak® sixty-nine weeks, dr four hundred and eighty-thrt® years, and one week the gospel was preached; Joh* Christ’s second coming. three and a half years, and ffirist three anda half makes tn£ sef^y weeks, jorlouEIvndjid ^d ninetj jeaii^r which. when accompuslied, would seal jjptne vision,~and make the prophecy true. We also le&rn that, after the crucifixion of Christ, the Romans would come and destroy the city and sanctuary, and that wars will not cease until the consummation or end of the world. “All that may be true,” says the objector; “but where have you proved that the seventy weeks *ere four hundred and ninety years ? ” I agree I have Hot yet proved it, but wili now do it We shall again turn your attention to the Bible. Look at Ezra vii. 11—13: “ Now this is the copy of the letter that the king, Artaxerxes, gave unto Ezra, the Priest, the scribe, a scribe of the taw of God : perfect Peace, and at such a time. I make a decree that all they ?f the people of Israel, and of his priests and Levites ^ my realm, which are minded of their own free will to go up to Jerusalem, go with thee.” This is the decree given when the wans of Jerusalem were built in troublous times. See, also, Neh. iv. 17—23. Ezra and Nehemiah being contemporary, see Neh. viii. 1. The decree to Ezra was given in the seventh year of Artaxerxes’ reign, Ezra vii. 7, and that to Nehemiah in the twentieth year, Neh. ii. 1. Let any one examine the chronology, as given by Rollin' or Jo^pEusT^tn tKe seventh year of Artaxerxes to the twenty-second year ojCTlberius Cedar, which was the year our Lord W8§L crpcified, and he will find it was four hundred and ninety years. The Bible chronology says that Ezra started to go up to Jerusalem on the 12th day of the first month, (see Ezra viii. 31,) 457 years before the birth of Christ; he being 33 when he died, added to 457, will make 490 years. Three of the evangelists tell us he was betrayed two days before the toast of the passover, and of eourse WasmO same day Crucified. The passover was always kept on the 14th ‘ day of the first month forever, and Christ being crucified two days before, would make it on the 12th day, 490 Jeais from the time Ezra left the river Ahava to go uBto Jerusalem. 5 * 54 LECTURE Iff. If this calculation is correct,—and I think no one can doubt it,—then th$ seventy weeks was fulfilled toj .day when our gaVior1 suffered onjthe cross. Is not the seventy weeks fairlyproveT*!o*Tmvenheen fulfilled by years P And does not this prove that our vision and the 2300 days ought to be so reckoned ? Yes, if these seventy weeks are a part of the vision. Does not the angel say plainly, I have come to show thee; therefore understand the matter, and consider the vision ? Yes. WelJ, what can a man ask for more than plain positive testimony, and a cloud of circumstances agreeing with it ? But one thing still remains to be proved. When did the 2300 years begin ? Did it begin with Nebuchadnezzar’s dream ? No. For if it had, it must have been fulfilled in the year A. D. 1697. Well, then, did it begin when the angel Gabriel came to instruct Daniel into the 70 weeks? No, for if then, it would have been finished in the year A. D. 1762. (Let us begin it where the angel told us, from the going forth of the decree to build the walls of Jerusalem in troublouj times, 457 years before Christ; take 457 from 2300, and it i|ill leave A. D. 1843; Y>r take 70 weeks of yeaft being 490 years, from 230o years, and it will leave 181® after Christ’s death. Add his life, (because we be£p*j to reckon our time at his birth,) which is 33 years, and we come to the same A. D. 1843. Now let us examine our subject, and see what *e have learned by it thus far. And, I. We learn that there are two abominations spoken of by Daniel. The first is the Pagan mode of worship, which was performed by the sacrificing of beasts upon altars, similar to the Jewish rites, and by which mean3 the nations around Jerusalem drew away many of tb0 Jews into idolatry, and brought down the heavy judg* ments of God upon idolatrous Israel; and God permit* ted his people to be led fhto captivity, and persecuted by the very nations that they, the Jews, had been so fond of copying after in their mode of worship. Therefore the sanctuary and place of worship at Jerusalem trodden down by Pagan worshippers; and the altars, erected by the command of God, and according to the patted CHRISTS SECOND COMING. 55 kfid ibrm which God had prescribed, were broken down, and more fashionable altars of the heathen erected in their room. Thus were the commands of God disobeyed, his laws perverted, his people enslaved, the sanctuary trodden down, and the temple polluted, until at last God took away the Jewish rites and ceremonies, instituted new forms, new laws, and set up the gospel om in the world. is, for a season, was kept pure from the worldly sanctuaries and policy of Satan. But Satan, an arch enemy, found his Pagan abominations could have but little or no effect to draw the followers of Christ into : Idolatry, for they believed the bloody rites and sacrifices had their fulfilment in Christ Therefore, in order to carry the war into the Christian camp, he suffers the daily sacrifice abomination to be taken out of the Way, and sets up Papacy, which is more congenial to the Christian mode of worship in its outside forms and ceremonies, but retaining all the hateful qualities of the former. He persuades them to erect images to some or all of the .dear apostles; and even to Christ, and Mary, the u Mother of GodA He then flatters them that tfye church is infallible. (Here was a strong cord by which he could punish all disputers.) He likewise gives them the keys of heaven, (or Peter, as they cadi A;) This will secure all authority. He then clothes them with power to make laws, and to dispense with those which God had made. This capped-the climax. In this he would fasten many thousand' who might protest against some of his more vile abohafiations ; Vet habit and custom might secure them to a willing obedience to his laws, and to a total neglect of the laws of God. This was Satan’s masterpiece; and, as Daniel says, “ he would think to change times and laws, and they ehould be given into his hand for a time, times, and a half; but they shall take away his dominion to consume and destroy it unto the end.” Therefore, when this last abom- 1 motion of desolation shall be taken away, then shall the sotoctuary be cleansed. ' : II. We learn that the vision which Daniel saw was repealed at three separate times—1st In Nebuchad- 06 LECTURE Tit. nezzar’s dream, which carried us down through foot great kingdoms, until they should all be swept away Eke the chaff of the summer threshing-floor before the wind, and no place found for them, and the glorious and everlasting kingdom of Christ fill the whole earth. The next vision^aniel saw was similar to this; he saw four great beasts, representing four great kingdoms, as before; and he saw the fourth beast to be diverse from all the others, dreadful and terrible, and exceedingly strong; lie had great iron teeth, and nails of brass, which* devoured, brake in pieces, and stamped the people of God and the whole earth under foot This beast contained the two abominations which we have before spoken of; the last, under the figure of a little horn, he saw until all these thrones were cast down, till the little horn was destroyed, and his body given to the burning flame. Daniel saw until the Ancient of days did sit. The Son of Man came in the clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of days. He saw thousand thousands ministering unto him, and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him; the judgment was set, and the books were opened. He saw the dominion, and glory, and kingdom given to the Son of Man, and to the people of the saints, of the Most High, whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom. In the third vision, which Daniel has coupled with the former, by saying that it was after (or like) the one which appeared unto him at the first, ne saw the three last kingdoms; gave a particular description of the two first, even naming them—the Medes and Persians, and the Grecian. He then gives a short account of the little horn, (having given a more general view of the fourth kingdom in the other vision,) how he would cast down the host of heaven, and the stars, and stamp upon them; also that he would magnify himself against the Prince of the host, Jesus Christ, and cast down the place of his sanctuary, and practise and prosper, but shall be broken without hands, showing that the stone cut out without hand should break him to pieces. Daniel, then, in the 26th verse, couples the two visions, the one in the evening, 7th chapter, and the one in the morning, 8th chapter, and says, “The Christ’s second coming. Sf vision of the evening and morning, which w$s told, is true.” III. We learn tliat this vision is two thousand three hundred days long; that days are to be reckoned years 1st, By the command of God; 2d, By the example of Jacob; and 3d, By the fulfilment of the seventy weeks of this vision, at the crucifixion of the Messiah^ We learn by the instruction of Gabriel that the seventy vreeka were a part of the vision, and that Daniel was commanded to begin the seventy weeks at the going forth of the decree, to build the streets and walls of Jerusalem in troublous times; that this decree, given to Ezra, was exactly 490 years, to a day, before the cruci-fcrion of Christ^ and that there is no account, by Bible cr any historian, that there was ever any other decree tfrbuild the streets or walls of Jerusalem. We think the proof is strong, that the vision of Daniel begins 457 Tears before Christ; take which from2300,leaves 1843, tiler Christ, when the vision must be finished. But the objector may say, u Perhaps your vision does not begin *ith the seventy weeks.” Let me ask tw:o or three questions. Does not the angel say to Daniel, ix. 23, “Therefore understand the matter, and consider the vision ” ? « Yes.” Does not the angel then go on and give bis instruction concerning the seventy weeks ? “ Yes.” Do you believe the Bible is true ? “We do.” Then if the Bible is true, Daniel’s 70 weeks are a part of the vision, and 490 years were accomplished when the Mesiali was cut off, and not for himself. Then 1810 Tears afterwards the vision is completed; and we now live about 1803 years after; of course it must have begun within seven years of that date. But it is very reasonable to suppose it began with the seventy weeks; for the angel said it would establish the vision, that is, make it sure; for iflthc 70 weeks were exactly fueled 1 3kthe death of Chnsi thbiTwould the remainder be In 1810 years after, which would be fulfilled A. D. 1843, we have before shown. And now, my dear hearer, are you prepared for this peat and important event? Are you ready for the judgment to set, and the books to be opened? Let this LECTUTE in. subject sink deep into your hearts; let it follow you to your bed-chambers, to your fields, or your shops. Not one jot or tittle of the word of God shall fail. If he has spoken, it will come, however inconsistent it may look to us. Be admonished, then, and see to it that you are prepared. Compare the visum with the history of the kingdom, and where can you find a failure ? Not one. Then, surely, here is evidence strong that the remainder will be accomplished in its time, and that, time but seven years. Think, sinner, how good God is to give you notice, and prove it a thousand fold. Remember the old world; they thought Noah was a maniac; but the flood came, and they were reserved in chains of darkness unto the judgment of the great day. Remember the cities of the plain. Lot was unto them like one that mocked; but the same day God rained fire and brimstone upon them, and they are suffering the vengeance of eternal fire. Be warned, then; fly^to the arl^Christ Jc«usvbefore the door is shut; escape to & mountain of the house of the Lord 'before the Lord shall rise up to the prey, and you be driven away io your wickedness. Amen, ^ LECTURE IT. DANIEL lx. 34. Seventy weeks are determined upon thy people, and upon thy holy city, to finish the transgression, ana to make an end of sins, and to make reconciliation for iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness, and to seal up the vision and prophe-ey, and to RnOint the Most Holy. Otjr text is one of the many found in the word of God, which prove the authenticity of the Scriptures, gives us a powerful weapon against Judaizing teachers, meets the infidel on his own ground —the history of the world. It sets a seal to prophecy that it is true, and shows that the prophets were inspired. It gives incontestable evidence against the Jew, and proves that Jesus of Nazareth was the true Messiah. It unlocks the wonderful vision of Daniel’s four kingdoms ; also the vision of the ram, the he-goat, and the little horn. It brings to view the great blessings of the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, reveals the exact time of its accomplishment, and shows the source of the gospel, proclaiming good news to lost man, even in anticipation of that important era when the Gentiles should be fellow-heirs with the Jews in faith. It establishes the wavering, and gives hope and confidence to the tried and tempted child of God, that he ^ill fulfil all his promises, according to the letter and Bpirit of his word. This text furnished Simeon, Anna, Nathaniel, and 60 LECTURE IV. others, with a strong faith that they should see the con solation of Israel. By this text the high priest convinced the council of the necessity of putting to death Jesus. “Then gathered the chief priests and Pharisees a council, and said, What d» *e ?, far this fnan doth many miracles. If we let him thus alone, all men will believe on him; and the Romans will come, and take away both our place and nation.” - “ And one of them, named Caiaphas, being high priest that same year, said unto them, Ye know nothing at all, nor consider that it is expedient for us that one man should die for the people, and that the whole nation perish not And this spake he not of himself, (not his own prophecy;) but, being high priest that year, he prophesied (from Daniel’s seventy weeks; for there is not another prophecy in the Old Testament which shows what year Christ should suffer) that Jesus should die for that nation; and not for that nation only, but that, also, he should gather together in one the children of Godr that were scattered abroad,” John xi. 47—53. The high priest argues that Jesus must die for the people. The seventy weeks shows that the Messiah must be cut off at the close of the last week, and not for himself Abo Peter had occasion to say in his epistle, “ Of which salvation the prophets have inquired and searched dilir gently, who prophesied of the grace that should come unto you, searching what, or what manner of time, the spirit of Christ, which was in them, did signify, when it testified beforehand the . sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow,” 1 Peter i. 10,11. •Where was the exact time of Christ’s sufferings prophesied of but in Daniel’s seventy weeks ? Again, / to’tnis Christ alludes when he says*“My time is not yet fully come and, “Then they sought to take him, but no'man laid hands on him, because nis hour was not yet come:” that is, the seventy . weeks were not yet fulfilled, John vii. 8, 30. Mark tells us, xiv. 41, “Th« hour is come; behold, the Son of Man is betray?® into the hands of sinners.” CHRIST*# SECOND COMING. 61 The seventy weeks wete now being’ fulfilled. And then, at last, when Jesus had completed his work, when ftilness of time had come; he finished transgression, wid made an end of sin: he then cried, “ It is finished, *®d gave up the ghost” The seventy weeks ended, our text was fulfilled; Christ had now become the end of law for righteousness, to every one that believeth; Je that knew no sin had become sin for us, and Death had struck his last blow that he would ever be able to five the Son of God. Daniel’s vision is now made sure—the Messiah cut ofl; the time proved true, as given v tee prophet Daniel. NW, ye infidels, can this be priestcraft? And, ye ■todaizing teachers, is not this the Christ ? Why look ^ for another ? I shall now take up the text in the following manner: t I shall show what is to be done in seventy weeks. en? d seventy week® began* and when they 1* The text tells us, “ Seventy toeeks are determined upon thy people and upon thy holy city;” that is, upon ™e Jews, who then were the people of Daniel, and also te Jerusalem, which then was called the “ holy city.” "he first question which would naturally arise on the Jtend, would be, What for to do ? The text and its context must tell us. 1st « To Jinish the transgression.” When was transition finished ? I answer, At the death of Christ t Heb. ix. 15, “And for this cause he is the Mediator ^ the new testament, that by means of death, for the tejemption of the transgressions that were under the text testament, they which are called might receive the Valise of eternal inheritance.” Isaiah liii. 8, “ For he cut off out of the land of the living; for the transmission of my people was he stricken.” 2d. “And to make an end of sins” This was also ^ribrmed at his death. See Heb. ix. 26, “ But now °hce in the end of the world hath he appeared, to put !*ay sin by the sacrifice of himself.” And 1 John iii. “Ye know that he (Christ) was manifested to take **ay our sins.” 6 02 LECTURE IY. 3d. ujStnd to make reconciliation for iniquity” Was this also performed at his death? Yes. See Col. i* 20, “And having made peace through the blood of his cross, by him to reconcile all things to himself” Heb. ii. 17, “ Wherefore in all things it behooved him to be made like unto his brethren; that he might be a merciful and faithful high priest in things pertaining to God) to make reconciliation for the sins of the people.” n 4th. “And, to bring in everlasting, righteousness “ This must be by Christ’s obedience,” says the objector) “ and cannot be at his death.” Not so fast, dev sir; let uf hear the testimony. Romans v. 21, “ That as sin bath reigned unto death, even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life,, by Jesus Christ our Lord.” And, “By the*obedience of one shall many be made righteous.” Again, see PhiL ii. 8? “ And being’ found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross-Paul says, “ I do not frustrate the grace of God; for u righteousness came by the law, then Christ is dead in vain;” evidently showing, that by Christs obedient unto death, he brought in everlasting righteousness. 5th. “ To seal up the virion ana prophecyWhat does “to seal up ” mean ? I answer, It means to mat* sure, certain, unalterable. Consult Esther iii., 12, P* 8. Solomon says, “ Set me as a seal upon thine heart as a seal upon thine arm;” that is, make me surei® thy love, and certain by thy power. John says, “$6 that hath received his testimony hath set to his seal that God is true.” John iii. 33. Paul to Rome, xv. 2$ “ When I have performed this, and sealed to them tb* fruit;” that is, made sure the contributions. Ag3^ to Timothy, 2 Epistle, ii. 19, “ Nevertheless, the found3* tion of God standeth sure, having this seal, The J knoweth them that are his.” Therefore the death of Christ would make Daniel’s vision sure ; for if a part of the vision should be exactly fulfilled, as to time manner, then the remainder of the vision would be & complished in manner and tiipe, as literally as to0 seventy weeks had been. 6th. “ And anoint the J\fost Holy.” The Most Hotyi Christ’s second coming. 63 in this passage, must mean Christ; for no hupian being can, or ought to claim this appellation, save him whom God hath anointed to be a Savior in Israel, and a King in Zion. See Acts x. 38, “How God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power.” Also, Acts iv. 27, “ For of a truth against thy holy child Jesus, whom thou hast anointed, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles, and the people of Israel, *ere gathered together,, for to do whatsoever thy hand and thy counsel determined before to be done.” Heb. L 9, “ Therefore God, even thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows.” It will next be requisite to inquire, When was Christ anointed ? I answer, When the Holy Ghost descended upon him, and when he was endued with power from on high to *ork miracles. See Isa. Ixi. 1, “ The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me; because the Lord hath anointed me to peach good tidings unto the meek: he hath sent me to hind up the broken-hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are hound.” After Christ was baptized by John, and after being tempted of the devil forty days in the wilderness, he Jent in the spirit into Galilee, and on the Sabbath day he went into the synagogue, as his custom was, and he stood up to read. They gave him the book of Isaiah, when he opened the book he found the passage which * have just quoted. After reading it he shut up the ®ook and sat down. He then began to say unto them, ? This day is this scripture fulfilled in your ears,” Luke lv-1—21. This passage plainly proves that Christ was tinted on or before this day. Other things were to be done in the seventy weeks, Jnch as, The cutting off of the Messiah, but not for himself. This can mean nothing less than the cruci-h*ion of Christ See Luke xxiv. 26, 46, “ Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into «ia glory ? * « Thus it is written, and thus it behooved Chnst to suffer, and to rise from the dead the third day.” ftom. y. 6,« For when we were without strength, in due LECTURE IV. «4 time (or according to tlie time of seventy weeks) Christ died for us.” “ And he (Messiah) shall confirm the covenant with many for one week.” What covenant is this to be confirmed? I answer, It cannot be the Jewish covenant, for that was confirmed by Moses many hundred years before Daniel lived. There being but two covenants, it must of necessity be the new covenant of which Christ is the Mediator; Moses having been the. mediator of the old, and Christ afterwards of the new.- If these things are so, and the gospel covenant is meant by Daniel, then the time the gospel was, preached by John and Christ is here called a week; for Christ himself preached more than seven days. Christ kept three passovers with the Jews after he began his ministry and oefofe he nailed the ceremonial law to his cross. This is strong evidence that a week is seven years, and that Daniel’s 70 weeks are to be understood as meaning 490 years. Again, “In the midst of the week he should cause the sacrifice and oblation to cease,” or, as all Hebrew scholars agree, “In the last half of the week,” &c., p the more proper translation; and it is evident that this translation would harmonize with the other parts of the passage, “ the sacrifice and oblation to cease.” What sacrifice and offering is this, which the Messiah was to cause to cease ? J answer, It must of course he that one offering and sacrifice for sin of which all other offerings and sacrifices were but types. It could not be the Jewish sacrifices and offerings, for two good reasons. 1st This is but one sacrifice, and the Jews had many-It does not say sacrifices; therefore it cannot mean Jewish sacrifices, nor offerings. 2d reason. The Jewish sacrifices and offerings did not cease in, nor even very nigh, the last half of the wee* in which the Messiah confirmed the covenant with many; and, even to the present day, they make oblations, if pot sacrilices. It must mean that sacrifice and oblation which the Messiah was to make to God for sin, once fo* all It must mean that sacrifice which is the antetyp® Christ’s second coming. 05 of all the legal sacrifices from the days of Abel to the diys of the Messiah. Let us hear what Paul says, Heb. vil 27, “ Who needeth not daily, as those high priests, to Offer up sacridce, first for his own sins, and then for the people’s; for this he did once when he offered up himself. See also Heb. x. 11,12. “ And every priest standeth daily ministering, and offering oftentimes the same sacrifices, which can never take away sins; but this man, after he had offered one sacrifice for sins, forever sat down on the right hand of God.” Many more passages aright be brought to show that all sacrifices and oblations which could take away sin, or in which God the Father could be well pleased, ceased in Christ’s one sacrifice and oblation. But I have given enough to satisfy every candid, unprejudiced mind; therefore I shall, II. Try to prove when the seventy weeks began, and *hen they ended. The angel Gabriel tells Daniel, ix. 25, Know, therefore, and understand, that, from the going forth of the commandment to restore and to build Jerusalem, unto the Messiah, the Prince, shall be seven weeks, and threescore and two weeks; the street shall be built again, and the wall, even in troublous times.” In this passage we have a plain declaration when the seventy weeks began: “ from the going forth of the' commandment” But what commandment ? we may Squire’. I answer, A command that will finally restore the Jews from their captivity under which they then *ere held in bondage; also to prepare the way for them to rebuild their city, repeople the same, and raise up the decayed walls, settle the streets, and cleanse the city of Jerusalem; and these things would be done in troublous times. So much is expressed or implied in the declaration of Gabriel, which I have just quoted. Who would give the command ? is the next question. I answer, It must be a king who had power over the lews to release and restore them. It must of necessity he a king over the Medes and Persians, or it would not he in agreement with the vision in the 8th chapter of Muriel; for He is expressly told by Gabriel that the ram 6* 66 LECTURE IV. he saw, and which was the first thing he did see in the vision, were the kings of Media and Persia. And now this same angel Gabriel has come the second time, and ^ tells Daniel, plainly and distinctly, that he has come to *" make him “ understand the vision.” What vision? The one Daniel had in the beginning, in the 8th chapter. See Daniel ix. 21—23. Then Gabriel begins his instructions by giving him seventy weeks of the vision, and then shows him, verse 24, when his seventy weeks begin; or, which is the same thing, “ the visionTo read and understand the N matter thus far, infidelity itself must blush to deny the premises. Then, if we have settled this question, the next ques tion would be, Which king of Persia, and what commandment ? I answer, It must be the fifth king of Persia noted in the Scripture of truth; for the angel Gabriel, the third time he visited Daniel to give him skill and understanding into u the visionsays, “ But I will show thee that which is noted in the scripture of truth,” Dan* x. 21. This shows that he was instructing Daniel into a vision which he before had seen, and written in the Scripturesi See Dan. vii. 1, “Then he wrote the dream, and told the sum of the matters.” Dan. x. H “Now I am come to make thee understand what shall befall thy people in the latter days: for yet the vision for many days.” What vision ? The one noted in the Scripture of truth, says Gabriel. Then, in Dan. xi* % he begins his instruction to him of the vision, which he was commanded by the voice between the banks of Ulm to make liim understand, by saying, “ And now will 1 show thee the truth. Behold, there shall stand up yet three kings in Persia; and the fourth shall be far richer than they all.” This fourth king was the ram pushing) and was the fifth king of Persia, being the fourth from Cyrus, who was then standing up. See Dan. x, 1. The kings, as Ezra has named them in his 4th chapter and 7th chapter, were, 1st, Cyrus; 2d, Ahasuerimi 3d, Artaxerxes, (the first;) 4th, Darius; 5th, Artaxerxe* (Longunaous ;V_this last being the king who gave a coDD' mandment to rhrp* to restore all the. captfve Jews who were willing to go to Jerusalem. Christ’s second coming. 67 What commandment ? is our next question to answer The decree given bv Cvnis (see Ezra L 1—11J caniiot be the decree meant by the angel, for the four following reasons:- 1st Cyrus was the first king of Persia, and of course cannot be the fifth king, as we have already shown. 2d reason. The decree of Cyrus was two years before the angel gave his last instruction to Daniel, and be would not have spoken of it as being future, if it had already passed: “ There shall yet stand up three kings,” &c. 3d reason. Cyrus’s decree was not given to build Jerusalem, but “ the house of God which was at Jerusalemneither were the walls built in troublous times, under the decree by Cyrus. 4th reason. This decree by Cyrus was given 536 years before the birth of Christ, or 569 years before Ids death. Therefore no rules of interpretation given in the Scriptures could possibly show how those things were accomplished in seventy weeks, which Gabriel has shown, in our text and context, were determined to be done. This, then, cannot be the commandment^ and harmonize with either Bible or facts. Again: the decree given by Darius, Ezra vi. 1—14, cannot be the commandment to which the angel alluded, for the same reasons we have shown that Cyrus’s decree could not be the one; for this was only a renewal of the former, and this decree Was issued 552 years before Christ’s death. The next decree or command of any king of Persia we find in the seventh year of Artaxerxes (Longima-uus.) See Ezra. vii. 6—28. In this decree we find the last command of any king of Persia to restore the captive Jews. We learn that, in this decree, the king furbished them with money and means to beautify and adorn the temple which had been built by Darius’s ordefr a number of years before. We find that the interdict^ Ezra iv. 21, in which the Jews were commanded not to . build Jerusalem, is now removed by its own limitation^ M until another commandment be given from me.” Tbi« ddqree, fherpfoiy, topk off this command. Wje lean by 68 LECTURE IT. Ezra’s prayer, ix. 9, that Ezra understood that the decree to which we allude did give them the privilege of building, in Judah and Jerusalem, the wall which had been broken down. After Ezra had been high priest and governor in Jerusalem thirteen years, Nehemiah was permitted to go up to assist Ezra in building Jerusalem and repairing the walls; which was done in troublous times, under Nehemiah’s administration, which lasted in all 39 years. See Nehemiah, 4th to the 7th chapter Ezra and Nehemiah, both of them having served as’gov-emors 49 years. Here, then, we find the fulfilment of what the angel told Daniel would be done under the command that would begin the seventy weeks, and which is the same thing — “the vision” This decree was given 457 years before Christ: the seventy weeks began, and if they ended at the death of Christ, which we have proved did end them, then the seventy weeks ended after Christ 33 years, making, in all, 499 years, which is 70 weeks of years. But it is evident that Gabriel has divided the seventy weeks into three parts, and I think clearly explains the use of this division. “Shall be seven weeks, and threescore and two weeks.” Then, as if you should inquire, What is seven weeks for? he explains, “The street shall be built again, and the wall, even in troublous times.” Ezra and Nehemiah were 49 years, of seven weeks of years, per-forming these very things, which ended before Christ 408. See large edition of Polyglot Bible. What i* sixty-two weeks for? The angel has already told us» “Unto the Messiah, the Princej” that is, to the time Christ was anointed to preach, the meaning of Messiah* Sixty-two weeks are 434 days; or weeks of years would be 434 years, which, beginning where the seven weeks ended, 408, would end 26 years after Christ, the year John began to preach as forerunner of Christ Then * he shall confirm the covenant with many for one week, roak&g iu all the seventy weeks. Thus the seven weeks ended with the administration of Nehemiah, & C. 408* Then the sixty-two weeks ended when John Christ’s second coming. €0 began to preach the gospel, A. D. 26; and the one week was fulfilled in A. D. 33, when Christ offered himself upon the cross, as an offering and sacrifice for sin; “by which offering we are sanctified once for all.” For he need not offer himself often, as the high priest did, under the law. “ But now, once in the end of the world, hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself Heb. ix. 26, Therefore, “ he shall cause the sacrifice and oblation to cease.” That is the only and last sacrifice and oblation that will be ever offered in our world, which can take away sin; ** for there remaineth,” says the apostle, “ no more sacrifice for sin.” Then let toe inquire, What is the sum of the instruction of the an- fil to Daniel? I will sum it up in as few words as can. After Daniel had a certain vision, commonly called “the vision of the ram, the he-goat, and the little horn,” Daniel heard one saint inquire of another, how long that vision should be. The answer was given Daniel, that it should be unto 2300 days, when the sanctuary should be cleansed or justified. Daniel then heard a man’s voice between the banks of Ulai, which called and said, Gabriel, make this man to understand the vision. Accordingly, Gabriel came to Daniel, and informed him that at file end of the world, or time appointed of God, the vision should be fulfilled. He then tells him that the ram represented the Mede and Persian kingdom: and that the rough goat represented the Grecian kingdom; gives a short history of that kingdom, and its four divisions; then shows, at the close of these kingdoms, that another king would arise, (meaning the kingdom of the little horn, or Roman,) describing him exactly as (loses had described the Romans many centuries before. See Deuteronomy xxviii. 49, 50. “ The Lord shall bring a nation against thee from far, from the end of the earth, as swift as the eagle flieth; a nation whose tongue thou shalt not understand; a nation of fierce countenance.” This, no person will dispute, means the Romania. Then why not a similar description in Daniel, Viil 23? “ When file transgressors (meaning the Jews) are come to the fall, a king of fierce countenance, and understanding 70 LECTURE IV. dark sentences, shall stand up, and his power shall be mighty, but not by his own power; and he shall destroy wonderfully, and shall prosper and practise, and shall destroy the mighty and the holy people.” I think the reader, divested of prejudice, cannot apply the description given in the above quotation to any other nation but the Romans. “ And through his policy, he shall cause craft to prosper iu his hand.” This description agrees with Paul* s man of sin, the mystery of iniquity which worked in his day, and which would' be destroyed by the brightness of Christ’s coming. See 2 Thess. ii. 3-—8. “ So that he, as God, sitteth in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God.” Gabriel says, “And he shall magnify himself in his heart, and by peace shall destroy many; he shall also stand up against the' Prince of princes;” that is, against God; the very same character which Paul has described. “ But he shall be broken without hand,” that is, ‘\by the brightness of his (Christ’s) coming,” as says Paul. But as Daniel has said, “ By the stone cut out of the mountain without hand;” or,as he says, Daniel vii. 21, 22, “I beheld, and the same horn made war with the saints, and prevailed over them, until the Ancient of days came, and judgment was given to the saints of the Most. High; and the time came that the Saints possessed the kingdom.” Alter Gabriel had instructed Daniel thus far, he left him. Sixteen years afterwards, Gabriel came again to Daniel, an 23, and 28th verses, and let the objector lay hia^haui8 upon his mouth and be silenjlL TTas m&nbecome so bold in sin that he will contradict angels, defame the prophets, deny the word of God, that we may cry peace and safety, when sudden destruction cometh? “But if ye wifi not Hear' Jfloses^anJ Ihe propEets, neither would you though one rose from the dead.” Peter says, u There shall be scoffers in the last day, saying, Where is the promise of his coming?” God has not revealed the time of the end^ say you; therefore it will be no Christ’s second coming. 75 farm for you to “ say in your hearts, My Lord delayeth ois coming.” Who sEall tell the friend of the bridegroom when to give the midnight cry, “ Behold, tfafc bridegroom cometh ” ? For this must be before he conies — no time then to cry; for it will be as sudden as the lightning, says the dear Savior. Let the objectors look to it, that they do not reject the council of God against themselves. “But ye, brethren, are not in darkness, (ignorant of the revelation of God,) that that day shall overtake you as a thief” Jbnen. LECTURE V. CC-m- ^ REV. xiii. 18. ' Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the. nuin* her ofthe beastj for it is the number of a man j and his nuinbei is^sTx~BunHredlhreescore and six. This text has caused as much speculation as any text in the whole Bible; rivers of ink have been shed to explain its meaning, brains have been addled in trying to find some great mystery which the wisdom of this world, as was supposed, could only discover; and in trying to be wise above what was written, men have lost their balance, and fell into absurdities too ridiculous to mention. Some have searched through all the vocabulary of Greek names, to find one whose numerical letters would make the number 666, and they have been wonderfully blest, for they found a number; but here again there remained a, difficulty to surmount, which required as much ingenuity as the former; but to remedy the evil, every Greek scholar chose the one his fancy dictated, wrote his book on the number 666, and then died, and his wonderful name died with him; for every wise Greek had his own favorite name. Also, the Latin book-worms, not wishing to be outdone by their Greek brethren, rummaged all the old goatskin parchments and mysty books m the cloisters of all the monks in Christendom; and behold, a much greater harvest was the fruit of their labor; for now every Latinus hai three or more names to his share ; and in all this wisdom, all other nations were left without any wisdom, except Christ’s second coming. 7? what they1 borrowed from their neighbors, the learned Greeks and Latins. But I hope, my dear hearers, that you have learned that if there is any mystery of God not explained by the Bible, it is not for us to understand. Therefore, in treating upon this subject, I shall endeavor to present the Scripture on the point, and then leave you to judge whether we have light or not I. Show what wisdom this is spoken of in the text II. Speak of the beast numbered, and show what beast III. The number, and what we may understand by it I. The wisdom spoken of in the text 1st Is it the wisdom of men, or of this world ? I answer, No. For Paul says, lCor.ii. 4,13, “And my speech and my preaching was not with enticing words of man’s wisdom, but in demonstration of the spirit and of power; that your faith should not stand in the wisdom of man, but in the power of God. Howbeit we speak wisdom among them that are perfect; yet not the wisdom of this world, nor of the princes of this world, that come to nought But we speak the wisdom of God in a mystery, even the hidden wisdom which God ordained before the world unto our glory.” Now, if Paul would not preach the wisdom of men or the world, surely the &ngel would not instruct John to use the wisdom of man or of this world, “ for the wisdom of this world is foolishness with God,” ICor.iii. 19. And if Paul .said •ur faith should not stand in the wisdom of men, neither Would John have given any thing that depended on the wisdom of men for a foundation of our faith. But Paul bas taught us what true wisdom is, by saying, “ Christ, the power of God, and the wisdom of God; ” “ But Clod bath revealed them unto us by his Spirit, for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God.” And Paul tells us how we may exercise this wisdom, 1 Cor. ii. 13, “ Which things also we speak, not in the words which man’s wisdom teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost teacheth; comparing spiritual things with spiritual.” Here, then, my dear hearer, is the great secret of wisdom, to compare spiritual things with spiritual y and then we have the mind and will of the Spirit, and shall not be 7* 7B LECTURE V, very liable to err. Let us, then, follow this rule while we try to explain. II. The beast numbered in the text And, 1st Let us inquire what beast it is. I answer, It is the first beast See our context, 12th verse, “ And he exerciseth all the power ef the first bea& before him; ” that is, the beast which John saw come up out of the sea, (the Roman government,) having seven heads and ten horns, and upon his horns ten crowns, and upon his head the name of blasphemy ; and the beast which I *s,aw was like unto a leopard, and his feet Were as the feet of a bear, and his mouth as the mouth of a lion; and the dragon i gave him his power, and his seat, and great authority.” By this beast, I understand the same as Daniel’s fourth kingdom, the Roman government; by u names of blasphemy,” I understand a mode of worship which would be idolatrous or blasphemous; by the dragon, we must understand the civil power of the same government giving its power to the ecclesiastical beast, whether Pagan or Papal. 3d verse, “ And I saw one ' ’ eray, Pagan) as it were, wouii® "If _ wtOT’ wasv boated, thg fudsUt^ion of the Papal blraphemous head and all the won a wondered after the Beasi” ~ John then goes on to describe the civil power of this Roman government under this last head, and shows the length of time they would exercise this last power -r- “ for- ty-two months” — which is the same as Daniel’s time, times, and a half, or John’s 1280 days, mentioned Rev. xi. 3, xii.6. His power to make war and overcome the saints is foretold. In the tenth verse he shows us how this civil power should be destroyed, by captivity and tiie sword; and this was fulfilled in 1798, when the pope was. earned a captive into Prance, and the states of Italy were conquered by the sword of the French army. 1® the 11th verse he gives us a discovery of the same beast in his ecclesiastical power; Pagan Rome in, IheJifft beasg>ni|d Papacy ip a*^ ^ wiU be evi- dentlbafcgr one wEo will examine me cliapter carefully* that John was not commanded to number the imag® beast—for the civil power of that beast was before Christ’s second coming. 79 numbered in the 5th veree,—but the beast which existed before him, which the Papal ecclesiastical beast is an image of, or Daniel’s daily sacrifice abomination, (Dan. xii.ll,) the one which Paul said, uhe who now letteth will let, until he be taken out of the way.” In this passage it is evident the apostle alludes to the same power, although he calls it the “ working of Satan.” John also gives a similar description in Rev. xii. 9, “And the dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: be'was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast oat with him.” But 1 have another evidence that the beast numbered was Pagan Rome, and 1 think it must be conclusive testimony, in Rev. xvii. 3. In this chapter one of the seven angels that had the seven vials came to instruct John, and to show him “the judgment of the great whore with whom the kings of the earth had com* milted fornication, and the inhabitants of the earth have been made drunk with the wine of her fornication.” “So he carried me away in the spirit into the wilderness, and I saw a woman sit upon a scarlet-colored beast, foil of names of blasphemy, having seven 1 leads and ten hOWlB w Here the same idolatrous beast, having seven heads and ten horns, is described; the woman sitting upon Ibis beast is the same as Daniel’s little horn which Came up among the ten horns, and shows plainly that it wa9 that part of Roman power which was prior to the woman, and was of course called the first beast. When John s*w this woman on the scarlet-colored beast, he wondered *ith great admiration, and says, Rev. xvii. 7, “ And the ®ngel said unto me, Wherefore didst thou marvel ? I tell thee the mystery of the woman and of the beast that carrieth her, which hath the seven heads and ten borns. The beast that thou sawest was, and is not; and shall ascend out of the bottomless pit, and go into perdition, and they that dwell on the earth shall wonder, *hose names*were not written in the book of lifb'from foe foundation of the world, when they behold the beast eo LECTURE V, its last stage of Papal Rome) “ and yet is,” m the same spirit, for Papal Rome is but an image of Paganism, as says the Apostle, 2 Thess. il 6,7, “ And now ye know what withholdeth, that he may be revealed in his time, for the mystery of iniquity doth already work.” And, 1 John ii. 18, “Little children, it is the last time, and as ye have heard that anti-Christ shall come, even now are there many anti-Christs, whereby we know it is the last time.” And again, Rev. xviL 9, u And here is the mind which hath wisdom; ” evidently referring John right back to our text, “ Here is wisdom; let him that hath understanding,” the same as mind in the above quotation. “The seven heads are seven mountains on which the woman sitteth, and there are seven kings; five are fallen, one is, and the other is not yet come; and when be cometh, he must continue a short space, and the bead that was, and is not, even he is the eighth, and is of the seven, and goeth into perdition.” These texts explain the whole matter; for it is evident that the beast here alluded to was the seven-headed monster who was then in existence when John wrote, for five of its executive forms of government (of which kings and mountains are figures) had fallen. Republican Rome had five different offices under that particular form of government — her senatorial, tribunate, consular) decemmr, and triumvirate These were fallen. One is, (that was when John wrote his prophecy,) Imperial, and ^ pfofir hadjlOt jfftt, CQjQft ffiikjkh th^ pame as the ten frprfls. For when tne VVestem Empire TCotae^was divided into ten kingdoms, “ And the ten horns which thou sawest are ten kings, which have received no kingdom as yet; but receive power as kings one hour with the beast” TJifigf fraye one mind, (that is. yeye aU^qyprtfid taJhe_Cathfls lie faithJ and shall give theft power and strength unto TTie'heast, Papal Rome. “ These shall make war with the Lamb, and the Lamb shall overcome them; for he in Lord of lords and King of kings; and they that are with him are called, and chosen, ana faithful.” ,And although this beast, whatever form it may assume, whether Pagan or Papal, may for a season tyrannize over and trample on the followers of Christ, through the agency Christ’s second coming. 81 oi the evil power of empires, kingdoms, states, or republics, yet He who rules over all, will, in the end, destroy all these powers, aud himself reign King of kings and Lord over &U. “ And the ten horns which thou sawest upon the beast, these shall hate the whore, and shall tnake her desolate and naked, and cut her flesh, and burn tor with fire.* This text has been literally accomplished within a few years; and those kingdoms which were of the ten, king-toms which first gave power to the beast, have of late persecuted and destroyed her, who is the abomination of fte whole earth. Witness the transactions of Great Britain, France, Spain, Portugal, Austria, Naples, and Tuscany, the Seven Kingdoms which were not plucked up by the dittie horn; each of these nations have in their turn resisted the power and pretensions of the Pope of Rome, until his civil authority is reduced to a cipher ii*
n as was bonL They could not have begun before *Jey became connected with the Jews, forthe reason “tat no nation is prophesied of, or noticed in the proph-except they are somehow connected with the fe4 LECTURE V. people of G6d ; and for the very Reason that this beast was to tread down the Jews, and finally, by cunning, deceit, and intrigue, destroy the city and nation of the Jews, then I think the fairest conclusion is, that when they became connected with the Jews by league, and when they had conquered Daniel’s third kingdom, the Grecian. Then, and not until then, had the Romans any part to this prophecy. This agrees with the angel’s statement, Dan. xi. 23, “ After the league made with him, (thpt is, Romans,) he shall work deceitfully, and become strong with a small (republican) people.” This league was made between the Romans and the Jews, ratified and carried into effect when the Greeks under Bachides left besieging Jerusalem, upon the command of the Romany and, as Josephus and Mpccabees tell us, never returned to troubl^ tRem^^tHe J^gj^y more. fTJ^, leagug then4 took effect ^ when the thj*d kingdoih in Dame]!? vrmoh cedaeS’Hamssing the Jews, a§a the fourth ktof* dom began its rvtfe QJtei the Jews and the world. IS5 was in the. yeajrJJ. CL Let those who wish to be satisfied of the correctness 'of the foregoing statement* read the 8th and 9th chapters of the 1st Maccnbe<*» and Josephus, B. XII. chapter x. sec. 6, of his Antiquities/, > r'Ttten,yif this be correct, that Pagan Rome began power in the year.B. C,_158, and was lo ^continue o6o , years, When would Paganism fall in the t add ttte “ daily sacrifice abomination ” be taken out of the way to make room for the abomination of desolation. I ^nswer, Take,-J58. from 666 and jou will have 5$‘J Then jn the year A- aj £ease£i ’What is the history1 Jf that time ? I answer, that about the year A. D. 47$ the .Western Empire of Rome ^5J0ect to pieces, and the Pagan nations of the north) Crossing the Rhine and the Danube, established ten kingdoms in what was considered the Western Empto* France was the principal kingdom of the ten. The8® knutdoms were all governed Dy PagaR kings; and hi** fcijf ihfbrms us that in the city of Rome and other pl®ce* in th$ empire these Pag^n conqOetors sacrificed women, and children to their supposed deities; that id the year 496 Clovis king of France was convert®® cbrist’s second coming. 85 ttod baptized into the Christian faith; and that the remainder of these kings embraced the religion of Christ shortly after, the last of which was Christianized in the year 508, and of course Paganism ceased, having lost bead by the power of the sword, or kings who wield J|e sword. Here, then, wag the accomplishment of two Important prophecies — the daily sacrifice abomination taken out of the way, and the Pagan beast receiving to deadly wound by a sword; since which time we have no account of any Pagan rites or sacrifices being offered within the bounds of ancient Rome. How exactly has the word of God been accomplished! How just and true are all the whys of the God of heaven! And how blind are mortals that they cannot see their own destiny m the rise and fall of others ! I am astonished sometimes *hen T reflect on the simple truths of the word of God, the exact fulfilment of the prophecies, that more do not believe, repent, and turn to God, LECTURE VI. DANIEL i. 14. Now I am come to make thee understand what shall befall tty people in the latter days j for yet the vision is for many days. This is the third time the angel Gabriel came to instruct Daniel. The first time was when Daniel had the vision of the he-goat, Daniel viii. 16. This was 553 years before Christ. The second time he came wafl when Daniel was praying for the deliverance of his people from their Babylonish captivity, fifteen years after the first visit, when he instructed him into the seventy weeks, and crucifixion of the Messiah. Now he haa come in the third year of Cyrus the Persian, in the 534 B. C., 21 years after Daniel had his vision of the foot beasts, nineteen after the he-goat, and four years after the seventy weeks’ instruction. After informing Daniel his purpose, as in our text, and making some preliminary observations concerning the vision in the remainder of the tenth chapter, he begins his teachings to Daniel, and through him to us» with the first of the 11th chapter. 1st verse^ he tells who he, the heavenly messenger, is — the same who confirmed Daniel in the seventy weeks. See Daniel ix. 1,21. And in the second verse he begins with the fifth king of Persia, the very same king *who issued the decree to Ezra to go up and build the walls of Jerusalem, which began our seventy weeks, Daniel ix. 2o» Ezra vii. 1—14. For the first Persian king was then on the throne, Daniel x. 1, which was the third year of the Christ’s second coming. 87 reign of Cyrus, king of Persia. This was the same Cyrus who was general and son-in-law to Darius the Mede, that conquered Babylon. Besides whom “there 8hould be yet three kings,” which three kings were Artaxerxes, Darius, and Ahasuerus, as they are named in Scripture. See Ezra, iv. v. and vi. chapters. I am aware that history has named four where Scripture has only named three. History names, 1, Cambyses; 2, Smerdis, same as Artaxerxes above named in Scripture ; 3, Darius, son of Hystaspes, same as above ; 4, Xerxes, same as Scripture calls Ahasuerus. Why the Scripture did not name Cambyses, if there was such a king, I am not able to tell, unless his reign was so short (which all historians agree in) that he had no hand in building or hindering the building of the temple at Jerusalem, as the other three kings had, which Ezra has named. But 88 Gabriel did not come to tell Daniel any thing which not “ noted in the Scripture of truth,” (see Daniel *• 21, “ But I will show thee that which is noted in the Scripture of truth,”) therefore the language of our text now under examination will be this — “There shall j 8tend up yet three kings in Persia, (noted in the Scripture j °f truth,) and the fourth shall be far richer than they j &c. This fourth king was Artaxerxes Longimanus, *nd is the same king noted in Ezra vii., and the first and only king of Persia “ noted in the Scriptures,” who ever 8*ve a decree to rebuild the walls and streets of Jeru-talem, especially in troublous times. We may therefore ftosonably and conclusively determine that the rnes-^nger Gabriel begins his instruction with this king’s Joign, the 5th king noted in Scripture. And if so, we toye another strong and forcible evidence that Daniel’s rision of the ram and he-goat began with the seventy *®eks, 457 years before the birth of Christ, and 490 y^ars, or 70 prophetic weeks, before his death, Dan. xi. We have the plain history of Alexander, the conjuror of the world, his death, and division of the kingdom into four great empires. Hear what Gabriel says him more than 200 years before the event happened, tod learn, ye skeptics, the evidence that this prophecy 13 of divine 6rigin, “ And a mighty king shall Btand up 88 LECTUftE VI. that shall rule with great dominion, and do according to his will And when he shall stand up, his kingdom shall be broken, and shall be divided toward the four winds of heaven, and not to his posterity, nor according to his dominion which he ruled; for his kingdom shall be plucked up, even for others besides those,” (that is, his posterity.) Need I, then, tell my hearers that history tells us that Alexander conquered the then known world in about six-years, and that he died 323 years B. C. at Babylon; that his kingdom was divided among his greatest generals, from which division arose four great kingdoms, Egypt in the south, Persia in the east, Syria in the north, and Macedonia in the west, which kingdoms lasted until conquered, by the Romans ? Between the years 190 and 30 B. C. nearly all these kingdoms became Roman prov-inces. From Daniel xi. 5, 13, inclusive, we have a prophecy of the two principal kingdoms out of these four — Egypt and Syria; and any one who may have the curiosity to see the exact agreement between the prophecy and history, can read Rollin’s Ancient History, where he has not only given us the history, but applied this propb* ecy. And as I see no reason to disagree from him in hi* application of these texts, 1 shall, therefore, for brevity’* sake, pass over these texts, and examine the text, Dan. xi* 14, <* And in those times there shall many stand up again** the king of the south; also, the robbers of thy people shall exalt themselves to establish the vision; but they shall fell.” The king of the south, in this verse, without any doubt, means king of Egypt; but what the robbers of thy people means remains yet a doubt perhaps to some* That it cannot mean Antiochus, or any king of Syria, it ifl plain; for the angel had been talking about that nation f°r a number of verses previous, and now says, “ also the robbers of thy people,” &c., evidently implying some other nation. I will admit that Antiochus did perhaps rob the Jews; but how could this u establish the vision, as Antiochus is not spoken of any where in the vision as performing any act of that kind; for he belonged to what is called the (Grecian kingdom in the vision. Again, “1° establish the vision,” must mean to make surd,''complete? or fulfil the same. And if it cannot be shown that the Christ’s second coming. Grecian kingdom was to rob the people of God, 1 think it must mean some other nation which would do these acts, to which every word will apply. And to this we need not be at a loss ; for at this very time of which the angel is speaking, Rome, the least kingdom in Daniel’s vision, did exalt itself, and this kingdom did have the very marks in the vision, and in the events following. This kingdom was to have great iron teeth; it was to break in pieces, and stamp the residue with the feet of it. The vision also says, “He shall destroy wonderfully, and shall prosper and practise, and shall destroy the mighty and holy people, and that he should magnify himself,” &c., the same as exalt himself, Daniel vii. 7, 23; viii. 10—12,24,25 verses. And it cannot be denied but that the Jews have been robbed of their city and sanctuary by the Romans, and the Christian church has been persecuted and robbed by this dreadful beast, the Roman kingdom. It is evident too that when this kingdom falls, tte vision will be completed, fulfilled, established: “ but they shall fall,” says the angel in the verse under our present examination; “they shall fallthat is, the ten horns in this fourth kingdom, when the vision is fulfilled or established, and when the stone cut out of the mountain without hands shall grind them to powder. We will take the 15th, “ So the king of the north ” (Rome is now the king of the north, because they had conquered the Macedonian kingdom, and had become mastem of the countries north and east before they attacked Egypt) u shall come and cast up a mount, and take the most fenced cities; and the arms of the south shall not withstand, neither his chosen people, neither shall there be any strength to withstand.” This was about fifty years before Christ, when Pompey, a Roman general, conquered Egypt, and made that kingdom tributary to the ftomans, and afterwards entered Jerusalem, and made them subjects of the Roman government. See .verses 16 and 17, “ But he that cometh against him * (Pompey coming against Egypt) “ shall do according to his own will, and none shall stand before him, and he shall stand in the glorious land which by his hand shall be consumed. . He shall also set his face to enter with the 8* 90 LECTURE VI. strength of his whole kingdom, and upright ones with him,” (or men of equal conditions, as it might have been rendered.) The Roman army, of which Pompey had the command, when he went into Egypt and Palestine, were composed of the sons of all the principal citizens of Rome, who were, according to the laws of the republic, to serve ten years in the service of their country before they were admitted to receive the high offices which they might afterwards be candidates for. This accounts fop the language just road in the text — “ upright ohes with him.” And u thus shall he do: he shall give him the daughter of woman, corrupting her; but she shall not stand on his side nor be for him.” When Pompey went into Egypt, he found that country divided between Ptolemy and Cleopatra. Pompey, after he had made them tributary to the Romans, compelled them to settle their differences by marriage. Afterwards, when Julius Caesar came against Pompey with his western veterans, with whom he had conquered the west part of Europe, and in the battle fought between these two contending rivals, Pompey and Julius Caesar, Cleopatra had the command of the Egyptian fleet on the side of Pompey; but in the midst of the action she deserted over to Caesar with her whole fleet, which turned the fortune of the day in favor of Julius Caesar. Pompey then fled into the Grecian isles, where he compelled many of them to declare in his favor. But Caesar soon followed him, and at the battle of Pharsalia completely defeated Pompey, who was slain by a band of pirates or robbers. This part we have in the 18th verse, “After this shall he (Pompey) turn his face unto the isles, and shall take many; but a prince (Caesar) for his own behalf shall cause the reproach offered by him (Pompey) to cease; without his own (Caesar) reproach he shall cause it to turn upon him, (Pompey:) 19th verse, “ Then he (Caesar) Bhall turn his face towards the fort of his own land; but he shall stumble and fall, and not be found.” The history of Caesar’s death is familiar to every school-boy. After he had conquered Pompey, he returned to Rome, eutered the city in triumph, and a few days after, when he was about to be crowned Emperor, he was slain in Christ’s second coming. 91 the senate-house, before Pompey’s pillar, by his own friends; “he stumbled and fell, and was not found.” 20th verse, “ Then shall stand up in his estate a raiser of taxes, in the glory of the kingdom; but within a few days he shall be destroyed, neither in anger nor in battle.” This verse describes Octavius Cffisar, who first taxed the Roman provinces, Judea being taxed (see Luke ii. 1, 5). when our Savior was born; but Octavius Cesar, afterwards called Augustus Cffisar, was not slain like his uncle Julius, nor like his successors ; but died peaceably in his bed. 21st and 22d verses, u And in his estate shall stand up a vile person, to whom they shall not give the honor of the kingdom; but he shall come in peaceably, and obtain the kingdom by flatteries. And with the arms of a flood shall they be overthrown from before him, and shall be broken; yea, also, the Prince of the covenant.” In these two verses we have the history of Tiberius Caesar, who was the successor of Octavius Cesar in the Roman empire ; and was one of the most vile, profligate, bloody tyrants that ever sat upon the Roman throne. History gives us the same account, that he obtained by flatteries the kingdom, and afterwards ruled it by tyranny. He also assumed the name of Augustus. In his reign Christ was crucified, “the Prince of the covenant was broken.” Here ends tbe history of the seventy weeks. This prophetic history being divided into four divisions, the first part is 'be history of the seventy weeks/ to which we have been attending, which began in the seventh year of Arta-Jerxes’ reign, and ended in the 22d year, of Tiberius "®8ar*s, being four hundred and ninety years; the second P^t will be the history of Pagan Rome, which begins *ith the first league made between the Romans and the Jews, and will carry us down six hundred and sixty-six ye&rs. You will likewise observe that the angel goes Jack and begins this history with the league. 22d verse, And after the league made with him he shall work deceitfully: he shall come upland shall become strong *ith a small people.” Let us in the first place inquire, Between whom is this le®gue made ? The Romans must be one of the contract- 62 LECTURE VI. ing parties, from the fact that the angel is talking about that government before and afterwards, and that the fourth or Roman kingdom was to work deceitfully, “ and through his policy also he shall cause craft to prosper in his hand.” See Daniel viii. 25. And also from the circumstance of their being a small or republican people at first, Rome, too, was small in territory at this time, although many nations and kingdoms were tributary unto them; but who was the other contracting party in this league? I answer, It must have been some people whom the angel had in view; and he, Daniel, had the same in view, or he would have given some mark by which Daniel or the reader could have come to a just conclusion. Yes, this was the case; for he had told Daniel in the very outset, “ Now I am come to make thee understand what shall befall thy people in the latter days.” See our text. This, then, is the key that unlocks the whole subject, and explains two important points in the vision. First, it teaches who are the subjects of this vision; and, secondly, when and how the Roman kingdom became connected with the vision. If I am thus far correct, then the angel has reference to the league made with the Romans 158 years B. C., when the Grecian general Baclii-des withdrew his army from before Jerusalem, and never returned to vex the Jews any more, as says 1 Maccabees ix. 72. For the history of this league, you can read 1 Maccabees viii. and Josephus B. XII. chap. x. sec. 6. This league was the first ever made between the Romans and the Jews, according to Josephus. It took effect 158 years B. C., when, the Grecian kingdom, at the command of the Romans, ceased to trouble the Jews, and the Romans began to work deceitfully. Then began the Pagan beast to exercise his influence over the people of God. And now let us pursue his history as given by the angel Gabriel, 24th verse, “He shall enter peaceably, even upon the fattest plapes of the province ; and he shall do that which his fathers have not done, nor hie fathers’ fathers; he shall scatter among them the prey, and spoil, and riches ; yea, he shall forecast hi? devices against the strong holds even for a time.” This verse Christ’s second coming. 93 is a true history of the rise of the Roman power; they did scatter the prey and spoil among the provinces, and conquered more nations by their munificence and benevolence in the outset, than by their arms or battles. Rome bought more nations by riches and intrigue than she conquered in war; and she compelled the Jews to submit for about two centuries to that which no nation before had been able ever to do, viz., to be ruled by kings, governors, and high priests, appointed by the Romans, and not chosen by themselves. 25th verse," And he shall stir up his power and his courage against the king of the south with a great army; and the king of the 8outh shall be stirred up to battle with a very great and mighty army; but he shall not stand; for they shall forecast devices against him.” This is a description of the war in Egypt, under the government of Mark Antony ftnd Octavius Ctesar. “ Yea, they that feed of the portion of his meat shall destroy him, and his army shall overflow, and many shall fall down slain.” When Antony went into Egypt with a great army, Cleopatra, then queen of Egypt, deserted her husband’s standard, as she had before Pompey’s, and went over to Mark Antony *Rh all the forces she could command, by which means Egypt became an easy prey to the Romans ; so that a Part of the Egyptian army, that fed of the portion of the king’s meat, were the means of destroying the kingdom. “ And both of these kings’ hearts shall be to do mischief, mid they shall speak lies at one table; but it shall not prosper; for yet the end shall be at the time appointed.” These two kings are Antony and Octavius, their characters agreeing with the description given in this passage ; history agreeing that they ruled over the Romans for a season jointly, and that they were both of them great deceivers and liars. History also informs us that after Antony had conquered Egypt, he and Octavius quarrelled; Octavius Cesar declared war against Antony, marched an army towards Egypt, and at the. bat-tie of Actium defeated Antony and Cleopatra’s forces, afterwards took Alexandria in Egypt, and Antony and Cleopatra put themselves to death, and Egypt becomes ft Roman province. This was thirty years before the LECTURE VI. 94 birth of Christ 28, “ Then shall he return into his land with great riches; and his heart shall be against the holy covenant; and he shall do exploits and return to his own land.” Then Octavius returned to Rome. And the next exploit that this fourth kingdom would do would be against the holy covenant. They, by their authority, crucified our Savior, persecuted the saints, and destroyed Jerusalem; and this fills up the acts of this Pagan history until towards the close of the reign of the Pagan beast. 29, “At the time appointed, * he 6hall return, and come toward the south; but it shall not be as the former, or as the latter.” The time appointed must mean the length of the reign of this beast, whose history the angel is now giving, which I have shown, in a former lecture, is 666 years. “ He shall return, and come towards the south,” not as the former or latter. Not as the Romans going into Egypt, the latter; nor the Syrians going into Egypt, as the former; but Italy must now take her turn to be overrun by the northern barbarians. Therefore the angel says, in the next verse, see 30, (“ For the ships of Chittim shall come against him; ”) the meaning of which is, that the Huns, which lived on the north of the Adriatic Sea, the place where it was anciently called Chittim, under their leader Attila, (sumamed the Scourge of God,) should ravage the Roman empire. This was fulfilled 447 years after Christ u Therefore he shall be grieved and return, and have indignation against the holy covenant; so shall he do; he shall return, and have intelligence with them that forsake trie holy covenant” About the time that Attila ravaged the Roman empire, Christians conceived it to be a judgment of God upon the Romans for their idolatry and wickedness, refused to bear arms in favor of the Roman emperors, which led to a bloody persecution of Christians, and a renewal of Pagan rites and sacrifices, which had been partially suspended during the reign of Constantine and succeeding emperors, except in the case of Julian the Apostate. “ And arms shall stand on his part,” that is, the force of the empire would be on the side of Paganism “ And they shall pollute the sanctuary of strength.” They, in Christ’s second coming. 95 this passage, mean the governments or kings, established on the fall of the Roman empire in the west, by the Huns, Goths and Vandals of the north. “ By sanctuary of strength,” is meant Rome. And it is said that at the time that Rome was taken, men, women, and children were sacrificed to their Pagan deities. “And shall take away the daily sacrifice.” The angel is giving us a history of what these kings would do, when Rome should be divided into its ten toes, or when the ten horns should arise, which the angel has heretofore explained to mean ten kings, Daniel vii. 24. This is evident by his using the plural pronoun instead of the singular, as before, or as he will following, when the little horn obtains the power. To u take away the daily sacrifice,” means to destroy Paganism out of the kingdom. This was done by those ten kings who now ruled the Roman empire, and would for a little season, until they should give their power to the image beast “ And they shall place the abomination that maketh desolate.” They, meaning the ten kings, shall place, shall put in the room or place of the daily sacrifice or Pagan beast which would now receive its death wound by the sword, that is, by the civil power of this fourth kingdom, under the reigning power of these ten kings; for John tells us, Rev. xvit 12,13, “ And the ten horns which thou sawest are ten kings, which have received no kingdom as yet; but thall receive power as kings one hour with the beast; these have one mind, (being all Pagans,) and shall give their power and strength unto the beastthat is, to support Paganism. Now, this was evidently fulfilled; for after the fall of the Western Empire, A. D. 476, and before A. D. 490, ten kings had risen upon the ruins, and formed ten separate kingdoms, the names of which I have before given; they all being Pagans, of course they supported that form of worship, until they were converted to die Christian faith, which happened within the 8pace of twenty years, Clovis, the king of France, having been converted and baptized in the year A. D. 496. Jly the year A. D. 508, the remainder of the kings were 96 LECTURE VI. which, begin _____________________ Ps reign a1.'i£56b. having reigned but a short our, says Jonn,) with the ten kings. We have now gone through with the angel Gabriel’s second part of the history, as we promised. I shall now go on with the illustration of the third part of his prophetic history, which is the history of the image beast, the djgfl j]y, iTPMUfl Qr wlmt " ills “the iife^Qn^fcltLdesolatg,” ^his b<^r would rule over tnekiSgaTof tne8S,?t?iJ and tread the church of God under foot forty-two months, or time, times, and a half, which is twelve hundred and sixty years, in common time, or, as the angel tells us in Daniel xii. 11, from the taking away the daily abomination to set up the abomination that maketh desolate, should be a thousand two hundred apfl ninety days, showing a ditterende ot thirty years from the statement of the actual reign of the image beast and the other, which includes all the time from taking away down through the setting up or reign of the image beast Therefore, to reconcile these two statements, ye p^ust cQprdiiffo thejff were 30 years from A. D- 5Q8r wh^n Papism ceased, before the image beast^or Papal Romg, wnpld begin hfiT IF mis is correct, tJmn the 1290 began 508, aijd would end us in 1798. But the reign o\' Papacy would not be set up, until A; D. 538, and would end us in the same year, A. D. 1798, being 1260. This, then, is the history the angel will give us next. 32, “ And such as do wickedly against the covenant shall be corrupted by flatterers; but the people that do know their God shall be strong, and do exploits.” The ecclesiastical historians tell us that in the beginning of the sixth century, about A. D. 538, a number of writers in that day undertook to prove that the Papal chair, together with councils of his approval, were infallible, and their laws were binding on the whole church. These writers were highly honored and flattered with promotion by the reigning powers ; while on the other hand there were many who opposed this power of the Pope and clergy, yh° were denounced as schismatics and Arians, and driven out of the kingdoms under the control of the Romish Christ’s second coming. 97 church. 33, “And they that understand among the people shall instruct many; yet they shall fall by the sword, and by flame, by captivity, and by spoil many days.” Those who instructed the common people, and opposed the worshipping of images, the infallibility of the Pope and councils, the canonizing of departed saints, *ere persecuted by the civil: power, (the sword,) were burned by order of the ecclesiastical courts established hy the laws of Justinian, emperor of Constantinople, *hose code of laws, published about A. D. 534, gave onto the bishop of Rome power to establish courts for this purpose, and many in the sixth century and subsequent down to a late period, “many days” suffered death, imprisonment, and confiscation of goods, in consequence of a difference of opinion in matters of religion, by the tyranny of this abomination, “ the bloody city winch has feigned over the kings of the earth.” 34, “ Now, when they shall fall, they shall be helped with a little help \ but many shall cleave to them with flatteries.” This text agrees with one in Revelation xii. 16, “ And the ®erth helped the woman.” “But many shall cleave to them; ” that is, many men of the world would cleave to them, and professedly would flatter the true people of God that they were friendly at least to them, and by these means Satan carried on his wars against the children of God. 35, “ And some of them of understanding riiall fall, to try them, and to purge and to make them white, even to the time of the end, because it is yet for a time appointed.” This verse shows us that even Christians would be led into some of the errors of Papacy, and would be tried and purged, even to the epd of this lItoage beast’s reign, which time is appointed, as 1 have ^ready shown, to be “ time, times, and a half,” 1260 years, ?&ding A. D. 1798. 36, “ And the king shall do accord-% to his will; and he shall exalt himself and magnify himself above every god, and shall speak marvellous fhings against the God of gods, and shall prosper till the Judignation be accomplished, for that that is determined be done.” The king here spoken of is the sarao JJ8 Daniel’s little horn, which came up among the ten h°rns. It it the same that blasphemed the God of 9 98 LECTURE VI. heaven. It is mystical Babylon. Isa. xiv. 12—15; Rev. xiii. 5,6. The same Paul has described in his Epistle, 2 Thess. ii. 1—9; the same image beast which we have been examining the history of; and one thing is evident, that this beast will continue until the day that God pours out his indignation upon a guilty world in some form or other. 37, “ Neither shall he regard the God of'his fathers, nor the desire of women, nor regard any god; for he shall magnify himself above all. In this passage we have a plain description of Papacy; they do not worship the same gods the Pagans did — “ their fathersAnd their clergy are forbidden to marry; the Pope calls himself the vicegerent of God, or God on earth, having the keys of heaven, &c. 38, “ But in his estate shall he honor the god of forces; and a god whom his fathers knew not shall he honor with gold, and silver, and precious stones, and pleasant things* It is true that the Pope, for ages past, has had largo armies at his command, and always a body-guard to attend him in his capital; also, that they adorn tlieir pictures with gold, and silver, and precious stone3, and pleasant tilings, and that the gods they worship, such a* the images of Christ, apostles, and Virgin Mary, and canonized saints, were not known to Pagan worshippers. 39, u Thus shall he do in the most strong holds with a strange god whom he shall acknowledge and increase with glory; and he shall cause them to rule over many, and shall divide the land for gain.” These patron saints, which th^^Fope divided among the several nations of the earth, and in almost every family, each one having their patron saint to rule over them, by the appointment of the Pope, were strange gods indeed; and rational beings might truly wonder when they beheld the power of this last abomination over tli® minds and judgments of mankind. And then, again, to see the number of kingdoms, provinces, states, and territories, which the Pope has sold to enrich his coffers without any more right or title to them than we have to the land in the moon, must convince every one that the description given must apply to the church of Rome or Christ’s second coming. j fte Pope, who claims to exercise this great authority by I his crazy title to St. Peter’s chair. ~We have now arrived to the end of the third division of the angel’s history; for the next verse tells us, u and at the time of the end,” meaning the end of his power, to tread on the church by his civil authority, or reign over the kings of the earth, and to dispose of lands for gain I have brought you down, my kind hearer, through a long prophetic history of more than 2200 years, and l&nded you to the yean A. D. 1798. .when tfre Pope of Rome lost his civil po^i\ In the beginning df fhe flSe 'ffSbruaiy, a French general, Berthier, entered Rome with a French army without resistance, deposed the Pope, abolished the Papal government, and erected the republic of Italy. The Pope, being taken prisoner, was carried a prisoner by them first to Sienna in Tuscany, from thence to Florence, afterwards to Grenoble, and then to Valence, in France, where he died on the 19th of August, 1799, since which time the Pope of Rome has exercised no more of his former power over any of the kings in Europe, or the Protestant church. We shall now close our lecture on this history for the present, reserving the remainder of Gabriel’s interesting history for another lecture. LECTURE VII. DANIEL rii. 8. And I heard, but I understood not: then said I, O my Lord, what shall be the end of these things 1 Previous to Daniel’s asking the question contained in our text, he had been taught, as we have seen in our former lecture, not only the history of future events as they would succeed each other down to the end of the world, but he had the regular order of time specified in the duration of the little horn, w time, times, ana a half” as in Daniel vii. 25, and xii. 7. But he had been informed of many events which should transpire after his “ time, times, and a half ” should be finished, and not having the length of the ragan beast, or daily abomination, given tonim at all, he could not tell or understand whereabouts in his grand number of 2300 days, the end of the civil power of the little horn, or Papal Rome, carried him: there was no rule given Daniel yet by which he could tell when or how long after the crucifixion of the Messiah before the daily sacrifice abomination would be taken out of the way, and the power of the little horn be established, and the abomination of desolation set up. Be sure, Daniel had heard the whole history down to the resurrection, and had the whole vision specified in his 2300 days. But as he saw there were evidently three divisions of the time after the crucifixion or cutting off of the Messiah at the fulfilment of his 490 years, or 70 weeks, down to the end of his 1810 years, which would be the remainder of his total number of 2300 years, alter his 70 weeks should be fulfilled} CHRIST S SECOND COMING. 101 afid having only 1260 of those years accounted for by the reign of his little horn, leaving five hundred and fifty years to be applied on the Pagan beast, and for the events which we are to attend to after the Papal beast lost his civil power, — therefore the propriety of Daniel’s saying in our text, “ Then I heard, but I understood not” He understood not how this time was divided, and especially,- how much time would be taken up in the last division of the angel’s history, beginning with the 40th verse of the 11th charter, where our last lecture ended, and finishing with th^ context of the 12th chapter, the verse previous to our text That this is the plain and significant meaning, is evident from what follows our text, viz., the angel’s answer to Daniel’s question,u What shall be the end of these things ? ” And her said, Go thy way, Daniel; for the words are closed up and sealed till the time of the end; ” that is, my mission is closed, the words are finished, and registered in the roll of God’s *ord, they are sealed, that is, made sure, unalterable, *ill stand until every word has its fulfilment, which in the end shall be accomplished; not, as some suppose, that Daniel’s prophecy is seeded, closed up, out of sight, Mid cannot be understood. This is not the way of God’s dealings with us; for if this had been the angel’s meaning, he would have said to Daniel as he did to John in similar circumstances, Rev. x. 4, “ Seal up those things, Mid write them not” But it is the reverse; for he says m the next verse, 10,u Many shall be purified, and made *hite, and tried; but the wicked shall do wickedly, and °one of the wicked shall understand.” None of the 'ricked shall understand what? Why, the things before spoken of — Daniel’s vision and instruction. Very well, then the wicked do right for once. Certainly, if your exposition of the former text is correct, that it is hid, and cannot be known, they are obeying the command of the Migel, close up and seal the words; and surely they will Hot be condemned for obedience. u But the wise shall Understand,” says the angel. Whht shall the wise understand ? They shall understand the vision; or the *ords before spoken by the angel at least But say you, “Daniel was commanded to seal up and close the words, 102 LECTURE VII. so that they may never know them till the end, and the wise understand them. How can these things be ?” I answer, These texts explain each other. There is a close connection in the word of God which must always be kept in view, and if our exposition of one contradicts another of the same connection or of like import, we may know there is a wrong in us. Now, one thing is certain, — “ all Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished u4b all good works.” And “secret things belong to God; but things revealed, to us and our children.” And when I see pretended servants of God, men of great pretence to piety and knowledge, disputing long and sharp on some metaphysical point m theology which they nor their, hearers can never understand, and when they are asked to explain the plain declarations of God, put it off, by saying, it is sealed up, and we ought not to tiy to understand it, it makes me think of iEsop’s fable of the dog in the manger; of Christ’s reproof to the scribes and Pharisees, “ Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men; for ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in;” and this passage in Daniel, “The wicked shall ao wickedly; and none of the wicked shall understand; but the wise shall understand.” You may depend upon one thing, when you hear such declarations as the above from the pulpit, that the speaker does not love his Bible as well as he loves his own popularity, and studies to support his faith, the popular writers and standard authors of the day, more than the divine revelation of God. But God is now trying his people; he is now giving them a great rule to know their love for his word. If the word of God is to them foolishness, and they take more delight in the popular writers of the day, they may depend upon it they are stumbling at that stumbling-stone. But the angel tells us that many shall be purified and made white. Tliis was good news to Daniel, and ought to he so to us; for it is the declaration of God through the medium of Gabriel, his messenger. “ And from tbe Christ’s second coming. 103 tune that the daily sacrifice shall be taken away, and the abomination that maketh desolate set up, there shall be a thousand two hundred and ninety days. Blessed is he > that waiteth, and cometh to the thousand three hundred * and five and thirty days: but go thou thy way till the/ end be, for thou shalt rest, and stand in thy lot at the end of the days.” Now Daniel had all he could ask for; now he could understand the time, and the length, and part of every division which the angel had given him in his instruction, so far as to fill up his vision *of 2300 years, (as we shall call them, having proved in a former lecture that they ought to be so reckoned, and have been so fulfilled.) He/has now learned that, to begin and reckon back from The reTOn^ti^wW^^wellJ^KB; and ouLwnen the daily sacrifice abomination would be *way. Therefore take 1335 years from 1810 Fears, would leave 475 years; and he could reckon from the end of the 70 weeks, or 490 years, to the end of Pagan Home, would be 475, from thence to the time he should *tand in his lot, would be 1335 years. Then by adding 490 475 1335 Would make the sum total of his whole vision 2300 years. And now, let us suppose he wished to know when the abomination of desolation would end, and when it would begin. He has only to take his number, one thousand two hundred and ninety, as given him by his angel, from his 1335, thus,— 1335 / 1290 45 and he finds that 45 years before the resurrection the little horn would lose his civil power. Now, let him take his time, times, and a half, and add, say 1260 years to 45 years, and he will find that the ‘‘little horn began bis reign 1305 years before the resurrection, and 30 years after the daily sacrifice abomination wfts taken away. And now he is prepared to give his vision and 104 LECTURE VII. the instruction of the angel all their proper bearings, and prove it thus: — 1st The seventy weeks or 490 years to the crucifixion of Christ, , ..........................490 Prom crucifixion to taking away daily abomination, 475 From taking away Pagan rites to the setting up abomination of desolation*.....................30 From setting up Papal power (time, times, and a half) to the end of his civil reign, . . . *1260 From the taking away the Papal civil rule to the ' resurrection,................................45 Now add these together, and you will have the whole 2300 years of Daniel’s' vision. Do you not, kind hearer, see by this mode, and by these last numbers given him, Daniel could learn every part and division of the* whole history down to the time when he should stand in his lot ? But now, for his instruction, we will suppose Daniel understood our mode of reckoning time; he might have given it to us in this way: — “ . plWard* abomination wilLfe m I flfall atftndJg s;jr fie that Waite* ancTcomeui ro'Ifie tfiotTsand three hundred and five and thirty days.” Rev. xx. 6. “ Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection.” We are now prepared to give you the remainder of the angel’s instruction to Daniel, beginning where we left off in our last lecture; and you will likewise now take notice that it is the last division, and what we now shall read to you must all take place in 45 years, between the years 1798 and 184;!. So that you may, almost all of ypu, uidge for yourselves, upon your own observations, whether these things are so or not We therefore begin at the 40th verse of the 11th chapter of Daniel, “and at the time of the end” of the papal civil power. Now, another person has obtained Christ’s second coming. 105 this civil power: this was Bonaparte, the ruler of the French nation. This year of which we are now treating was the very year that the French destroyed the power of the pope, and Bonaparte began his extraordinary career in conquest and authority; and it was evident, J>y his success and fortune, that he was raised up by (rod himself for some great and special purpose; and through him, as an instrument, and by means of the French revolution, the shackles that had bound more than half of Europe in bigotry, superstition, and tyranny, were burst asunder, and the inquisition and Papacy lost their power and terror over the bodies and minds of men. At this time, then, our prophecy begins, and Bonaparte is the person designated by the pronouns he and him in the prophecy: “ And, at the time of the end, shall the king of the south push at him; and the king of the north shall come against him like a whirlwind, with chariots, and with horsemen, and with many ships.” This is a description of an alliance entered into by the king of Sardinia, Italy, and Spain, in the south, and Great Britain, in the north, for six years. England engaged, in this treaty, to pay the king of Sardinia 200,000/. per annum to furnish an army of horse and a large fleet The command of the fleet was given to Lord: kelson. Various was the success of the allies in the south. Spain had to recede, and finally joined the French. The king of Sardinia had to leave his territories on the consent, and shut himself up in the island of Sardinia. The king of Naples fled to the island of Sicily, after making n vigorous push at the French, in November, 1798, and getting possession of Rome, while Lord Nelson ; took and destroyed the French fleet, near tae mouth of {he Nile, the same year. But the French soon retook Italy; and this broke tip this league, and the French Gained masters of almost all that belonged to the jVestem Empire of Rome, except Great Britain. “ AM he shall enter into the countries, and shall overflow, and over,” was literally accomplished. £ tf He shall enter into the glorious land,” (or land of delight, as it might have been translated.) This, I have no doubt, means Italy. Bonaparte fought some of his most bril- LECTURE VII. 106 liant battles in this delightsome country J)The battle of Marengo was fought, if I mistake not, ill June, 1800, after crossing the Alps, an impassable barrier between France and Italy, as it was supposed by his enemies. “And many countries shall be overthrown.” It is said that Bonaparte conquered three kingdoms at the battle of Marengo. “But these shall escape out of his hands, even Edom and Moab, and the chief of the children of Ammon.” Bonaparte, when he went into Egypt, calculated to march into the East Indies: he advanced‘into Syria, where, after gaining some advantages, he received a decisive check before St John d’Acre, when he was obliged to raise the siege, and retreat back to Egypt with the shattered -remains of his army. So the country once inhabited by the Edomites, Moabites, and Ammonites, “ escaped out of his hands;” 42, “ He shall stretch forth his hands also upon the countries; and the land of Egypt shall not escape.” “ Hcmds” signifies power; and what country on the globe did not more or less feel the effects of Bonaparte’s power? Egypt, surely, did not escape; for all Lower Egypt was conquered by his arms. 43, “But he shall have power over the treasures of gold, and of silver, and over all the precious things of Egypt” Bonaparte, in his conquest of Egypt, levied contributions upon the inhabitants of the country sufficient to support and pay his troops, and brought away much with him. “ And the Lybians and Ethiopians shall be at his steps.” When he first went into Egypt, he landed his army on the coast of what was anciently called Lybia, and his last battle wa3 fought in Upper Egypt — what the ancients called Ethiopia. So both of these places were at his steps, although neither of them was fairly conquered, as was Egypt 44, “ But tidings out of the east, and out of the north, shall trouble him.” This was what was at that time called the Holy JSUance, This was composed of most of the kings on the north and east of France, which finally proved the overthrow of the power of Bonaparte, and the restora tion of the Bourbons on the throne of France. The news of this alliance caused him much trouble, and also his immediate return to France. “ Therefore CHRIST s SECOND COMING. 107 he shall go forth with great fury to destroy aod utterly to make away many.” This is a plain description of Bonaparte’s campaign into Russia. He went forth with an army of 400,000 men, with fury, in order to break up the Holy Alliance. He did utterly destroy Moscow, and laid desolate the country through which he passed. He made away with more than 200,000 of his own army, besides the destruction of his enemies, say many “'thousands more. Such a destruction of life and property in one campaign was never known since the days of the Persians and the Greeks. 45/ “ And he shall plant thg\ MimmMk hpR ^opnteip” (ojr.poujit$m,Qf delight) (Ijis was lit-) fmSUed. in May &£ .180$, when Bonapffo. was/ downed king of Italy at Milan, — Italy hfingjtetween^ To “plant the tabernacle of his palace ” f ^ouTd be to establish him as king.) * Yet he shall comqj to his end, and none shall help him.” This closes the bistory of one of the most powerful monarchs—the most ambitious and fortunate of warriors, and a man of unbounded sway — that modem times had ever produced. He had destroyed, perhaps, more than 3,000,000 lives; be had dethroned more than one half of the kings of Europe ; he had disposed of kingdoms at his will; all nations had been under the control of his decrees; he bad commanded more than two millions of veteran soldiers ; the treasures of the four quarters of the globe lay at his feet “ Yet he shall come to liis end, and none shall help him.” How soon the tale of his end is told! A breath, and his end is come; a vapor, and he is gone. G God! the breath of kings is in thy hand; thy word goeth forth, and it is done; thy decree passeth, and it 8tands fast “ He shall come to his end, and none shall help him.” Where are those kings that courted his alliance? Where the twenty millions of French who idolized him as a god ? Where are those two millions veteran soldiers whose bodies had been used as ramparts to mount him to glory ? Where are his five breth-ren who sat in the seat of kings by his power ? Where j* his mother, made a rich dowager by his munificence ? Where, O where is the empress Maria Louisa, and the 108 LECTURE VII. young king of Italy ? a And none shall help him.” Yes, Bonaparte was by the British, after he had resigned himself into their hands, carried a prisoner to the island of St Helena, in the Atlantic Ocean, where he died in exile. “ He shall come to his end, and none shall help him.” , By this history the kings of the earth may learn, that j God can, with perfect ease, when the set time shall come, break them and their kingdoms to pieces, so that the *fin also, hast thou them that hold the doctrine of the Nicolaitans, which thing I hate.” This doctrine was promulgated in the fourth century. See the church his* tory, and our former observations. u Repent, or else 1 will come unto thee quickly, and will fight against them with the sword of my mouth.” Again the. Lord calls for repentance, and threatens the judgments of his word upon BTem’'that obey not. 01 may we take warning, my brethren, and tempt not the heavy judgments of God upon us, for our idolatry and fellowship of that which is not the religion of Jesus. “ He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches. To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden manna, and will give him a white stone, and in the stone a new name written, which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it” Again, all that have ears are oommanded to hear, and those wfio remain faithful, that do not fall away, receive a promise of spiritual food, and a name and righteousness which none can know but they who receive it 18, “And unto the angel of the church in Thyatira write.” The signification of Thyatira is, a “sweet savor of labor or sacrifice and contrition,” and is a description of the church, after she is driven into the wilderness by the anti-Christian beast This church lasted until about the tenth centuiy; and little of her history is known to the world; but some authors have pretended to trace her into the north-west part of Asia, and in the north-east port of Europe, where they lived until about the tenth century, unknown unto the rest of the world, or taking but little concern with the nations around them. Yet it is said they retained religion in its puri Christ’s second coming. 141 ty, and held to the doctrines of the word of God. At any rate this church is represented as being in a state of heavy trial) and subject to seduction by some power represented by that unman Jezebel, of which I shall speak in its place. “ These things saith the Son of God, who hath his eyes like unto a flame of fire, and ids feet are like fine brassrepresenting, as in all the other declarations to the churches, that the character addressing them is no less than the mighty God, the omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent Jehovah, who says, “ I know thy works, and charity, and service, and faith, and patience, and thy works; and the last to be more than the first.” When this church existed, which was when anti-Christ began her reign, there was great need of the exercise of those graces of the spirit which in this passage are enumerated. 1st. In works they had to, and without doubt did, combat the anti-Chnstian doctrines which began in the sixth century to overwhelm the Christian world, such as worshipping angels,. ^d saints, subjection to councils and bishops, ility of the Pope, &c. They, in charity, too, had many of their brethren to sustain while combatting these errors against the power 6f this beast They did much service in holding up the hands of their pious teachers and pastors who were not led away by this wicked one. How much faith, too, must they have been in possession of to have withstood the power of their councils, the excommunications of the Pope, end a majority of their brethren who had fell into Papal errors! how much “patience” to have remained unwavering amidst persecution when driven from their homes, their country and friends, into the wilderness, where God prepared a place fin: her! and how much more necessary were their last works to support each other in exile, poverty, and distress, the natural consequence of being driven from among men ! But these things were so, according to the best account we can obtain of those times. 20, “ Notwithstanding, I have a few tilings against thee, because thou sufferest that woman Jezabel, which call-eth herself a prophetess, to teach and to seduce my 143 LECTURE IX. servants to eommit fornication, and to eat things sacrificed to idols.” In this verse we have strong testimony that the exposition we have given of the seven churches is correct; for no character given the woman Jezebel will apply so exactly, as the woman sitting on the scarlet-colored beast, full of names of . blasphemy, “having a golden cup in her hand full of abominations and filthiness of her fornication.” Jezebel is a figurative name, alluding to Ahab’s wife, who slew the prophets of the Lord, led her husband *into idolatry, and fed the prophets of Baal at her own table. A more striking figure could not have been used to de* scribe the Papal abomination. See 1 Kings xviii. xix. xxi chapters. It is very evident from history, as well as from this verse in Revelation, that the church of Christ did sufier some of the Papal monks to preach and teach among them. See the history of the Waldenses. 21, “And I gave her space to repent of her fornicar tion, and she repented not” 22, “ Behold I will cast her into a bed, and them that commit adultery with her into great tribulation, except they repent of their deeds.” 23, “And I will kill her children with death; and all the churches shah know that I am he which searcheth the reins and hearts, and I will give unto eveiy one of you according to your works.” We cannot be mistaken in the character given to this mystical Jezebel, when we compare the descriptions here used, and the judgments threatened, with other passages of like import in Revelation, where mystical Babylon is described and threatened. See Rev. ix. 20,21, “And the rest of the men which were not killed by these plagues, yet repented not of the works of their hands, that they should not worship devils and idols of gold, and silver, and brass, and stone, and of wood, which neither can see, nor hear, nor walk: neither repented they of their murders, nor of their sorceries, nor of their fornication, nor of their thefts.” If these last texts mean anti-Christ, of which I believe none have any doubt, that is, no commentator that I have been nbie to consult, then it is equally evident that this woman* called Jezebel, in this prophecy of the church in Thyatira, means the same; and the conclusion is strong Christ’s secokik coming. 143 that the Thyatira church represents the churches in some age of anti-Christ, and the prophecy contained in the verses we have already quoted are the judgments God has and will pour out on that great city that rules over the kings of the earth, and has for ages past trodden the church under foot, and contaminated the people of God by her seductions, sorceries, and fornications. 24, * But unto you I say, and unto the rest in Thyatira, As many as have not this doctrine, and which have not known the depths of Satan as they speak, I will put upon you none other burden.” 25, “ But that which ye have already, hold fast till I come.” In these verses the church which have not fellowshipped the anti-Christian doctrine, and have not followed the practices of the Satanic blasphemies of their abominations, are here promised to experience no other persecution except what they may experience from this beast or woman Jezebel, which is another proof of this being anti-Christ; for the church in Thyatira has long been extinct, if there ever was such a church, and was when the man of sin was revealed; and yet they are promised to have none other harden un-t til lie come, as it is more than implied; and this power is ■ to stand until he comes. For Paul says, “ Whom he shall f consume with the spirit of his mouth and destroy with the : brightness of his coining.” This is Daniel’s fourth kingdom, which was to be broken without hand, and to he : carried away like the chaff of the summer threshing-floor ■ before the wind, that no place be found for it. 26, w And he that overcometh and keepeth my works unto the end, to him will I give power over the nations,” 27, (*‘ And he shall rule them with a rod of iron; as the vessels of a potter shall they be broken to shivers,) even as I received of my Father. And I will give him the morning star.” 29, “He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith to the churches.” In closing the prophecies to the churches, our divine Instructor carries them down to that day when he shall come to be admired in all them that believe, or to glorify his saints, to crown them his in his kingdom of glory, to break in pieces all the kingdoms of the earth as a potter’s vessel is broken to shivers, as the last text says, which 144 LKCTUBJE IX. proves that when Christ comes, he will bring all the saints with him, and this too when the kingdoms of this world and anti-Christ will be destroyed. And this proves another important point in which many good and pious people are greatly mistaken, viz^ that were will not be a thousand years’ happy reign previous to Christ’s coming the second time without sin unjo salvation. What happy reign can there be while the kingdoms of the earth stand as they now do; while the anti-Christian beast has power to seduce and draw the servants of God into idolatry, and lull to her serpentine folds thousands and tens of thousands human beings yearly, and deceive the nations by her siren song of mower church; while by means of her poison, subtle, secret, and deep, she is undermining and sapping the foundation of every religious sect but her vOwn; of every civil government but such as will resign their power unto her control ? And now, while I am speaking, she is exerting an influence in this once favored land, by means of her Jesuits, that will set father against son, and son against father, and drench our country in blood. Can this monster of murder, iniquity, and blood, retain her life, her standing in society, and we have a happy reign? No. She must and will sink like a mill-stone in the mighty deep, and God will avenge the blood of his servants. Her flesh must be eaten by dogs; yes, the kings of the earth shall eat her flesh, and God shall conssme her with fire before the happy reign comes. “ Come, Lord Jesus, come quickly ” LECTURE X. REV. 1. SO. Urn mystery of the seven stars which thou sawest in my right hand, and the seven golden candlesticks. The seven stars am the angels of the seven churches j and the seven candlesticks which thou sawest are the seven churches. In my former lectures I have given my views of four of the churches spoken of in the text Three more remain, which will complete the prophetic histoiy of the church through all the ages of the New Testament times until the state of trial shall be fulfilled, and the church shall enter her glorified kingdom in triumph. You have undoubtedly been led, by the comparison of the churches with the history thus far, to admire the agreement of the prophecy of the four churches with the history of the times; and truly this is one of the greatest evidences we have of the truth of the divine inspiration of revelation, and this evidence fixes the authenticity of the Scriptures heyond a reasonable doubt I shall now claim a few moments’ indulgence while I attempt to show where and when the other three churches have been or will be fulfilled. See Rev. iii. 1, “ And unto the angel of the church in Sardis write.” Song of joy, or that which remains, is the signification °f Sardis. The last signification is the one which the heaVenly Instructor has affixed himself to this church in the second verse, “Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain.” The church preceding this had passed a long, dark, and benighted age of the worldp 146 lecture X. and every writer of these times calls them the dark ages; and truly it was an age of superstition, bigotry) and ignorance; therefore we must reasonably suppose that but few were the true worshippers of God, and those few enjoying but a faint knowledge of divine things. But we will pursue our course. “ These things saith he that hath the seven spirit? of God, and the seven stars, I know tby works, that thou hast a name, that thou livest, and art dead.” The same character that has addressed the other churches, still gives, himself a quality by which we may know that it is he who is called God man, having the spirit of God, and as man governing his church as the star of Bethlehem. This church began about the tenth century, and lasted until the Reformation under Luther, Calvin, and others. They had a name, were called Waldenses, Valdenses, &c., “and art dead;” that is, she was or would be of little use to the rest of the world, hiding her influence within her own sphere, and of course did not manifest her light to the world, was inactive, idle, not per-forming the work which God had commanded them to perform, to set their light on the candlestand, that it might give light to alL This was the case with the church in the valleys of Piedmont during the time of thd crusades to the Holy Land; and while the Pope had th® command of all the armies of Europe, the church lived in these valleys of the Pyrenees,* nearly in the centre of Europe, unknowing and unknown. 2d verse, “ Be watchful, and strengthen the thing® which remain, that are ready to die; for I have not found thy works perfect before God.* Although the church in this age retained some of the leading principles of the gospel, the ordinances were in part retained among them, yet towards the close of this Sardis age, the Pap®1 monks and priests were sent in among them, and manf of the Waldenses became corrupted by the Papal beast and her doctrine. Therefore the admonition,w Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain.” . 3d verse, “ Remember how thou hast received ana heard, and hold fast and repent If, therefore, thoU shalt not watch, I will come on thee as a thief, and thou Christ’s second coming. Shalt not know what hour I will come upon thee.” The judgment threatened in this verse, “I will come upon thee,” is undoubtedly a prophecy of the persecution of the Wddenses and Lollards, by the Papal authority, and through the inquisition, as an instrument, about the close of the fourteenth century, when, for their departure from the true doctrine of the gospel, and the comnpands of God, they were persecuted and scattered among all nations, so that by the judgments of God, for their transgressions, they were made instruments in the hands of God of spreading the knowledge of the gospel among the nations, which they ought to have done in obedience to his word, and for the love of souls. And these judgments served the double purpose of punishment for sin, and opening a door for a more general display of aal-, vation. 4th verse, “Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments, and they shall walk with me in white, foi* they are worthy.” There were a few even in this age of moral darkness who followed Christ in his laws and ordinances, and1 they receive the promise of justification before God, “ walk with me in white.” 5th verse, “He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment, and I will not blot ofit his name out of the book of life; but I will confess his name before my Father and before his angels.” Whenever the phrase, “ he that overcometh,” is used, it always implies, I think-in the Scriptures, that the persons addressed are, or will pass through a time of persecution; and in this text the church in this age is shown that those only who can endure tribulation and persecution will be acknowledged at the bar of God as the children of faith. And then this church is again warned to hear and believe what the Spirit saith to the churches. 6th veree, “ He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith to the churches.” I shall now attempt to show to what age we may calculate the Philadelphia church should answer, and when this prophecy was fulfilled. 7th verse, “ And to the angel of the church in Phila- 140 LKTURE X. delphia write* These things saith he that is holy, he that is true, he that hath the hey of David, he that openeth and no man shutteth, and shutteth and no man openeth.” This verse is a description of the character addressing the church and gives an account of his holiness, his veracity, authority, and power, and leaves us without a doubt that it is Jesus the eon of David, the Holy One of Israel, the faithful and true witness, he that hath all power in heaven and in earth. And he thus addresses them, 8th verse, “I know thy works: behold, I have .set before thee an open door, and no man can shut it, for thou hast a little strength, and hast kept my word, and hast not denied my name.” The signification of the name of this church, Philadelphia is Tmdherly hvt, and tjus age began a^i ofthejtefbi^tion; for then GoTopened an effectual door for the gospel to be spread which no man or set of men fc*s been able to shut And the early reformers displayed a zeal and fearlessness in their cause which astonished their friends and confounded their enemies. At this time, too, Chris* tian love and fellowship was evidently one of the strongest marks of the day and manifested that the work was of God. 9th verse, “ Behold, 1 will make them of the synagogue of Satan which say they are Jews and are not, but do lie.” The characters here spoken of axe the same a? those who sit in Satan’s seat, who profess to be Christians, but are anti-Christians; they are worshippers of the Papal beast, professing to be the mother churchy but are only that part which are fallen away, as Paul has told us, “there should come a falling away first, and then the man of sin should be revealed, who opposeth* (or is anti,) and exalteth himself (calling themselves Jews, a figurative expression, or name for Christian) above all that is called God.” u Behold, l will make them to come and worship befQie thy feet, and to know that I have loved thee.” This sentence shows that anti-Christ would he humbled in this age of the church and brought to take the back ground, or in some measure lose her civil power over the Protestant church and be humbled at bar feet Ha* not thin prophecy been accomplished Christ’s second coming. 149 strictly according to the letter ? Witness Grefit Britain, Germany, and other nations. And to this day she has not been able to bring into subjection any of the Protestant states, and is only permitted to dwell among them by toleration. And although within a few years past she reems to be making an effort to regain her lcet power and authority, yet it is but a last struggle, a dying gasp; for soon she must and will fall, to rise in civil power no more forever. 10th verse,a Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of temptation which shall come upon all the world to try them that dwell upon the earth.” This, part of the prophecy was fulfilled on or before the French revolution, when Atheism and Deism made such rapid progress through Europe or the Roman government, which in prophecy is called the earth. See Rev. xii. 9. And it is a feet, that through this age of profligacy and corruption, the church retained her principles as pure and with as little defection as any age in modern times; although men 6f the world were led away by the plausible writings of Voltaire, Hume, Tom Paine, and others, yet it had no effect on the Christian church: and the promise, u I will keep thee from the hour of temptation, was fully and faith-felly accomplished; and the very means that Satan used to destroy the religion of Jesus Christ, or “the twelve fishermen,” was the means of bringing the church out of the wilderness. And those governments of the world which had for more than twelve centuries persecuted the children of God, now granted free toleration for all ®sn to worship God according to the dictates of their own conscience. And from this period we may see the “angel flying through the midst of heaven having the everlasting gospel to preach to them that dwell on the earth.” Now the church began to awake to the subject of missions; and while the world was tempted and tried, tile kingdoms of the earth shaken to their centre, (yet Jot destroyed;) while the civil power of the mother of oarlots, the inquisition of Spain, and the horrible means °f torture, persecution, slavery, and cruelty, were all Wept away in one revolution, — the church, by the power 13 * 150 JLKCTURE X. of Him who had promised to “keep them,” passed tlirough the fiery ordeal without the smell of fire on her garments. 11th verse, “Behold, I come quickly; hold that feat which thou hast, that no man take thy crown.” In this verso we have notice of his second coming, and that it would be quickly; by which I understand that the age of the seventh church, which was yet to come, would be short, and the second coming of him, who will overcome and subdue all things, would be quickly. He likewise admonishes us to hold fast that which we have, giving us, as I understand, warning that the next age of the church would be an age of invention; of lo heres, of departure from the true faith, of denying the crown of the church, the twelve stars, the apostles’ doctrine. And amidst the. confusion of.the doctrines and revelations of the present day, if any one should inquire of me what sentiment it would be best for them to embrace, I would first point them to the Bible, and second, back to the fathers and teachers of the last centuiy, and say, Hold fast that they held; let no man take thy crown. Let us then, my brethren, be watchful, and remember “ him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my God, and be shall go no more out; and’ I will write upon him the name of my God, and the name of the city of my God, which is New Jerusalem, which cometb down out of heaven from my Gpd; and I will write upon him my new name.” The blessings promised in this text are to be realized when the New Jerusalem comes down from God out of heaven; then shall the spiritual bom child of heaven be a pillar in the temple of God, in that building made without hands; then, too, will he receive that rich inheritance that is laid up in heaven for those that love God, and there obtain that eternal crown, that immortal life which is now hid with Christ in God, and then and there realize that “ blessed hope at the f lorious appearing of the great God and our Savior esus Christ” “ And he shall go no more out ” of that glorious temple; no tempting devil there, for he will be chained; no persecuting kingdom, for they will “ all be destroyed ana carried away like the chaff of the sum®®* Christ’s second coming. 1» threshing-floor.” Then will he receive the Qgw name, “ The Lord our righteousness,” for the Lord is there. Then, too, a citizen of the glorified kingdom, the New Jerusalem, married to the Lamb, and shall live and reign with him forever and forever.'-“He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches.” This closes the prophecy to the sixth church; and now let us .see to it that we do not lose the blessings promised by refusing to hear what the Spirit saith to the churches. Hfiar, and your souls shall lir°,; disobey, turn a deaf ear, refuse the offered grace, rmd you will die ; for the ■eul that sinneth shall die. It now remains for me to show the age of the seventh or Laodicean church, and the characteristic marks of that church or age. And. if 1 am right in considering these churches m a mystical sense, as our text more than implies, and our arguments and references strongly prove, in my bumble opinion, then, this part of our subject becomes doubly interesting to us, who live in the very age of the fulfilment of this prophecy. Yes, my brethren, we live at the very time when the great head of the church says, 14th verse, “ And unto the angel of the church in Laodicea write, These things saith the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the beginning of the creation of God.” Laodicea signifies the judging of the people, and may bave reference to the church in its last stage, when God would pour out his justice and judgment upon a guilty world, and upon a haughty, proud, and self-exalted church, and spue them out of his mouth. This idea may be warranted from the subject in connection. The address to this church begins by showing that it is the closing up of this dispensation, by saying, “ These things saith the Amen.” It also teaches us that it commences the judgment, or prepares for a judgment, by bringing forward “ the faithful and true witness.” It also shows the universality of this judgment by the knowledge of the witness being “the beginning of the creation of God.” 15th verse, “ I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thon wert cold or hot” _To be 153 LECTURE 1. neither cold nor hot in religious things implies apro* fession of religion without a spiritual fife, or the middle way between the world and Christ; taking much pains after worldly things, to the neglect of spiritual things; endeavoring to move between the doctrine of Christ and the doctrine of men; taking the middle ground, as 1 havfe often heard it expressed. ' 16th verse, “ So thfen, because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth.’’ For this cause, that is, because they are engaged radre for show, honors, or profits of this world than for God, he I would spue them out of his mouth. The word spue is used in three places in Scripture, besides the one under ’consideration; in Levit xviii. 28, xx.22, Jer. xxv. 27; and in all these places stands connected with the judgments of Clod upon Israel, or the nations spoken of, and implies a shaking out or driving from their present standing, either among nations or in the kingdom of Christ, as the case may be. And this passage, I suppose, alludes to the time when God hath promised, saying* “Yet once more 1 Bhake not the earth only, but also heaven,” Heb. xii. 26. So we may expect a shaking of the church of Christ, if this is the age spoken of, that those things which cannot be shaken may remain. This, too, is the age when the wise and foolish virgins are sleeping and slumbering together. 17th verse, “ Because theu sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing, and know-est not that thou art Wretched* and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked.” Our heavenly Instructor has given us in this verse the reason why they are lukewarm; “ because thou sayest, 1 am rich.” The church in tins Laodicean state, like the rich man, will be laying up goods, or making-great calculations for the outward or worldly concerns of the church for many yeare to come, building places for worship, establishing colleges, high schools, academies, theological institutions, to raise tip a popular ministry, that the world may be pleased, the ministry well supported, and they become the most popular sect oT the nay, “ increased with goods.” Tliis, too, w the church. What shall be e&lled the goods of the CHRIST’S' SECOND COMING. church ? It is those contributions which are deposited for charitable and pious uses, such as Paul informed his brethren to lay by them in store on the first day of the *eek. These will be increased to a great and astonish-•ng degree in this age of the church. Theological Writings and publications, too, are the goods of the church: there will be a great increase of these. “ Come, *ee what great things we are doing,” will be the general language of the church, and the names of donors and the sums they contribute will be published through the *orld. “And knowest not that thou art wretched.” The corruptions of the church will be kept out of sight; pride, popularity, self-righteousness, depravity, will he the besetting sins of the members and great body of public professors, and few, very few of the jninistere of the churches will be valiant or bold enough to tell them the truth- “And miserable.” Real piety will be very httle enjoyed; the hopes of a large body of professor* *ill be bat the hope of a hypocrite. “ And poor.” Without a tried fiiith, suffering but little or no persecution, the church will lack those riches which are more precious than fine gold, the trial of their fiiith. “And blind,” without faith, living by things seen more than on the promises of God. “ And naked,” having on their own Righteousness. “I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried to the fire.” That is, tfie Amen, the faithful and true witness, counsels the Laodicean church to buy the gold hied in the fire, which may mean either that faith which *iU stand the fiery trial of temptation and persecution, 0r that truth which is like “ apples of gold in pictures ?f silver;” “that thou maycst be rieh; ” rich in faith or to the knowledge of the truth; “ and white raiment that Otou- mayest be clothed,” that raiment which John saw the saints in heaven clothed with, which is the righteousness of the saints, the imputed righteousness of Christ, “ the Lord our righteousness.” If it is not so, why counsel the church to buy of him? Yes, my brethren, are counselled to buy a raiment without spot or Crinkle, “ and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear.” Truly, when Christ comes, and we find, we* have been trusting in self, although we have called ourselves 154 ItECTURE X. by his name, we have worn our own clothing, and eat our own bread, and instead of being clothed upon, we shall find ourselves naked. Shall we not be ashamed before him at his coming, if we are in this situation when he comes? O, what an awful thought! Therefore let us now receive the further admonition, “ And anoint thine eyes with eye-salve, that thou mayest see.” To anoint the eyes, in a figurative sense, is to examine the truth and evidences of Scripture, that we may see clearly our state and standing as it respects our character towards God and our hope in his future aid, promises, and blessings, It is to see our sins, and feel the need of help, to lmow our weakness, and trust in his strength —in one word, it is to repent and believe in the gospel of Jesus Christ For he says, u As many as I love I rebuke and chasten: be zealous therefore and repent Here, then, is one comfortable promise to this lukewarm church. If there is any tried, chastened, penitent soul in this church, this Laodicean state or age of the church, they have the promise of his love, his everlasting love, his unchangeable love; his loving kindness he will not take from him, although he should u visit their transgressions with a rod, and their iniquity with stripes. Be zealous, therefore, brethren, and repent „ 20th verse, “^Behold, I stand at the door and knock. He that is the u Amen ” is bow at the door. In this I*' odicean age of the church he comes; he knocks by bis judgments, by the fulfilment of the signs, by his word, by all the means of grace that God has ever used to alarm the sleepy, slumbering virgins of his approach He gives the cautionary word, “ Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if any man hear my voice and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me.” In this passage of prophecy we are brought down to the marriage supper of the Lamb — another and a strong testimony that the churches are to be considered in a mystical sense, and the language or subject prophetical For this is certainly the saying of Jesus, the faithful and true witness; u for the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.” Rev. xix. 7—0, Let us rejoice and be glad, and give honor to him; for the m*1' Christ’s second coming. 155 riage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made herself ready. And to her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine linen, clean and white ; for the fine linen is the righteousness of saints. And he saith unto me, Write, Blessed are they which are called to the marriage supper of the Lamb. And he saith unto me, These are the true sayings of God.” We see, my friends, by the similarity of the sentiments given in the marriage aupper, and those admonitions ami prophecies to the Laodicean church, that they must mean one and the same event To hear the voice of the bridegroom, and to open the door, and go out to meet him, is the way which the bride makes herself ready > and his supping with them and they with him, shows that it is when Christ shall come, and live, and reign with them. u To him that overcometh will 1 grant tp sit with me in my throne, even as 1 also overcame, and am set down with my Father in his throne.” Here is another expression which proves we are brought down to the end of time, “ to him that overcometh.” What can the faithful and true witness mean by this expression ? He explains himself, “ even as I also overcame.” How did Christ overcome when he sat down with his Father? I answer, By bursting the bands of death, by conquering the grave, he arose a glorious conqueror, and was seated at the right hand of God. Then this is the true meaning of the text, to him, that hath part in the first resurrection, will I grant to sit with me in my throne. “ Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection; on such the second death hath no power; but they shall be kings and priests of God, and of Christ, and shall reign with him.” What light m*»y we not receive from the word of God, when taken together, when explained by its own lan-guage, when kept unbroken! “He that hath an ear, \ let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches.” This closes, what 1 call, and what Christ, I think, calls, a prophecy. “ Blessed is he that readeth, and they that 1 hear the words of this prophecy, and keep those things frKinh ova urritton ihorPin * fni* thp tlTTlP lfl of liarwl ^ and ition 156 LECTURE X. will close, the judgment will set, and the books will be opened; the hypocrites wiH be spued out of the church, and the sanctuary cleansed. Will the situation of the churoh, the character of Christians, the doctrines taught, and the signs of the times warrant us to believe that we live in the Laodicean age of the church ? Let us few a moment examine the evidence and see. 1st The situation of the church, enjoying peace in and among the kingdoms of the earth, enjoying all the privileges of citizens without persecution, making great and many improvements in her worldly concerns, rich in this world’s goods, having at her command many millions of funds, and almost swaying the destinies of the world; great, learned and rich men enlisting under her banners, conjxolling the fashions, customs, and laws of the day, swaying a mighty influence over the education of our youth, and giving a general tone to the literature of the world, increasing her demands for power, establishing bishoprics, presbyteries, national and state conventions, conferences, councils, associations, consociations, societies innumerable; and all these controlled almost exclusively by her clergy. May we not say truly,u She is rich and increased in goods ? ” But is this all ? No. Look at her colleges, theological schools, academies, depositories, public edifices, presses, theological writings and publications, in almost every nation, kingdom, state, and territory, and in this country in almost every county and town; and all this by contributions. Well may it be said, she has need of nothing. These things, too, among all sects and denominations, one cannot outdo another apparently, yet each is striving for the me3tery. 2d. The characters of Christians generally. In speak- J mg of the character of our brethren, it becomes the speak-er to be- very careful and unassuming, for God has not» made him a judge over his brethren. Therefore, to judge | this one is right, and that one wrong, we shall leave for. the Judgment seat of Christ But on a general scale surely we may be allowed to examine and compare our- j selves with the prophecies. In all ages back, Christians, when living godly, have been a poor, despised, persecu-j Christ’s second coming. 157 ted people, pilgrims and strangers in the world, plainly showing that this is not their continuing city, but that they are seeking one to come. But is it so now ? Have Rot professors generally, for more than thirty years, been seeking for the riches of this life, for the honors of the world, and following the fashions of the times as greedily as men of the world ? Yes. And can we distinguish a professor of religion in our public assemblies from a man of the world, except we are informed ? No. Where, then, do Christians plainly show they seek a better country? Nowhere. May we not live in the same neighborhood with professors for years, and not hear them recommend the religion they profess ? Yes. But do we not hear the same persons talk freely, flippantly, and zealously about the world, the politics and the fashions of the day? Yes. Is it not a general complaint with all of our churches, of coldness, of a want of spiritual life, and a great failure in active spiritual duties ? Yes. Has not a spirit of sloth and supineness seized upon professors generally ? Do not many think, if they have a hired servant to talk religion, and visit the widow and fatherless, and keep themselves unspotted from the World, for them it is enough? Yes. And does not all this, and much more which might with truth be said on this point, declare loudly that the professors of Christianity, generally, are in a lukewarm state ? Yes. We must respond, Yes. The doctrine iaughL Here again your speaker feels a diffidence in speaking on this subject, knowing that many great, learned, and good men differ on this point; but we must all stand or fall to our own Master, and I must answer how I speak or shun to declare the whole counsel of God. Your speaker believes that the depravity of the human heart, our dependence on God, and indebtedness to grace, are abundantly taught in the Scriptures. See Eph. ii. 4—13. But how stands, this doctrine with our public proclaimers at the. present day ? Some few may preach it, but there is more than ten to one who do not preach it, or* if they do, they so .cover it up by their plausible and specious reasoning, that the force of the doctrine and the object of the inspired 158 LECTURE X* writers are wholly lost We ore hew taught that man can make himself a Christian as easily as he can turn about in the highway; that obedience or baptism is regeneration ; that works are the medium of acceptance with God, and that the righteousness of Christ is not imputed. How can such doctrine be more clearly pointed out than it is by the “ faithful and true witness” to the Laodicean church P w And knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked.” That is, they know not their depravity.*. “1 counsel thee to buy of me (see here their dependence on God) gold tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich; and white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed, that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear; and anoint thine eyes with eye-salve, that thou mayest see.” Grace, grace, from the foundation to the top stone. Surely, my dear friends, no candid observer of the doctrine taught at the present day, but what must in his heart acknowledge that the doctrine taught by many, among the different sects, is the same described by our divine Master in the prophecy to the Laodicean church. The signs of the times. In the close of Christ’s instructions to the church under consideration, he says, “ Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if any man hear my voice,” &c. Daniel says, “ At that time shall Michael stand up, the great Pnnce that standeth up for the children of thy people.” And Christ Says, u For many shall > come in my name, saying, I am Christ, and shall deceive many.” These were particular signs given by Christ and the prophets. And how have these come to pass ? Witness the great and many reformations which for thirty years have progressed in our land, in Europe, and the islands of the seas. See also the word of God published, in whole or in part, among all nations. See the missionaries of the gospel running to and fro through the whole earth. Do not these indicate that Christ stands at the door, and that his voice has gone out even unto the ends of the world, and that Michael has stood up for the children of thy people ? Yes. Again: diow many new sects have arisen, how many false Christs have come in this blaze of gospel light, and are drawing away Christ’s second coming. 159 their hundreds and thousands after them! It is almost incredible, *rhen we take into view the light and knowledge under which we live; but all go to prove that Christ is nigh, even at the door. In reviewing our subject, we learn by the events of the Sardis church, and by the admonitions given, our duty to guard against the introduction of errors into the church, and to strengthen ourselves in the truth; and lik^rise of being active in all the duties of religion, that upt only have a name to live, but have the life and^ower of the gospel, that we may resist all the temptations and fiery darts of the enemies of the church. By the church of Philadelphia, we learn that if we keep the word of God and the testimony of Jesus Christ, he will keep us from those trials and judgments which he sends on an ungodly and rebellious people, and that God has opened a door for the spread of the gospel, which no power on earth will be able to shut, until the angel standing on the sea and on the land, shall swear that time shall be no longer. We also learn the importance of having brotherly love and perseverance in holy things, that no man take from us the crown which is laid up for those that love God, and which will be given to them who remain steadfast in Christ Jesus at his coming, which is promised quickly to this church. By the Laodicean church, we learn the important lesion that we cannot serve two masters; we cannot love the present evil world, and at the same time be the servants of God; that to be lukewarm in religion is to be cast out of his presence, and call down the vengeance of God’s final judgment upon our heads, and, while we may flatter ourselves that we are righteous, find to our ever lasting shame, that we are wretched, miserable, poor blind, and naked. Think, O think, my dear friends, you that are trusting In your own goodness, when that day of justice shall come, and the faithful and true witness shall stand against you, when your goodness shall pass away like the morning cloud, and the righteous Judge shall pronounce 160 LECTURE X. tiie dreadful sentence, Depart-—what must be your feelings! The world, which you here worshipped, is burning up; the friends with whom you here associated are gone to meet the Lord in the air, or are sinking with you into endless and hopeless misery. The Savior, whose name you are now ashamed to own, or whose righteousness you think you need not, is now your Judge, seated on a great white throne, from whose face the heavens and the earth shall dee away. Think, 0 sinner! where wilt thou be found! f f LECTURE XI. REV. t. 9, 10. And thdy sung a new song, saying, Tbou art worthy to take the book, and to open the seals thereof; for thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kind/ed, and tongue, and people, and nation; and hast made us unto our God kings and priests; and we shall reign on the earth. There is such harmony, beauty, and knowledge in every part of the word of God, that the Bible student, whose heart is interested in the sajne, has often, while reading, been led to stop and admire the order, wisdom, and light which burst upon his enraptured vision, at the Unfolding of the figures and truths which until that moment, perhaps, lay in darkness, doubt, arid obscurity, and seemed to be wrapped up in a mysterious veil that almost makes the reader quail, and come to the conclusion that he is treading on forbidden ground; but, perhaps, in an unexpected moment, the inspired penman, seem-ingly having anticipated our ignorance or darkness, throws out a spark of that live coal which had touched his lips, and our darkness is dispelled, ignorance vanishes before the fulness of knowledge of the word of God, and we stand reproved and admonished for our stupidity arid ignorance in the figures and truths before explained. Our text is a brilliant spark of that fire which is upon the altar between the cherubims, and gives us a clear ray of light to discover the allusion of the figures contained in die fourth and fifth chapters of this Dook. It is conveyed unto us by way of a chorus, like the angel’s 16S LECTURE XL song at the birth of our Savior in Bethlehem of Judea. It explains to us in a divine song what the four beasts are, and gives a key to unlock the mystery of the twenty-four elders, and clearly shows who opens the seals of the book. I shall, in illustrating this subject, inquire I. Who they were that sung mis new song; II. Show the song, and the occasion of it; and, III. Speak of the reign and the place where. I. We are to inquire who are the singers in this grand chorus. The prophet calls them M the ' four beasts,” or, as it might have been more properly translated, four animate orings; and the “four and twenty elders,” he also calls them tt saints,” See the 8th verse, “ And when he had taken the book, the four beasts and four and twenty elders fell down before the Lamb, having every one of them harps and golden vials full of odors, which are the prayers of the saints ” Then comes in our text, “ And they sung a new song,” &c. Thg four beagtg is ^figurative repres^ntAtinn of the whole N^^esES^ charactq^ J>ut jn cKdnoloj^r^n^enf!^ Qie^uf different sjafepf tngj titttfGgE cTffifcJfshoufd pasiln for pilcrijTiage in lEEe enter the visible kingdom of fierglortbus Redeemer, the New Jerusalem, and reign on the earth. And every individual Christian, who may live any length of time after his conversion, passes through some or all of these states of trial twelve pafri- nrchSfl whicILttie jaametimas called prophet^ and u# tweRe^^Ses of theJLam1>. Kir'it is said, we are bdtlTbn me^propfiets and apostles, Jesus Christ being the chief corner-stone; and figuratively it may represent the faithful and true ministers of Jesus Christ, the same as the twenty-four courses of the priesthood under the Jewish economy. See lChron.xxiv.7—19. And the four beasts are typified by the four grand divisions of the Jewish camp under Moses. The first, on the east, was to fellow the standard of Judah; that on the south side, and second in the march, was the standard of Reuben ; on the west side. Ephraim, and his, was the third standard in the march; on the north side was Dan’s Christ’s second coming. standard and Dan brought up the rear in the march of the Jews through the wilderness. What their several standards were, I cannot tell, except that of Judah, which marched in front, immediately after the ark, which in all probability was a lion. And our “first beast” under consideration was “ like a lion, and the second beast like a calf, and the third beast had a face as a man, and the fourth beast was like a dying eagle.” represent the four grand divisions of the gospel. cEurci^ The first "represents ST the apk&tolic age, when the church went forth, bold as a lion, preaching and proclaiming the gospel among all nations. The second state or division of the church was the times of persecution and slaughter by the Roman emperors, represented by the calf. The third state of the church was in Constantine’s day, when the church enjoyed privileges as a man, and became independent, and like a natural man, proud, avaricious, and worldly. The fourth and last state of trial was when the anti-Christian beast arose ; and, under the scourge of this abomination, the church having two wings given her, like the wings of an eagle, she new into the wilderness, where, a place being prepared for her, she is nourished from the face of the serpent a thousand two hundred and threescore days, Rev. xii.6,14. This of course would include the whole Christian church until Christ’s second coming, when anti-Christ will be destroyed, and the church delivered from all her foes, and brought into her New Jerusalem state, where John now sees in his vision the whole family of the redeemed, singing the grand chorus as in the verses following our text “ And I beheld, and I heard the Voice of many angels round about the throne, and the beasts, and the elders; and the number of them was ten thousand times ten thousands and thousands of thousands.” In this vision John has the same view which Daniel had in his vision. See Daniel vii. 10. Daniel sa w the same throne, and the same numbers stood before it; which proves, almost beyond a doubt that Daniel’s vision carries us into the eternal, immortal, and glorified 164 LXCTOUX XU state; 6m* John, in the next verses, carries us into thd eternal state of the righteous. 12th verse, u Saying with a loud voice, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honor, and glory, and blessing. And every creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that are in them, heard I saying. Blessing, and honor, and glory, and power, be Unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb forever and ever. And the four beasts said, Amen. And the four and twenty elders fell down and worshipped him that liveth forever and ever.” Nothing can be more evident than that John here Baw the whole family of the redeemed, as they will be after the first resurrection; for he gives the several situations of every part of the whole family Us they actually were, that is, in body, or the situation of their bodies at that very time when he was writings “every creature,” that is, in person, in their bodies, a* they will be after the resurrection; not all mankind, as some vainly suppose, but those who are redeemed, or who may hereafter be redeemed, “ out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation” See our text. I* it had been “ all nations,” &c., he would not have said, “out of,” &c. Therefore we must take the whole in connection. But John saw every creature whose bodies then were dome of them in heaven, as Enoch and Elijah; every creature who was then alive on the earth, like himself and brethren; every body of the saints that had slept and been buried under ground, or in the sea, and all the saints who were yet in the loins of their fathers-In one word, he saw the whole general assembly, and church of the first bom, whose names were written m the Lamb’s book of life. These four beasts are the same living creatures which Isaiah "saw when he had a view of the glory of God. Isa. vi. 1—3, “In the year that king Uzziah died, I saw also the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple* Above it stood the seraphims ; each one had six wings: with twain he covered his face, and with twain he Christ’s second coming. 165 covered his feet, and with twain he did fly. And (me cried unto another, and said, Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts; the whole earth is full of his glory.” Ezekiel also saw the same living creatures that Isaiah calls use-taphims,” and John “ four beasts.” Ezekiel calls them “ cherubims.” See Ezek. i. and x. chapters. John says, Rev. iv. 8, u And the four beasts had each of them six Wings. about him,” the same as Isaiah’s u seraphims.” These wings are the graces of the Spirit, as is strongly implied by Ezekiel l 12, “ And they went every one straight forward; whither the spirit was to go, they went; and they turned not when they went” u With two they covered their face ”^lmmility and repent ^wiffTtwo they cWered itheir feet"”—that is,they^ bytwo o£ TatGi^aiul patienceylaim in fflr^atmntm ^ula{w>n did By^— jmpe aneTWS. They “ mouriTup with wings aseagles; ffieJrsKafl run and not be weary, walk and not faint,” says the prophet Isaiah, xl. 3L And again John says, they were “full of eyes before and behind, and they were full of eyes within;” showing that they would have just views of sin, of God, and his word, and of themselves: they could look back and see their sins, and the pit from which they had been delivered, and with gratitude remember their Redeemer. They could with eyes of faith look forward and believe in the promises of God. and have a view of the glory that shall be revealed at his second coming. With eyes within, they could look into their own hearts, and see the remaining corruption and hidden depravity that lie lurking in every comer of the soul, and by this means put off the old man with his deeds. They are represented by John as being praying souls, “and golden vials full of odors, which are the prayers of saints.” Every one had these viajs, says John. How then, I ask, can the prayerless man or woman think to join this celestial throng ? “ Having every one of them harps; ” showing that tUl of them would have new hearts, be bom of God; so they would be enabled to sing in the New Jerusalem state the new song. ^ These are the characters and persons which John saw 166 LECTUBE XI. represented by the four and twenty elders and the four beasts. I shall now, II. Show what we may understand by the new song, and the occasion of it The prophet John had been led by the angel through seven different stages of the church, by the vision of the mystery of the seven stars and seven golden candlesticks, under the name of the seven churches of Asia, which ought to he understood symbolically down to the time when the judge stands at the door ready to enter .in to the supper of the great God, when all wicked flesh will be destroyed, and till the marriage supper of the Lamb arrives, when all the righteous will be raised, enter into the glorified state, and live and reign with him on earth. Then it is perfectly natural that after we had read the history of the church through all her trials, persecutions, and imperfections, we should be led to see her deliverance on the other side of the banks of Jordan, or beyond the power of death, and to hear a part, at least, of that new song which no man can sing unless he is redeemed from the earth. In the second and third chapters of Revelation, have the history of the church, as I have endeavored to show in my lectures on the churches. In the fourth and fifth chapters we have a view of the glorified state, and the characters given of those who will enioy the privilege of that state, the song which will employ tne golden harps, and the place where. The characters I have already given. The song is represented as a new song. It is new because it is sung only in that state where all things are made new. See 2 Pet. iii. 13, “ Nevertheless we, according to his promise, look for new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness ” Rev. xxL 5, “ And be that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I make all thing* new.” Now John saw, in Rev. iv. 2, the same throne, and him that sat upon it, and in the verse above quoted he speaks as though he had mentioned before w him that sat upon the throne.” And as he has not mentioned him in this language in any other place, we may have strong reason to believe that the time and subject matter is the same in the 4th chapter of Revelation as in the 21*t Christ’s second coming. 167 Chapter. Again: we are expressly told that no man could learn the new song, but those who are redeemed from the earth, Rev. xiv. 3. And redemption from the earth is no where spo*ken of until the resurrection of the body. Christ says, in Luke xxi. 27, 28, “ And then shall they see the Son of Man coming in a cloud with power and great glory. And when these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your heads* for your redemption draweth nigh.” And Paul says, Rom. viii. 23, “Even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our bodies.” Io this state they can sing, “ For thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood, out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation.” It is also a holy song; for they cry, “ and rest not day and night, laying, Holy, holy, holy Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come.” The church m this state are not all holy; they have but a faint view of the holiness of God’s character, his law or government; neither could they endure the sight; for when God has,seen fit to repeal a small part of his holiness, men have fainted under it. Isaiah cried out, “ Woe is me.” Ezekiel fell upon jus face, Ezek. i. 28. Daniel’s comeliness was turned into corruption, so that he retained no strength, Dan. x. 8. Therefore it is evident that this holy song can only be sung in a state of immortality, when we shall holy, even as God is holy. This new and holy song *ill not cease, for they rest not day and night, which Proves it to be in the eternal state. And the dress and crowns of the elders, “ clothed in white raiment,” and they had on their heads “ crowns of gold,” and they “cast their crowns before the throne, saying, Thou art Worthy, O Lord, to receive glory, and honor, and power” — all proves that the new song is sung after the second coming of our Lord Jesus Christ; for Paul tells us, that * crown is laid up for him which the righteous Judge fihall give him at that day; and not only him, but to all thorn also that love his appearing. So neither the elders tor the beasts can sing this new song until the New Jerusalem is formed, their bodies redeemed from the e*rth, and they brought into the eternal state of the 168 LECTURE XI. righteouB. It will not be sung until the last child ifl born into the kingdom — the last enemy conquered — the elect gathered from the four w;nds of heaven, and the cap stone brought forth, when the heavens will ring with this general chorus. “ Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty: blessing, and honor, and glory, and power, be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb forever and ever; and the four beasts will say, Amen.” III. I shall now show the reign spoken of in our.text, and the place where. There is much speculation at the present day on the reign of Christ on the earth, which is promised in hie word, and in the text Some have supposed that it would be purely spiritual, by the Holy Spirit’s influence, when all, or a large share of mankind who then should be On the earth, would be regenerated and become the subjects of his spiritual kingdom; that there would be no tempting devil to deceive, nor any kingdoms on the earth, but what would be subject to Christ’s spiritual reign, and the church would enjoy a long Sabbath of rest; and the long-desired period of some who profess to be the servants of Christ would come; when church and state would be united, and war would cease to the end of the world, and the world would increase in riches* arts, and science to an amazing degree, beyond any thing we have yet conceived; thousands would inhabit the earth where there are but tens now, and man would lfa® to a good old age, and nations be born in a day. This theory is the most rational one I have been able to discover, aside from the glorious reign of Christ with his people in a state of immortality. To the above theory I have many scriptural objections* Although the advocates of this theory call it spiritual, yet a large share, if not all, are temporal blessings ot this kingdom, and are exactly the same that the JewS believed they should possess at Christ’s first coming* Again : they must suppose, if this be true, that t|j* rulere of the world must all be Christians, or professedly so. Then what must we say to Christ’s words, u kingdom is not of this world ” ? and again, w In tbe Christ’s second coming. « 169 world ye shall have tribulation ” ? The world hate you* and if ye live godly, ye shall suffer persecution, and these (meaning the wholfe family of the redeemed) have come out of much tribulation. How could those millions who are bom or live in this happy period, come out of great tribulation ? But where do the advocates of the above system prove their doctrine ? Some pretend to bring the same passages in the Old Testament that the Jews did, to prove their temporal kingdom over the Gentiles, and do not see that much of the Old Testament prophecy was, and has been fulfilled in its typical sense. And it is very easy to show that the passages they pretend to bring in the Old Testament were aU fulfilled 1800 years ago. But, if they had believed in this theory, would not some of the New Testament writers have fnentioned this important period ? I remember, when I was but a child, of bearing an old minister of the gospel make a remark like this:—“All the Old Testament prophecies,” said he, « which were not fulfilled when Christ came in the flesh, are carried into the New Testament, and further explained.” 1 then thought there was reason and propriety in the remark; I mink so still, for the two wit* nesses must and will agree. And where do the believers in this system bring us one word from Christ? Not one. But we can show much to the contrary. The parable of the tares and the wheat carries us to the end of the world; and he expressly says, “ Let them grow together until the harvest” His prophecy and parables in Matt xxiv. and xxv. give us a prophecy until his second coming, and not a word about a happy period previously, but much about lo heres, and lo theres, and wicked servants beating and bruising their fellow-servants, and eating and drinking with the drunken, saying in their hearts, My Lord delayeth hid coming. Can this be a millennium ? No. Too much devil in such conduct as this. Where does Paul, a very prominent writer, give us a hint of these important things ? He must have understood the Old Testament as well as some, if not nil, of our modern divines. But he, too, has given the feverse. In his epistle to the Thessalonians, he tells us 170 LECTURE XI. plainly)u Then shall that wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of his mouth, and destroy by the brightness of his coming/’ 2 Thess. ii. In his 2 Thess. i., he tells them of the necessity of patience and faith in all their persecutions and tribulations; which, he says, is a manifest token of the righteous judgment of God; and then goes on to show Christ’s coming, and destruction of an ungodly world; nothing that looks like a millennium in this, or any part of Pam’s writings, before Christ’s second coming. Where, then, shall we find it in the New Testament? Perhaps they may*say in Rev. xx.; but this chapter can never be given to them until they do away the first resurrection; for all in that chapter is after the first resurrection, anj, of course, is after the personal and second coming of the Savior; and all the arguments to do away or destroy the word resurrection are so futile and weak that it needs no argument to refute them; for what could do it in that place might in every other case, and we should be Sadducees at once. James, Peter, and Jude mention the lasHlays in their epistles, and describe them as being very wicked, yet make no mention of a day of the spread of the gospel in this wonderful manner. James speaks of tneif heaping up treasures foj the last days. “ Behold, the hire of the laborers who have reaped down your fields* which is of you kept back by fraud, crieth; and the cries of them which have reaped are entered into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth. Ye have lived in pleasure on the earth, and been wanton: ye have nourished your hearts as in a day of slaughter. Ye have condemned and killed the just; and he doth not resist you. Be patient, therefore, brethren, unto the coming of the Lord, for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh.” Can this be the millennium? No! unless proud, earthly pleasure, wantonnes3, and murder, are the spirit of their millennium. Yet, if it is temporal, this would be the most likely fruits, if we judge of the future by the past; for the greater the temporal blessings, the greater is man’s rebellion. Read the second and third chapters of 2 Peter, where he expressly speaks of the last days. “ Knowing this first* that there shall come, in the last days, scoffers, walking CHRISES SECOND COMING. 171 after their own lusts, &nd saying. Where is the promise of his coming?” &.C., agreeing with what Christ said the wicked ministers would be doing when he comes. They would say in their hearts, My Lord delayeth his coming; Can there be this happy time described in the above theory ? All rnhst answer, No. Then let this suffice as answer to the above theory, until our opponents prove their own sentiments by the word. There are many more branches of the above system, but none that I have seen but are liable to the same objections. I shall now undertake to prove that this reign is in the immortal state, after the resurrection; that Christ will be present with his people, and, of course/ personally, and that it will be on the earth. I. Then I am to prove that it will be immortal after the resurrection. The present reign is called, in Scripture, a reign of grace; “So might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life, by Jesus Christ our Lord.” This reign has been ever since! Christ was in the world, for 1800 years past We shall now show that this reign must continue Until after the resurrection of the dead. See 1 Cor. xv. 23L-26; “ But every man in his own order; Christ the first fruits, (resurrection;) afterwards they that fcre Christ’s at his coming. Then'cometh the end, when he shall have given up the kingdom to God, even the Father; when lie shall put down all rule, and all authority and power. For he must reign till be hath put all enemies under his feet The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.” Here we have plain Scripture that the same reign of grace mu9t continue unto eternal Hfe; and. in the other text, until the resurrection of them that are Christ’s, and death, the last enemy to the church, is destroyed. Where, then, shall we get in a spiritual or temporal reign? We see evidently there is’no change of the reign of Christ in the gospel or grace, from the apostles’ days until the time comes when the saints shall possess the kingdom in the immortal state. Paul says; Rom. v. 17, “ For if by one man’s offence death reigned by one, much more they which receive abundance of m LECTURE XL grace and of the gift of righteousness, shall reign in life by one, Jesus Christ” Here the saints are promised to reign after the gift of righteousness, (which the righteous Judge shallgive all those who love his appearing at that day,) in life, that is, eternal life. See 21st verse. 1 Peter v. 4, “ And when the chief Shepherd shall appear, ye shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away.” This must, of course, be in the immortal state, for it fadeth not away. 11. That Christ will be present with his people in a state of immortality, can hardly be doubted when we read such texts as these: —John xii. 24, “If any man serve me, let him follow me; and where I am, there also shall my servant be.” Again, John xiv. 3, “ And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you to myself; that where I am there ye may be also.” So much for Christ’s promise to his disciples. And now let us read his prayer to his Father on this point, John xvii, 24, “Father, 1 will that they, also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am, that they may behold my glory.” Paul says, 1 These, iv. 17, “ And so shall we ever be with the Lord.” “ For it doth not yet appear what we shall be; but we know that when he shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is.” Our text says, “ And hast made us unto our God kings and priests.” Rev, xx. 4,6, “And they lived and reigned with Christ” “ And shall reign with him.” xxl 3, “And 1 heard a great voice out of heaven, saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they shall be bis people, and God himself shall be with them, and be their God.” 1IL “ And we shall reign on the earth,” says our text Not under its present dispensation, but after it is cleansed ' by fire; after the wicked are destroyed by fire, as tbe antediluvians were by water, after the resurrection of the saints, and when Christ’s prayer, taught to his disciples, shall be answered, “ Thy will he done on earth, even as in heaven,” When the bride has made herself ready, and married to the bridegroom, he will then move her into Christ’s second coming. 173 the New Jerusalem state, prepared as a Bride adorned % her husband, where we shall reign with him forever and ever on the new earth and in the new heavens; “ and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes, and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow nor crying, neither shall there be anymore pain; far the former things are passed away,” Then tire whole earth “ shall be fhll of his gloryand then, as save the prophet Isaiah, Uv. 5, “ For thy Maker is thine husband ; the Lord of Hosts is bis name; and thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel; the God of the whole earth shall he be called.” And then, my dear hearer, if you have had your heart broken off from sin; if you have hy faith been united in spirit to the Lamb of God; if you have patiently endured tribulation and persecution for his name,—then you will live and reign with him on the esp-th. and this earth will be regenerated by fire and the power of God, the cursed destroyed, sin, pain, crying, sorrow, and death banished from the world, and mortality clothed upon by immortality, death swallowed up in victory. You will rise up in that general assembly, and clapping your hands with joy, cry, “ Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is now come.” Then you wfll be in a situation tojoin the grand chorus, and sing the new song, saying, “ Thou art worthy, for thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by tby blood, out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation, and hast made us unto our God kings and priests, and we shall reign on the earth, saying, with a loud voice, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honor, and glory, and blessing.” And all who meet in that grand assepnbly will be then heard to shout, “ Blessing, and honor, and glory, and power be unto him that sittetn upon the throne, and unto the Lamb forever and ever.” And methinks I can now see every one who loves our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ in this assembly, rising upon their feet, and in one united prayer of faith, crying, “Come, Lord Jesus, O come quickly/ 15 * m LECTURE XI, But you, O impenitent man or woman, where will you be then? When heaven shall resound with the mighty song, and distant realms shall echo back the sound, where, tell me, where will you be then? In hell! 0 think! In hell! a dreadful word! Once more think! In hell! lifting up your eyes, being in torment Stop, sinner; think! In hell! where shall be weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth. Stop, sinner, stop; consider on your latter end. In hdl! “where the beast and false prophet are, and shall be tormented day and night forever and ever.” I entreat of you to think — in hdl! 1 know you hate to hear the word. It sounds too harsh. There is no music in it You say it grates upon the ear. But think, when it grates upon the soul, the conscience, and the ear, and not by sound only, but a dread reality, when there can be no respite, no cessation, no deliverance, no hope! You will then think, yes, of this warning, of a thousand others, perhaps of this hour, with many more that are lost; yes, worse than lost, that have been squandered in earthly, vain, and transitory mirth, have been abused; for there have been many hours the Spirit strove with you, and you prayed to be excused. There was an hour when conscience spake; but you stopped your ears and would not hear. There was a time when judgment and reason whispered; but you soon drowned their cry by calling in some aid against your own soul. , To judgment and reason you have opposed wiU and wit, and said,u in hell,” was only in the grave. In this vain citadel, on this frail house of sand, you will build, until the last seal is broken, the last trump will sound, the last woe be pronounced, and the last vial be poured upon the earth. Then, impenitent man or woman, you will awake in everlasting woe! Be warned; repent; fly, fly for succor to the ark of God, to Jesus Christ, the Lamb that once was slain, that you might live, for he is worthy to receive all honor, power, and glory. Believe, and you shall live. Obey his word, his spirit, his calls, his invitations; there is no time for delay; put it not off, I beg of yon; no, not for a moment Do you want to join that heavenly choir and Christ’s second coming. 175 Bing the new song ? Then come in God’s appointed way; repent Do you want a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens ? Then join in heart and soul this happy people, whose God is the Lord. Do you want an interest in the New Jerusalem, the beloved city ? Then set your face as a dipt Zion-ward; become a pilgrim in the good old way. « Seek first the kingdom* of heaven,” says Christ, ** and then all these things shall be added unto you.” LECTURE XII. REV. v. 5. And one of the elders salth unto me, Weep net: behold, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the root of David, hath prevailed to Open the book and to loose tbe seven seals thereof. The book of Revelation has been called by tnousands a sealed book; and many a dear saint, while in this imperfect state of vision and knowledge, has wept much, because they could not read and understand the book. For it is very evident that the book of Revelation is not only interesting in its symbolical and mystical descriptions, natural scenery, and figurative language, but it iff rich in truth, and the communication of events then hid under the veil of futurity, and would only be unfolded to the natural visions of men, many ages to come. John has written this book after the laws of nature; that is, he has seemed to copy after some of the richest and most picturesque scenes in nature’s laws. He has, in revealing truths to our minds, followed the same steady course fiat fountains of water do in their course to the sea. He begifis as it were back upon the mountains, where the head may be but a fountain, and there gives ns a description of the source. He then glides gently along through the vale below, winding between hills and mountains, visiting in his Course the hamlets of the peasant, fie villages of men, the populous towns and cities of commerce, until he lands us or leaves us in the ocean of eternity. At first, he appears to be describing some bubbling fountain or gentle spring, and swelling CHEISTS SECOND COMIIfO. 177 in importance as he proceeds, brings in and adds every important stream of event, deepens and widens in his coarse, until he makes his prophetic history like a deep-flowing river, bearing upon its bosom the gallant ships and galley with oars. At first, he describes a pebbly brook murmuring along the hills, now and then bursting into view with some gentle fall, then gliding softly away, until it meets some rugged head-land, shifts its course, and almost seems to retrace its path; then, suddenly bursting from the hills in cataracts of foam,bound-ing from rock to rock, leaping into the vale below, he again seems to follow the alluvial flats and receives his tributary streams, winds on his way, until it falls at its mouth by a tremendous leap into a gulf of waters, and is swallowed up in the waves of the sea. Four times the Revelation seems to bring ns down in this manner, as though he had begun on one mountain, and traced four different streams of histonr down to the great ocean of eternity; like the river of Eden, which watered the garden, becoming four heads of four great rivers, which watered and encompassed the whole land, taking different points of the compass, but falling at last into me ocean, Gem ii 10—14; and all these having seven tributary streams in their course. The seven churches of Asia is a history of the church of Christ in her seven forms, in all her windings and turnings, in all her prosperity and adversity, from the days of the apos ties down to the end of the world. The seven seals are a history of the transactions of the powers and kings of the earth over the church, and God’s protection <5* his people during the same time. The seven trumpets are a history of seven peculiar and heavy judgments sent upon the earth, or Roman kingdom. And the seven vials are the Beven last plagues sent upon Papal Rome. Mixed with these are many other events, woven in like tributary streams, and filling up the grand river of prophecy, until the whole ends us in the ocean of eternity. This, to me, is the plan of John’s prophecy in the book of Revelation. And the man who wishes to understand thist book, must have a thorough knowledge of other parts of the ward of God. The figures and metaphors used m LECTURE X1L in this prophecy, are not all explained in the same, bat must be found in other prophets, and explained in other passages of Scripture. Therefore it is evident that God has designed the study of the whole, even to obtain a clear knowledge of any part. I shall then pursue the following method: — I. Explain the book which was in the right hand of him who sat on the throne. II. Give the history of the seven seals, and their opening. I. l am to explain what is meant by the book. The book is often spoken of in the word of God. Sometimes we hear it spoken of as a iittle book, open, in the hands of the angel; and sometimes it is commanded to be sealed up; and sometimes, to be unloosed, as in our text The question arises, What can this book mean ? It cannot mean the book of Revelation, for John was commanded not to seal the sayingB of this book, Rev* xxiL 10. Neither could it be the prophecies, for they were commanded to be read every Sabbath day by the Jews, and were so read Yet John tells us, in our context, « That no man, neither in heaven, nor in earth, nor under the earth, was able to open the book, neither to look thereon; and I wept much,.because no man was found worthy to ^open and to read the book, neither to look thereon.” We see, plainly, that it could not apply to the l&wV nor the prophets, to the Old or New Testaments, for these were committed to the Jews, and also unto us 'Gentiles, and were to be read by all men; but this book they could not open, read, nor look thereon. There is one more book which answers to John's description, which no man, neither in heaven, new on earth, nor under the earth, has yet been able to look thereon, or open and read, as we have any account of; and which, according to the whole tenor of the Scripture, will never be opened, read, or looked upon, until the last, seal is broken, and the judgment site “And I saw the dead, smaHaud great, stand before God; and the books were opened; tmd another book teas opened, which is the book of life ; and the dead were judged out of those things which ware written in the books.” In this book, which CHRIST** SSCONB COMING. 179 to called the book of Ufe, the names of all the redeemed in heaven, in earth, or under the earth, are written, which are not known to any man, neither will be known, until the last seal is broken open; for the judgment will declare who is on the Lord’s side. For the apostle tells Us, plainly, a Our lives are hid with Christ in God; that, when he appears, then we shall appear with him in glory.” And John tells us, Rev. xxi. 26, 27, u And they shall bring the glory and honor of the nations into it, and there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination, or maketh a lie; but they which are written in the Lamb's book of life." “ And whosoever was not found written in the book of life* was cast into the lakeof fire.” Again: k And they whose names were not written in the hook of life, from the foundation of the world, shall wonder," &c. This book, although we are abundantly informed there is one, in the right hand of him that Sitteth upon the throne, no man, as wo are any where informed, has been able to look upon it, or open it, or to read its contents. This, then, is the book, on account of which John wept to know its contents. And so it . has been with all Christians. They are anxious to know whether their names are written in the Lamb’s book of life. But you must first learn, my dear brother in Christ, to live by faith; and faith, too, founded on the book in which you can took — of which you may read the promises, the prophecies, and commands. But into the book of life you can never look, until the Lamb of God shall open the seventh seal, and the righteous dead be raised, to meet with the dear Savior in that world of glory, when the book will be opened in the presence or the universe, and he will Own you as his, and crown you with joy unspeakable and full of glory. II. I shall now give the history of the seven seals, with the time of their opening. After the prophecy of the seven churches, in the 2d and 3d chapters of Revelation, John has a view of the heavenly host, singing the grand song, and gives us a description of the heavenly ohoir, and a part of the song. He likewise introduces the book, sealed with seven seals, and shows who csa 180 LE6TWUB X$U open the kook, in the fourth and fifth chapters. These we have attended to, in a former lecture. We ghn-11 now begin with the sixth chapter, 1st verse, “ And 1 saw when the Lamb opened one of the seals; and 1 heard, as it were the noise of thunder, one of the four beasts, saying, Come and see. And I saw, and behold, a white horse, and he that sat on him had a bow; and a crown was given unto him; and he went forth conquering and to conquer.” The “ beast,” in this passage, is the first, which was like a lion, representing the church in its first state, in the days of the apostles, When the church went every where, preaching the word, bold as a lion. The white horse, and him that sat upon hum, represent Jesus Christ going forth in the power of the gospel. This is proved by the passage, Rev. xix. 11-—1% * And I saw heaven opened, and behold, a white horse; and he that sat upon ham was called Faithful and True, and in righteousness he doth judge and make war. His eyes were as a flame of fire, and on his head were many crowns; and he had a name written that no man knew hut he himself and he was clothed in a vesture dipped in blood; and bis name is called The Word of God.” This is the same personage as the other, and both places represent the same thing, only the first description is rep' resenting the spread of the gospel in the beginning of the gospel day, the other at me end of the gospel period, under which we are now Hying. Therefore the first seal opens with the promulgation of the gospel, as the last will be closed by the same. 3d and itb verses, “ And when he had opened the second seal, I heard the second beast say, Come and see. And there went out another horse, that was red ; and power was given to him that sat thereon to take peace from the earm, and that they should kill one another; and there was given unto him * great sword.” The red horse denotes blood and carnage, and has reference to the times of persecution in the days of Nero and other Roman emperors, and answers to the same time as the Smyrna church. “ Given unto him a greatsword,” shows that the power would have great authority. The second beast spoken of in this passage i* the representation of the church, which was like a calfi CHRIST o SECOND COMIHO. 131 showing that the church would be given to the daughter, like & calf fatted for the market, during the period of the opening of this seal, which period lasted until about A. D. 318, when Constantine put a period to the persecutions of the Christians. 5th and 6th verses, w And when he had opened the third seal, i heard the third beast say, Come and see. And I beheld, and lo, a black horse; and he that sat apon him had a pair of balances in his hand. And I heard a voice in the midst of the four beasts say, A measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a penny, and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine.” The third beast, which represents the church, tinder this seal, had a face as a man, and shows that the church would be like a natural man, proud, haughty, independent, selfish, ambitious, covetous, and worldly. This seal was opened m the days of Constantine, when religion became popular, and was a stepping-stone to power; and this seal agrees with the Pergamos church, as to time and place. The black horse denotes error and darkness; and when the church became connected with worldly power and wisdom, she lost her purity of doctrine and practice, and adopted, in her creed, maxims and principles congenial with the natural heart, and forms and ceremonies for show and parade, rather than the humbling and cross-bearing life of the followers of Jesus. The balances denoted that religion and civil power would be united in the person who would administer the executive power in the government, and that he would claim the judicial authority both in church and state. This was true among the Roman eriiperors, from the days of Constantine until the reign of Justinian, when he gave the same judicial power to the bishop of Rome. The measures of wheat and barley for a Penny denote that the membere of the church would be eagerly engaged after worldly goods, and the love of money would be the prevailing spirit of the times, for they would dispose of any thing for money. The oil and wine denote the graces of the Spirit fhith and love, and there was great danger of hurting these, under the influence of so much worldly spirit And it is well at-16 183 LECTURE XII. tested, by all historians, that the prosperity of the church in this age produced the corruptions which finally terminated in the falling away, and setting up the anti-Christian abominations. 7th and 8th verses, “ And when he had opened the fourth seal, I beard the fourth beast say, Come and see. And I looked, and behold, a pale horse, and his name that sajt on him was Death, and hell followed with him; and power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword, and with hunger, and t with death, and with beasts of the earth.” The fourth’ 'seal opened in the year A. D. 538, when anti-Christ first arose, for the fourth beast was like a flying eagle. “ And to the woman was given two wings of air eagle, that she might fly into the wilderness, into her place, where she is nourished for a time, times, and a half, from the face of the serpent” The pale horse is named, in this passage, death. And hell followed, showing us plainly that it is the anti-Christian power which would have the ascendency over one fourth part of the earth, during the opening of this seal. “ Power was given unto them,” shows conclusively that it is the same power mentioned in Rev. xiii.2—5, “ And the dragon gave him his power, and his seat, and great authority.” “And there was given him a mouth speaking great things and blasphemies ; and power was given unto him to continue forty and two months.” Again, 7th verse,“ And it was given unto him to make war with the saints, and to overcome them; and power was given him over all kindreds, and tongues, and nations.” In our text he says, “ Power was given them to kill with the sword,” that is, to make war, which was fulfilled in Europe, when the papal power sent out large armies to exterminate the heretics, as they were called, who would not worship the beast or his image. “ And with hunger; ” this was fulfilled by the same power imprisoning and starving to death many thousands of persons who were suspected of opposition to her ungodly pretensions. “And with death;” inventing the most cruel and bloody means of torture that were ever imposed upon our world; to inflict death, in every possible shape that men or devils could invent Christ’s second coming. 183 thousands and tens of thousands suffered death under the most excruciating torments that the Inquisition could devise. “And with the beasts of the earth;” after they had glutted their thirst for blood in every possible shape that man could inflict, thousands were thrown to ferocious beasts, to be destroyed by them. The time and place of the opening of this seal we cannot be mistaken in. It must have been during the bloody and persecuting reign of the papal church. 9th—11th verses, “ And when he had opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar the souls of them that were slain for the word of God, and for the testimony which they held; and they cried with a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth? And white robes were given unto every one of them; and it was said unto them that they should rest yet for a little season, until their fellow-servants also, and their brethren, that should be killed as they were, should be fulfilled.” On the opening of the fifth seal, there is no beast to say, “ Come and see,” for this very good reason—the church has not changed her position, and is yet in the wilderness, like the flying eagle. Therefore, under the fourth beast, the church is likewise under the control of the same anti-Christian power as under the fourth seal, but the difference appears to be only in one thing—the church appears to enjoy a little respite from her persecuting enemy; and it would seem by the language of the souls of the martyrs that they are now looking for a day of vengeance, which God hath promised upon them who worshipped the beast or his image; and the inquiry is, How long before this day of vengeance will come ? The answer is given to these praying souls to rest a little season, and they are informed there must be one more day or little season of persecution, when their brethren must be killed in like manner with themselves; and when that is accomplished, they would then experience the last promise of God, the resurrection. This seal was opened about the beginning of the 18th century, A. D. 1700 when the bloody persecutions against Protestants ceased, and the nations of the world began to enjoy religious freedom. 184 EEGTUKK XII. 12tb—I7th verses, u And I beheld when he had open ed the sixth seal, and lo, there was- a great earthquake/ On the opening of this seal there is a great earthquake This earthquake is spoken of in other places in this book and alludes to the French revolution; and of course this seal opened about A. D. 1790. u And the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood.” Sun sometimes denotes rulers or kings, as in the case of Joseph’s dream, when the sun, moon and stars made obeisance to him, meaning his father, hpad over all Israel his mother, and his brethren; for where the king is called the sun, the queen is called the moon, and inferior rulers are called stars, as Christ is called tun of righteousness, because he is king of Zion. The church is called the noon, because she is the bride of Christ Ministers are called stars because they are inferior rulers in Christ’s kingdom. Therefore I understand this to mean in that revolution when the king lost his authority, and tried to disguise himself, and fled from his own subjects, afterwards was beheaded. The queen, too, became blood, and all the nobility of France fell to the earth. One decree levelled all titles and distinctions with the commonalty, like a fig-tree casting her untimely figs. u And the stars of heaven fell nnto 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.* The heavens must mean that circle in which the' planets move; and if that is to be understood figuratively, so must this. Heavens must then meait the laws and government of France. These were all swept away, or rolled up and laid away like an old parchment out of date or use. “ And every mountain and island were moved out of their places/’ Mountains and islands are figures of large and small governments, and in the French revolution every government was removed from their legitimate sovereigns, except England, in the old Roman empire, and given to kings of Bonaparte’s creation. And certainly all the kingdoms in Europe were changed from what they were before; so that when legitimacy was restored, the ancient kings could not ana have not found their kingdoms Christ’s second coming. 185 in the same situation they were in before the revolution. “And the kings of the earth, and the great men, and the rich men, and the chief captains, and the mighty men, Mid every bondman, and every freeman, hid themselves m the dens, and in the rocks of the mountains, and said to the rocks and mountains, Fall on us, and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb.” It is a well-known fact to all who are conversant with the history of the French revolution, that almost every king in Europe had to flee from his kingdom during the space of about five and twenty years: the king of Portugal to Brazil; the king of Spain to France; the king of France fled to England; the Pope died in exile; the lung of Sardinia left his kingdom and fled to the island of Sardinia ; the king of Naples to the island of the same name; the king of Austria left his capital; and the king of Prussia took shelter under Russia; the emperor of all the Russian left Moscow to its fate; and. Bonaparte himself fled to the island of Elba, and died a prisoner on St Helena. The great men and chief captains, and all orders and degrees of men, had to flee from the land of their fathers, and seek an asylum among strangers. So true was this passage of 8cripture fulfilled that many writers and divines actually supposed that it was the last great battle and supper of the great God. “For the great day of his wrath is come, and who shall be able to stand ? ” The sixth seal is not yet wholly opened; for it is evident that we are carried down to the last day, the great day of wrath which will immediately follow the sealing time which he gives us in the next chapter. Rev. vii. 1, “And after these things I saw four angels standing on the four corners of the earth, holding the four winds of the earth, that it should not blow on the earth, nor on the sea, nor on any tree.” Daniel tells us, vii. 2, “ I saw in my vision by night, and behold, the four winds of the heaven strove upon the great sea.” The four winds, then, means the opposing elements, war and contention. These principal elements of war and contention God would restrain for a little season, so they should not fan up the spirit of war and strife, neither in the Roman government, (called earth,) nor on the great 16* LECTURE XII. 1&6 nations, (called great sea,) nor on individuals or small societies of men, (called trees;) and this has been remarkably fulfilled for twenty years past Not a particle of opposition has been experienced against the translation and spread of the Bible, or the missionary cause. Kings have been nursing fathers, and queens nursing mbthers, to help forward the cause of God. The wind of Papacy has been kept down by the angel, so that all the opposition they could raise has been weak and inefficient The Mahometan wind has not blown a blast for twenty years; the idolatrous and pagan nations of the East have, by some invisible power, been kept in check: the infidel and deistical principles of the West have been held in complete subjection by the same invisible hand, until the servants of God should be sealed. Therefore, since the French revolution, none of these four winds of opposition to Christ have been permitted to use any physical force, as formerly, to suppress the spread of the gospel through the earth. “And 1 saw another angel ascending from the east, having the seal of the living God; and he cried with a loud voice to the four angels to whom it was given to hurt the earth arid the sea.” The angel here spoken of as ascending from the east, is the angel standing on the land and on the sea, with a little book open, and the same that is represented in another place as flying through the midst of heaven having the everlasting gospel to preach to them who dwell on the earth. Coming from the east, the place of light, and having the seal of the living God, shows plainly that it id the angel of the gospel The four angels are the four messengers of God, who suppress those four opposition principles, until the sealing time shall be over, “ saying, Hurt not the earth, neither the sea, nor the trees, till we have sealed the servants of God in their foreheads.” The four Angels are here commanded not to let these four winds of opposition hurt the earth, sea, or trees, until the sealing time is past, which is the same time spoken of,.Daniel xii. 1, “Then shall Michael stand np, the great jfoipee which standeth for the children of thy people.” “And I heard the number of them which were sealed ; and there were sealed a hundred forty and four thousand of all the tribes of the children of Israel.’1 Christ’s second coming. 187 f John first gives us an account of the number that were -'toded day,.’diit oT'an'jffie^rTBH"ofIsrael Mgy wmftaU^pa he tells ns when, he wro^ it being~fin-iaEed iir3^close,pi thejg^sh dispensa^pn. ITb^mg ajcomplete jp*mbeiy 144,W)0,lLndtKerelorejwiuld Belium-bered; and as th^se,were sealed at the close of that fisfensation, so John now saw in vision a great number, ‘ which no Ldian could number, sealed at the close of the Gentile dispensationAof which he has been prophesy-irig; for after tie has gone through with numbering twel ve thousand in every tribe, he then says, Rev. vii. 9, “After this I beheld,” that is, after this sealing, by which 144,000 Jiad been sealed among the Jews, he beheld, “and lo, a great multitude, which no rpan cojld ^number, of all nations, and kindreds, and people, "and tongues, stood before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands.” Xhis evidently refers to the last sealing time among all nations; for he again hears them singing the grand chorus song, as at the close of the history of the seven churches, “And cried with a loud voice, saying, Salvation to our God, which sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb. And all the angels stood round about the throne, and about the elders and the four beasts, and fell befqre the throne on their faces, and worshipped God, saying, Amen: blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and thanksgiving, and honor, and power, and might be unto our God forever and ever, amen.” This shows us that we are again brought down the stream of time, to hear a part, at least, of the song which no man can sing, but those whose bodies are redeemed from the earth. “And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, What are these w'hich are arrayed in white robes? And whence came they? And I said unto him, Sir, thou knowest And he said unto me, These are they which come out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.” This passage shows who those were that John saw, and hpw they obtained tho honor and glory, which John saw them possessing, through great tribulation, and the blood of the Lamb “Therefore are they before the throne of God, and 168 LECTURE XII. serve him day and night in his temple: and he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them;” the same as in Rev. xx. 6, “And they lived and reigned with him,” in the New Jerusalem state; for he goes on to describe this state of happiness, which John does in Rev. xxi. 1—5, compared with the two following, and there can be no doubt on the mind that John is describing the same in one place as in the other. “They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neithei shall the sun light on them, nor any heat For the Lamb, which is in the midst of the throne, shall feed them, and shall lead them unto living fountains of waters; and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.” There can be no doubt left on the mind of any man, that John has, in these passages, given us a view of the New Jerusalem in the immortal state. We have been permitted to. hear a part of the new song, and have received, in the passage just read, the blessed promises contained in that beloved city. And now, we only wait for the last seal to open. “And when he had opened the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven about the space of half an hour.” Zechariah says, ii. 13, “ Be Bilent, O all flesh, before the Lord; for he is raised up out of his holy habitation! ” Habakkuk says,ii.20, “But the Lord is in his holy temple; let all the earth keep silence before him!” From these passages I should infer, that when God arises up to the prey, when his great white throne is set in the heavens, and when the Son of Man shall come in the clouds of heaven, with power and great glory, then will all flesh be silent before him. And it is reasonable to suppose that the whole universe of rational beings who may be permitted to witness that grand scene, will be so filled with wonder and awe at the sight of the glory of God, that they will be silent Then, too, will the redeemed souls, while the great Judge is separating them from the wicked, while they are rising to meet their Lord in the air, be silent. They will, ljjie the children of Israel, stand still, (be silent,) and stff* the salvation of God. And the wicked world, who have scoffed at the idea of Christ’s second coming, who have said, “Where is the promise of his coming?” and laughed and ridi- Christ's second coming. 189 culed the servants of Christ, who have cried to them, in their midnight revels,“ Behold, the bridegroom cometh,” will be silent. Then will those servants who have “ said in their hearts, My Lord delayeth his coining,” and “ begin to beat and bruise their fellow-servants,” who have proclaimed his coming, “ and to eat and drink with the ' drunken,” be silent. Then, too, will all the false prophets, who have cried Peace, peace, when there was ‘ no peace, be silent, when they see the frowns of an angry judge whom they have disregarded. Then shall those who have promised the wicked life, though he should not turn from his wickedness, be silent. Then, every one found in that great assembly, when the Son of Man shall come in the clouds, and all the holy angels with him, and all the saints who have slept, and all nations then shall be gathered before him, and every eye shall see him; then, I say, will every one found in this vast multitude, not having on the wedding garment, be silent; for the Scripture says, “ He teas speechless.” And now, my dear friends, what say yon ? Have you wept much to know whether your names are written m the Lamb’s book of life ? “Weep not,”for “ behold, the Lion of the tribe of J udah hath prevailed to open the hook.” And he says, “ He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment; and I will not blot his name out of the book of life, but I will confess his name before my Father, and before his angels. Therefore, “rejoice, because your names are written in heaven,” says the dear Savior. But you, my impenitent friends, who have never wept, nor confessed your sins to God, who have been more anxious to have your names written in the book of fame, of worldly honor, of the riches of this world, than in the book of life, remember, you too will weep when all heaven is silent—when the last seal is broken—then you will see the book, and your name blotted out. Then you will weep and say, “Once, niy name'was there; I had a day of probation; life was proffered; but I hated instruction, I despised reproof, and my part is taken from the hook of life. Farewell, happiness; farewell, hope! Amen. LECTURE XIII. REV. li. 3. And I will give power unto my two witnesses, and they shall propb* esy a thousand two hundred and threescore days, clothed in sackcloth. The two witnesses in our text have caused as much speculation among the writers on the New Testament, as any other passage in the word of God. Some have supposed that it was a succession of orthodox divines, whom God had raised up to witness to the truth, during the time specified, which all agree is twelve hundred and sixty years. And those writers who have taken this side of the question, have endeavored to find some favorite divines, among their sect, answering to the description given of the two witnesses. Upon this construction every sect might claim the honor of giving to the world the two witnesses. And were this explanation true, instead of two witnesses, we should have more than eight hundred; for every sect must have a set, and I dare not give preference to any. This would destroy the idea of two witnesses at once. . Other writers have fixed on the church as the two, clergy and laity; but here are many difficulties to encounter, the same as above. Every sect must have their own church and clergy, or admit at once that they are not the true church. But let us now come to the word of God. And if the word of God does not explain the “ two witnesses,” I shall despair of ever coming to the truth on this subject, for I am commanded by Christ him* self to call no man master. I shall, then, Christ’s second coming. 191 L Attempt to show what the Bible calls the two witnesses. II. What we may understand by their being clothed in sackcloth. III. Their history, prophecy, and time specified. I. What is the Bible account of the two witnesses? And, first, What is a witness ? I answer, A witness is a person, or legal instrument, testifying to the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, on matters of fact which are supposed to be known no way but through testimony, either oral or written. Oral testimony is given by a person who is sworn to tell the whole truth, as above, and relate what he actually knows, by the medium of his own senses, and no more nor less. The apostles were such witnesses; for they testified to the things which Christ did in public. And when Judas fell by transgression, Peter informed his brethren that one must be chosen, << of these men which have companied with us all the time that the Lord Jesus went in and out among us, beginning at the baptism of John, unto the same day that he was taken up from uk, must one be ordained to be a witness with us of his resurrection.” But these could not be the “ two witnesses; ” for here were twelve. But we learn by this history what a witness must be. He must go in and out; he must know by actual observation, or he could not testify any thing concerning Christ That was the manner of oral testimony in that day, and so it is at the present. This, then, precludes the idea at once of any men, or set of men, being Christ’s witnesses at the present day, or since the days of the apostles. But, says the objector, does not. the word of God call all Christians witnesses for Christ? I do not know of any scripture where Christians are called ivitnesses, except the prophets and apostles, or inspired writers, that is, concerning Christ They may witness a good profession, or they may witness for themselves, that they believe in Christ or his word; but further they cannot go. They are not witness either to the person of Christ, to his works, death, miracles, or resurrection and ascension; and if there was no other testimony but oral, we should be no better off than the darkest Hindoo or most ignorant Hottentot LECTURE XIII. 192 But, thanks be to God, he has not left us without a witness. There is a better testimony than all Christendom, which is written; and it is this which I hold in my hand; it is the word of God. It tells the truth; “ for not one jot or tittle of this word shall fail.” It tells the whole truth, u that the man of God may be perfectly furnished to every good work.” It tells nothing but the truth; for it is the truth indited by him who cannot lie. You are well aware, my friends, that written testimony is considered in all courts, under all laws, to be stronger than any oral testimony whatever. For instance, take the last will and testament of any man; if it was written or indited by himself, signed by his own hand, sealed with his own seal, in presence of witnesses chosen by himselfi and ratified by his death, no oral testimony can be brought against it; unless the instrument itself shows some contradiction or discrepancy, it cannot be destroyed. So il is with these two testaments, revealed, indited, confirmed, witnessed, and ratified, by the death of the testator, the Lord Jesus Christ And although wicked men and devils have endeavored to show some Contradiction or dis crepancy in its testimony, it has stood the shock of ages, the wreck of kingdoms, and will stand when these heavens and this earth shall pass away with a great noise and the elements melt with fervent beat; for by this word we must all be judged; by these witnesses we shall be justified or condemned. Christ says, “Search the Scriptures; for in them ye think ye have eternal life; and they are they which testify of me.” Thp angel tells John, in the next verse following our text, that the two witnesses “ are the two olive trees, and the two candlesticks standing before the God of the earth.” The angel, in his allusion to the two olive trees, quotes the prophet Zech-ariah, iv. 3, “ And two olive trees by it, one upon the right side of the bowl, and the other upon the left side thereof.’* Here the olive trees are used in a figurative sense, and properly denote the “ sons of oil,” or the two cherubims which stood over the ark, and spread their wing9 over the mercy seat The wings of the cherubims stretched from either side of the house to the centre over the mercy seat, and their faces turned inwards down upon the mercy seat, Christ’s second coming. 193 and the glory of the God of Israel was above the cherubims. These cherubims are a lively type of the Old and New Testament The signification of cherub is “fbl-ness of knowledge;” so is the word of God, “that the man of God may be thoroughly furnished, perfect in every good work.” They have the whole truth, all we can Know about Jesus Christ in this state. They stand on either hand of Christ, one before he came in the flesh, pointing to a Messiah to come, by all its types and shadows ; and like the cherub whose wings touched the outer wall of the room and reached to the centre over the mercy seat, so did the Old Testament reach from the creation of the world down to John’s preaching in the wilderness, mid like the cherub looking down on the mercy seat, it testified of the Messiah. The other cherubim’s wings reached from the centre over the mercy seat, and touched the other wall of the room, while his face was turned back upon the mercy seat. So does the New Testament begin at the preaching of John, and reveals all that is necessary for .us to know, down to the end of the world. And all the ordinances of the New Testament house look back to the sufferings, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, and are to continae until his second coming and and of the world. These cherubims were made of dive trees, and overlaid with pure gold, 1 Kings vi. 23—28. Again: the angel tells Zechariah what the two olive trees are, Zech. iv. 4—6, “ So I answered and spake to the angel that talked with me, saying, What are these, my lord?” (the two olive trees.) tt Then the angel that talked with me answered and said unto me, Knowest thou not what these be? And I said, No, my lord. Then he answered and spake unto me, saying, This is the word of the Lord unto, Zerubabel,” &c. Here we are plainly told that the two olive trees are the word of the Lord* and the angel tells John, Rev. xi. 4, that “the two witnesses are the two olive trees and the two candlesticks.” As candlesticks are the means of light, so is the word of God. Candlesticks are used in Scripture in the same sense as lamps. And David says, “ Thy word is k lamp to my feet ana a light to my path.” Therefore 1 humbly believe that I have fairly and conclusively proved 194 LECTURE Xlft. that the two witnesses are the Old and New Testament And I will, II. Show what we may understand by the two wit* nesses being clothed in sackcloth. Sackcloth denotes a state of darkness, as in Rev. vi. 12, “ The sun became black as sackcloth of hair; ” that is, the sun became dark, invisible, and did not give its light. Jost so during the dark ages of papal rule, the word of God was darkened by monkish superstition, bigotry, and ignorance in its sacred principles. It did not give its true light, because the laws, doctrines, and ordinances were changed by the laws of the Latin chu’rfch; its doctrine was perverted by the introduction of the doctrine of devils and the anti-Christian abominations: its ordinances were so altered as to suit the convenience of carnal men; and it was obscured, because the common people were forbidden to read it, or even to have it in their houses, by the Papal authority. It was h|d from the world in a great measure; for the Papal beast, the church of Rome, forbade its translation into any language except the Greek and Latin, which languages ceased to be spoken in the Roman government in the middle of the sixth century. Sackcloth denotes great calamities and troubles, aa in the days of Hezekiah, 2 Kings, xix. 1, % u When king Hezekiah heard (the threatenings of the king of Assyria,) he rent his clothes, and covered himself with sackcloth; ” also, the Ninevites put on sackclolh at the preaching of Jonah, when their city was threatened with a final overthrow. So with the two witnesses; while they were clothed in sackcloth, it was a time of great calamity and trouble to the people of God; persecution raged without any mitigation in some or all parts of the Roman government, apd the church of God, which was fed and nourished by the “ two witnesses,” during her residence in the wilderness, was threatened with a final destruction by the Papal armies, the inquisition, and every other means that could be devised by wicked men or devils. But God has preserved his word, through all the persecutions of the Roman power. I shall now, UL Show their history, prophecy, and time specified in the text- Christ’s second coming. 195 1st Their history, contained in Rev. xi. 5—13, inclusive. Let me read and explain. 5th verse, “ If any man will hurt them, fire proceedeth out of their mouth, and devoureth their enemies, and if any man will hurt them, he must in this manner be killed.” If any man shall add or take away from the book or revelation of God, “ God shall take away his part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city.;” and “God shall add unto him the ^s that are written in this book.” This verse has erified in our day in the history of deistical France. The rulers of France, in the revolution, proclaimed a war of extermination against the fishermen’s Bible, as they were pleased to term it; and within six years they exterminated themselves, the republic, and almost their principles. The kingdom was deluged in blood; anarchy was the law of the land; and the judgments denounced by this word were /literally accomplished, so that deists themselves stood appalled at the horror and confusion their own principles had brought upon their heavendaring crimes. 6th verse, “ These have power to shut heaven, that it rain not in the days of their prophecy.” Allusion is here had to “ the three years and a half,” in the days of Elijah, when the heavens were shut up, Luke iv. 25, which is the same time the witnesses prophesy clothed in sackcloth, 1260 days, forty-two months, thirty days to a month; that being common time, and this prophetic. The Scriptures are the means which God has made use of to convert sinners from error to truth, from sin to righteousness, and to convey the knowledge of grace, (which in this'verse is compared to rain,) tua lost and perishing world. During the reign of anti-Christ, 1260 years, the church in the wilderness, and the two witnesses clothed in sackcloth the same 1260 years, the doctrine of grace in Jesus Christ was but partially taught Much of the professedly Christian world have been taught that doing penance, purchasing indulgences, obeying the holy Catholic church, or performing some outward act for pardon, would answer them heaven and happiness, < But when the Scriptures began to be *ead and understood, and where the doctrine of grace in 106 LECTURE XI1L Jesus Christ has been published by the translation and circulation of the word of God, how different the scene! Now, we can hardly find a Roman Catholic who will pre tend that heaven is purchased by infliction of bodily torture, by doing penance, or by a monastic seclusion from the world; neither do we see them selling indulgences, and promising the holders pardon for the most abominable crimes. And but rarely do we hear the infallibility of the mother, or holy Catholic church, advanced from pulpit or press. Why this mighty change in public sentiment ? Because the reign of grace is not withheld; the two witnesses are no longer clothed in sackcloth; “ Michael has stood up, that standeth for the children of thy people.” And the “angel is flying through the midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel to preach to them that dwell on the earth.” “ And have power over the waters to turn them to blood.” By waters, we understand people; and by blood, ware. This text has been amply fulfilled in the wars of Europe, fightjng for religious tenets and ecclesiastical power, claiming their prerogatives from the two witnesses, and wresting and perverting the word of God to their own destruction. u And from thence come ware, tumults, fightings,” because they understand not. ** And to smite the earth with all plagues, as often as they will.” In Old Testament times, it was the word of God, through Moses and Aaran, that smote Egypt with the ten plagues, and through Joshua the Canaanites. So, in New Testament times, the seven last plagues, and the three woes, are denounced against the anti-Christian beast, wbo dwells on and haa great power over the earth. w As often as they, will,” meaning as often as they have prophesied of them, so often will the plagues be sent Not one jot or tittle of the word of God will fail 7th verse, “ And when they shall have finished their testimony,” that is, when the 1260 years are about fulfilled, the “ beast that ascendeth out of the bottomless pit i” this beast is the same as the little horn, Papal Home, and is said to ascend out of the bottomless pit, because it is founded on error. The principles taught by this beast wave first Paganism, and ended in Deism, Christ’s second coming. 197 which are not built on the word of God; and, therefore* have no foundation, and may truly be said txfrbe “ bottom-less” “ Shall make war against them.” The governments, under the authority of Papal Rome, shall endeavor to exterminate the “ two witnesses,” the word of God. “ And shall overcome them, and kill them; ” have power over them, pass laWs or edicts against them, and, by this means, destroy their usefulness, life, and activity. For where the Scriptures are not read, and believed in, they become a dead letter; but when read, and believed, w they are spirit, they are life,” John vi. 63.- 8th verse, “ And their dead bodies shall lie in the streets of the great city, which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt, where also our Lord was crucified.” This verse teaches us, that the word of God* would be made & dqai letter, by the authority of one of the principal kingftms out of one of the ten into which the Roman government was divided, and that they would be guilty of the same sins that Sodom and Egypt were guilty of; and, also, of crucifying our Lord, that is, in a spiritual sense. This will apply to France in particular. France, previous to, and in the French revolution, was guilty of Sodomitish sins; she also bad held in bondage, like Egypt, the people of God; and, in France, Christ had been crucified afresh in his people, on St Bartholomew’s eve, A. D. 1572, when 50,000 Huguenots were murdered in one night The people of God are called Christ’s spiritual body, 1 Peter ii. 5, Col. L 24. 9thverse, “And they of the people,and kindreds,and tongues, shall see their dead bodies three days and a half, and shall- not suffer their dead bodies to be put in graves.” This decree, or edict, should be generally known among all nations; and although they could not prevent the witnesses from lying in the streets of the great city three years and a half, yet the nations about them would prevent the Scriptures from being buried, or put out of sight 10th verse, “ And they that dwell upon the earth shall rejoice over them, and make merry, and shall send gifts one to another, because these two prophets tormented them that dwelt upon the earth.” We learn by this text 17 * 198 LECTORS XU!. that the nation, who would suppress the reading of the word of God, would make great rejoicings upon this occasion, and congratulate each other upon the destruction of the Bible, as they would suppose, for this reason, because the doctrine and precepts of the Bible would be hateful and disagreeable to them. 11th verse, “ And after three days and a half, [years,] the spirit of life from God entered into them, and they stood upon their feet; and great fear fell upon them which saw them.” After the Bible would be dormant three years and a half, God would so order in his providence, that they would again be permitted to be read and enjoyed as usual, and the Bible would again stand upon its own foundation, or merits, and would again have their bearing on the hopes and fears of mankind, and the governments of the world, and their enemies would see it and tremble. \ 12th veree, “And they heard a great voice from heaven, saying unto them, Come up hiBier; and they ascended up to heaven in a cloud, and their enemies beheld them.” This verse shows us that many voices would unite in calling for a general spread of the Bible through the world, and that the Bible would be exalted among the nations, and great multitudes of them circulated, and the enemies of the word of God could not prevent it Here we have a plain and distinct prophecy of the Bible societies. 13th verse, “And the same hour was there a great earthquake, and the tenth part of the city fell, and m the earthquake were slain of men [names or titles] seven thousand, and the remnant were affrighted, and gave glory to the God of heaven.” At the Bame hour the witnesses would be slain, there would be a great revolution, and one of the ten kingdoms, which had given their power and support to the Papal beast, would fall; and seven thousand names, or titles of nobility, in chnrch and state, would be destroyed; and this revolution would produce great fear amon* the nations, and some would acknowledge that the word was fulfilling, and God was producing these wonderftil events. Here we again see exactly depicted the French revolution, and its ef- Christ’s second coming. 199 feels; and we cannot but see that the whole of this prophecy has been literally fulfilled. In the beginning of the sixth century, about A. D. 538, y Justinian, emperor of Constantinople, in*his controversy \ with the Arians, and other schismatics in the Greek ‘ church, constituted the bishop of Rome head over all others, both in the western and eastern churches, who, by his authority, suppressed the reading of the Bible by laymen, pretending that they could not read and understand without the assistance of the clergy. About this time, too, the Latin language ceased to be spoken in Italy, and the Greek and Latin both became dead languages. The Bible at that time not being written or translated into any other languages in Europe, it became an easy task for the bishop to obscure the doctrine and discipline of the word of God, so far as suited his convenience, and to obtain universal power over the minds and consciences of men, and clothe the Scriptures in gftsteloth m A^ PT pn'd prpjfoffiy l^Q^ears About tfie**close cSii^mPconse- quence of the abominable corruptions of the church of Rome being exposed to public view, the men of the world began to treat revelation as a fiction, and religion us priestcraft; and instead of searching for the pillar and ground of the truth, “ their imaginations became vain, and their foolish minds were darkened.” They declared war against the Bible, the “ two witnesses,” which war became general all over Europe and America. Some of the most eminent and principal writers in this controversy were in France, the principal kingdom among the ten, into which Rome had been divided at the close of the fifth century; and so successful were these writers, that almost the whole nation of the French became Deists, or Atheists, in a short time. This nation had long been guilty of the abominations of the anti-Christian beast, the sins of Sodom and Egypt, and the persecution of those who protested against her national corruptions: the slaying of the witnesses; their lying in a dead state three years and a half in the street 200 LECTURE Xlll« of the great city; the revolutiou spoken of in this prophecy— all happened in the French revolution, between the years 1793 and 1798. A decree was passed by the council and directory of France, prohibiting the Bible to be read in public, in any of the chapels in France, and Bibles were gathered in heaps, and bonfires were made of them, and great rejoicings were had all over the kingdom at the downfall of priestcraft, as they called it; and particularly at Lyons, where the Scriptures were publicly dragged through the streets, with circumstances of the greatest contempt, and other things transacted in the exultation of their triumph, which are too shocking to narrate. Let it suffice, then, to say, that after three years and a half the Bible was again permitted to be read, and religion had free toleration in France; and wfiat is equally as remarkable, is, that the same year ft few individuals in London established what has since been styled, the Bible society, which has been instrumental in sending Bibles among all nations, and of translating them into more than 150 languages/since that period ; and almost all the writers, who acknowledge the Bible to be the two witnesses, do agree that the events, prophesied of in this passage, were literally accomplished in the French revolution. Now, the Bible is more than restored to its former state in society; it is exalted, and every person can have, and read, and examine for themselves into its sacred truths. It is also ft fact, that the progress of the Bible society has exceeded the most sanguine expectations of its advocates; and the Atheists and Deists of our day appear to be perfectly confounded at these events. Instead now of declaring open war against the Bible, they make pretence at least of drawing their rules of morality from this blessed book; and the man who should now undertake to write down the word of God, would be considered either a madman, or a fool. One thing more: In the French Revolution, the names or titles of men were abolished; and it is said by some writers, that, in the long list of titled nobility, and the great catalogue of priestly orders, there were seven thousand destroyed at once. Well might the; remnant be affrighted, and give glory to the God of heaven! Christ’s sec on© coming. 201 Let ns now fora moment see what follows the nistory ef the two witnesses. 14th verse, “The second woe is past, and behold, the third woe cometh quickly.9 The second woe began by the civil wars in France and Germany, and ended in the French revolution; and the third woe will come quickly. It is the last great woe denounced against the woman sitting upon the scarlet-colored beast, and against the earth, which she hath filled with her sorceries, and the kingdoms of this world, which must all be destroyed under this woe. 15th verse, uAnd the seventh angel sounded, and there were great voices in heaven saying, The kingdoms ofthis world are become the kingdoms of our Lord and his Christ, and he shall reign forever and ever” The third woe and seventh trumpet are both the same thing, (see Rev. viii. 13;) and the seventh trumpet is the last trump, when the dead shall be raised. See 1 Cor. xv. 52. It is evident, also, that we are earned into the eternal state forever and ever. 16th verse, “And the four and twenty elders, which sat before God on their seats, fell on their faces and worshipped God.” By the four and twenty elders, I understand the true ministers of Christ, alluding to the twenty-four courses of the priesthood appointed by David, 1 Chron. xxiv. 17th verse, “ Saying, We give thee thanks, 0 Lord God Almighty, which ait, and wast,and art to come, because thou hast taken to thee thy great power, and hast reigned.” This is the language of every humble and devoted minister of Jesus Christ, who makes the word of God his study, and believes in the overruling hand of God as accomplishing the great design therein revealed, 18th verse, “ And the nations were angry, and thy wrath is come, and the time of the dead, that they should be judged, and that thou shouldest give reward qnto thy servants the prophets, and to the saints, and them that fear tby name, small and great, and shouldest destroy them which destroy the earth.” ‘ This verse shows us what takes place at the sounding of the seventh trumpet and thkd woe, which the angel LECTURE XIII. 90S says will come quickly after the French revolution, if I am right in my explanation of the two witnesses. It is morally certain that the word of God is not now in an obscure state; it is not hid from the world, neither is clothed in sackcloth. It is true that many voices have united in the Bible societies to spread the knowledge of the word of God; and that it is translated into about all the known languages in the world. It is almost absolutely certain mat the French people are the nation that is compared to Sodom and Egypt, in the passage we have been examining; and likewise the earthquake spoken of is the French revolution. Then if the two witnesses are the Old and New Testament, we are certain the third woe is coming quickly, and the seventh trump must shortly begin to sound, as I have already-proved in my lecture on the trumpets, in the yea/l83SU You have undoubtedly seen, my friends, that wettreriiKewise brought down to the judgment, when God will reward the righteous, and destroy the wicked, who have persecuted the saints and trampled them under foot. And once more let me inquire how it stands with you, my dear hearer. Are you prepared for that great and solemn day ? Are you ready to meet the judgment ? The two witnesses will appear for or against you. Their testimony will not fail. Do you believe them ? He that believeth shall be saved, and he that believeth not shall be damned. u TJie word that I have spoken,” says Christ, M the same shall judge you in the last day.” Why will you not be warned ? If half the evidence that I have brought of our being on the end of this dispensation, was brought to prove there was a great treasure hid iii your field, how soon would you search and how diligently would you seek until you found it! In this book, of which we have now been speaking, are durable riches, gold tried in the fire, seven times purified. * Search for it as for hidden treasures; seek and you shall find.” Can you tell me where the word of (rod, the Bible, has failed of being accomplished litr erally, and in the time specified ? Many events have been foretold, the times given, and not one failed. Hew can you disbelieve? How can you shut your eyes c&rist’s second coming. against so much light? Where will you have an excuse in the day of j udgment ? I have repeatedly brought you down to this time, and shown, by Scripture proof, the judgment must commence immediately. You are in your hearts convicted that what has been declared concerning the two witnesses, in' this discourse, is true. And if sof your reason must teach you that what follows Under the third woe must be equally as true. “ And the nations were angry, and thy wrath is come, and the time of the dead, that they should be judged, and that thou shouldest give reward unto thy servants the prophets, and to the saints, and them that fear thy name, small and great; and shouldest destroy them which destroy the earth.” LECTURE XIV. KEV. ill. «. And the woman fled into the wilderness. where she hath a place prepared of God, that they should feea her there a thousand two hundred and threescore days. The history of the church, in all ages of this present world, is but a history of persecution and blood, when we follow her through all dispensations from Adam to Moses, and from Moses to Christ; so likewise from Christ’s first coming down to his second appearance, the church have experienced, and according to the whole tenor of Scripture, must expect to realize from the kingdoms and men of this world, this one promise at least, u In the world ye shall have tribulation.” These facts are so plain and obvious, that it has given rise to a common saying among almost all writers, that M the blood of martyrs is the seed of the church.” Yet there is a bright side to her history; for she has come out of all her persecutions more purified, more faithful, and with more energy, to prosecute the work her divine Master has left her to perform. And one other thing is certain — God has preserved her, whether in the wilderness or among the nations of the earth, in an extraordinary and miraculous manner; even her enemies themselves being her judges. Where has a kingdom stood when all the nations about them have conspired their overthrow? Where is the Assyrian and populous Nineveh? Where is Chaldea, tbe queen of nations ? Where is the Grecian empire, once the colossus of the world? Where is imperial Christ’s second comiito. SOS Rome? Gone,' gone, by the power of earthly foes. But behold the church of Christ and of God, delivered first from Egyptian bondage by the mighty arm of the God of Jacob, led by miracles through the wilder* ness forty years, brought into the promised land, although all the nations of the earth were her enemies, preserved as a nation through the rise and fall of mighty empires, and experiencing a reverse of fortune only when she courted the aid of worldly kingdoms, or suffering diminution only when she adopted Die more popular worship of heathen idolatry. Yet in her lowest estate, God told his servant the prophet, that “he had reserved seven thousand that had not bowed the knee to Baal.” And if men would reason on the subject of religion as they do on other subjects, there could not be an infidel in the world. For nothing is or can be more manifest than the miraculous interposition of Providence in the preservation of his people through the most severe trials, heaviest afflictions, and deadliest hatred of all men, that men or societies ever endured. Our present discourse will show us the history of the church by prophecy, through the darkest age the church has ever been permitted to experience since the days of Abraham. I. I shall show what we may understand by a the woman ” in our text II. I shall show what we are to understand by the great red dragon and beast III. 1 shall give the history of the woman given in the chapters of our text IV. The time specified in the text, 1360 days, their beginning and end. I. What may we understand by woman in our text? I answer, We must understand the people of God, in all ages of the church, whether among the Jew or Gentile : she is called a woman because she is the spouse of Christ; she is likewise called a woman because of her dependence on Christ for all things. As a man is the head of the woman, so is Christ the head over all things to the church, says the apostle. As the woman depends on her husband for a name, for food, and for raiment, so 906 , LECTU&E X.V likewise the church on Christy for a name—“ And thou shalt be called by a new name, which the mouth of the Lord shall name,” Isa. lxii. 2—5* “And they were called Christians first at Antioch.” For food, our text says, “that they should feed her there,” &c. The prophet Isaiah says, xL 11, “ He shall feed liis flock as a shepherd.” John vL 53, “Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of Man, and drink his blood, ve have no life in you.” For raiment, the psalmist, speaking of the church, says, “ She shall be brought to the king in raiment of needlework; her clothing is wrought gold.” The angel to the seven churches says, “ He that overcoraeth, the same shall be clothed in white raiment” And again, “ I, John, saw the holy city, New Jerusalem, coming dowp from God, but of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.” This shows conclusively that the people of God are compared to a woman. And now let me show, II. What we may understand by the great red dragon and beast that persecuted the church, or woman that fled into the wilderness. The red dragoii is the same power as Daniel’s fourth kingdom, the Roman, for the description is the same, having ten horns; his character, too, is the same. Daniel says he should break in pieces the whole earth, and stamp the residue with his feet; that he should work deceitfully, &c. John says that the dragon drew a third part of the stars of heaven, and did cast them to the earth, and that he deceiveth the whole world. The Roman government, then, must be the apocalyptical red dragon beast, having seven heads and ten horns. The Roman power is called red, either because of their persecuting and bloody spirit, or on account of their emperors wearing purple robes, when dressed in state; either might be sufficient to entitle them to the appellation “red.” “Dragon" is undoubtedly given the Roman government from the fact that the Romans changed their forms of government so often, having seven different forms in about five hundred years, and from their deceitful, cunning, intriguing manner by which they obtained power over the nations around them, that they Christ’s second coming. 207 were properly a nondescript; and could not be described by Daniel or John by any thing seen on earth; and therefore they took one of the inhabitants of the bottomless pit, “ the dragon,” to describe to us by figure this dreadful, persecuting, and bloody power. The red dragon is, therefore, used as a figure to denote Pagan Rome, and the woman sitting on the scarlet-colored beast to denote the church of Rome, or Papal Rome ; and both together, civil and Papal, make the anti-Christian abomination, which would drive the church of Christ into the wilderness, where she would be fed 1260 days, or time, times, and half a time. I shall, III. Give the history of the woman, as in the twelfth chapter of Revelation. Verse 1, “Arid there appeared a great wonder in heaven,”—John saw this wonderful sight as transpiring under the gospel day, or government of God, with his people in me gospel, the circle in which the church moves, here called hea/ven,—“a woman clothed with the sun,” the church adorned with gospel light; as the natural sun gives light to the world, so does the gospel the church, — “and the moon under her feet” This shows us that John had a view of the church while it was in its Jewish state. For the moon represents the ceremonial law, which was typical of the gospel, like 'the moon shining in a borrowed light, ana liable to change when the Shiloh should come. “Under her feet,” shows that she walked or stood on the ordinances of God’s house, which, like the moon, pointed to the sun both before and after Christ “And upon her head a crown of twelve stars,” — first the twelve patriarchs* afterwards the twelve apostles, Eph. ii. 20. Like stars they are smaller lights in the government of God, and teachers under the law and gospel. Verse 2, “And she, being with child,” — having the promise that the seed of the woman should bruise the serpent’s head, — “ cried travailing in birth,”—denoting prayer in faith, — “ and pained to be delivered,” -—that is* an anxious and deep longing for the advent of the promised Messiah, when she expected deliverance from bondage, sin, and all her foes, Matt xiii. 17. 908 LECTURE XIV. Verse 3, “ And there appeared another wonder in heaven,”—another eight or view of God’s government of the world in connection with the gospel,—“ and behold, a great red dragon”—a figurative representation of the Roman kingdom* Verse 4J“ And his tail drew a third part of the stars of heaven, and did cast them to the earth.” Judea became a Roman province before the Messiah’s advent, which is figured by the tail, and the Jews had for a number of years been governed by tetrarchs or kings of the Romans’ appointment The Jews were governed by “ And the dragon stood before the woman which was ready to be delivered,” — Herod was then king of the Jews, at the birth of Christ, a representative of the Romans, because he was supported by their authority, — “for to devour her child as soon as it was born.” Herod sought the young child’s life, to destroy him. See Matt ii. 13. Verse 5, “ And she brought forth a man child,”—J esus Christ, born of a virgin. “ For unto us a child is born, unto ut a son is given,” &c. Isa. ix. 6> 7, “ Who was to rule all nations with a rod of iron,” denoting the power of Christ to break in pieces and subdue all the kingdoms of the earth. Psalms ii. 9. Rev. xix. 15,— ** and her child was caught up to God and his throne.” Christ has ascended up on high, and is seated at the right hand of the Father until he makes his enemies his footstool.” See John vi. 62. Eph. iv. 8—10. Verse 6, “And the woman fled into the wilderness, where she hath a place prepared of God.” The church had grown weary of the protection of the Roman power, for she found, by woful experience, that whenever she placed herself under the protection of this red dragon, he destroyed some of her blessed privileges, and brought in a flood of errors, which caused divisions and subdivisions in the church. The Jews had tried their friendship Christ’s second coming. 209 and protection for more than two hundred yearn before and after Christ, and the event proved the destruction of their nation and place. The Christians, too, had tried the friendship of the same power, under Constantine and succeeding emperors, for little more than two hundred years, beginning A. D. 313, and ending in A. D. 538, as we shall show; which so corrupted the Romish church that she became the anti-Christian abomination, and the true children of God were driven into the wilderness out from her connection with the anti-Christian church, u the city of the nations,” as she is called. But God took care “that they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and threescore days,” which ls 1260 years, from A. 1). 538 until 1798, during which time a free toleration of religious rights were not permitted in any of the kingdoms which formerly composed the Roman empire; but God raised up teachers among them, who retained in a good degree the doctrine and purity of the word of God, and practised the ordinances as they were delivered to the saints in the apostles’ days: yet but little is known of them for six or seven hundred years. Verse 7, “ And there was war in heaven.” After the prophet John had given us a history of the church, as in the preceding verses, he now goes back to bring up the history of the dragon, the Roman kingdom, and begins his history in the days of Christ and his apostles. “Michael and his angels fought”—Christ and his apostles. See Matt x. 34, “ Thjnk not I am come to send peace on earth: I came not BWbfa ” — ^ v erse*8, ^And prevailed not, neither was their place found any more in heaven.” Rome could not prevail against the kingdom of Christ or the gospel; for it differed materially from the Jewish mode of worship; and although Rome in her Pagan state could find easy access into the Jewish sanctuary, because of the similarity of their worship, yet when Christ set up his gospel kingdom they were excluded, for none could enter this kingdom without regeneration, faith, and repentance. 18 * 910 LECTURE XIV. (tvoman,) as the serpent did Eve, the woman in the garden, — “ called the devil,* because they devour and per-secute with a devilish spirit, — “and Satan,” because satan-like he claims power over all kingdoms of the world — “which deceiveth the whole world.” — This may be said of Rome, for she conquered more nations by deceit and flattery than by fair warfare. — “ He was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him” This was literally fulfilled when Christ cut off the Jews and all unbelievers; when he said, “ My kingdom is not of this world;” when Jie_.excluded thfl, €n,”—many voices in the church under the gospel dispensation,— “ Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ” — This represents the grand chorus of all the saints, when they discover the true principle on which the kingdom of God. is built This was literally true at the day of Pentecost —M For the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which accused them before our God night and day.” Tfce Romans had, by drawire&e^ J?ws .inlu idolatry^ d^sed^em to sin iP JwU&itf ^emng'and morning Sacrifices, And by these means, ~Gse who live under’ flie^ |Tqpa^^vpnsi-ment^— “and thesea*—Cleaning the'princijalfoi^- ^.ampngli^e4en’'%^pms. j^ce^ S^Jly meant by^jea in t a For the deviT is oome Ho^n'unt^ouJT1^11^ great Wrath, because he knoweth that he hath but a short time.” The devil ''means destroyer, and the three woes, and seven last plagues, were all to be sent upon the earth and sea, which denote wars, revolution^ and changing of governments. These things would prevail in the close of this Roman kingdom, and war would be the closing up of the earthly scene of this fourth kingdom which Daniel saw and John has been describing under the figure of the “great red dragon.” Verse 13& And when the dragon saw that he was cast unto the earth,” — when tike Roman government saw they could have no controTm Bie things pfChijstfs kingdom, they hated the church ahd the' doctrine that taught that tinrist’s kingdom was not of this World, and they persecuted the woman that brought fbrth tke mao child,” which is the church that had a Savior bom unto her, Christ Jesus, the Lord of life and gloryj Verse 14, “ And to the woman was given two wings of a great eagle,” — by which wings I understand the means God used between the Arian and Papal controversy, at the time of the division of the Greek or eastern church from the west or Roman church, which happened in the reign of Justinian, emperor of the east,vabout A. D. 538, when the controversy arose concerning the worshipping of departed saints, images, and the infallibility of the church at Rome. In this controversy, many privately withdrew themselves, and settled in the northwest part of Asia and in the north-east part of Europe, and after a number of years colonies were sent by them 212 LECTURE XIV. into Piedmont and valleys of the Alps, where it is supposed the true worship of God was retained during the dark ages of Papal ignorance, bigotry, and superstition. (See Milner’s Church History, and Benedict’s History of the Baptists.)— a that she might fly into the wilderness, into her place,” — a separation from the world, as says the voice from heaven, “ Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues,” Rev. xviii.4. —M where she is nourished for a time, times, and half a time,” — fed and nourished by the spirit and word of God 1260 years, “from the face of the serpent” — from the knowledge of Papal Rome. Verse 15, “ And the serpent cast out of his mouth waters as a flood after the woman,”—waters, in prophecy, means people, Rev. xvii. 15. Therefore I understand this prophecy to have been fulfilled when the Pope, the head of Papal Rome, sent forth his armies and inquisition to subdue the'heretics, as he called them, who dwelt in the valleys of the Alps, which was about the beginning of the thirteenth century**— “ that he might cause her to be carried away of the flood ” — exterminated and destroyed by his armies and inquisition. Verse 16, “ And the earth helped the woman, and the earth opened her mouth and swallowed up the flood which the dragon cast out of his mouth.” This verse was fulfilled in the wars which followed the above-mentioned time of persecution, in which the German princes helped their subjects against the armies of the rope, and destroyed and swallowed up many of the Papal armies, from the thirteenth to the fifteenth century. Or, as some authors have supposed, the icaters which the dragon cast out of his mouth was the flood of errors whiqh arose about the time of the French revolution, under the name of Deism, which was calculated to destroy the doctrine of the gospel, as they vainly supposed, backed up by the republican armies of France, and afterwards by the power of Bonaparte, who was finally subdued by the combinations of the kings of the earth. But, as this transaction seems to me to be too Christ’s sicoitd coming. 1213 late to affect the woman in her exiled state, I have inclined, in my humble opinion, to my first exposition of these texts. Verse 17, “ And the dragon was wroth with the woman,” — Papal Rome was angry with the true church, — 44 and went to make war with the remnant of her seed.” This war has not yet come; for it is evident by the expression “ remnant of her seed,” that it means the last of the church “ who keep the commandments of God, and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.” This is the last struggle of this anti-Christian beast, and is described in many places as the last great battle, or the supper of the great God. Such expressions as “ and went,” as though this power would go to some place out of their own territory, and “ the kings of the east might be prepared,” Show that they will go west l.JWU, &erefore, cpgr grained to believe that this battle of tne dm^nV last be ih'AmeHcaj"anower; — “for they are the spirit oideWs, worldH^' mira-clesj**—that is, spirit of deceit, separating friends, dividing kingdoms, states, societies, churches, and families, and crumbling every man-made institution, and levelling to the dust all law, order, and bond of union, which the wisdom of man may have invented^ — “ which go forth unto the kings of the earth and of the whole world.” This shows the universal spread of this fanatical spirit of disorganization, and it will finally lead t#“ gather them to the battle of that great day of God Almighty.” “Behold, I am come as a thief Blessed is he that wateheth and keepeth his garments, lest he walk naked 214 LECTURE XIV. and tney see his shame.” We are here notified that nis coming will be like a thief to those who are engaged in this political warfare, and in those popular and men-made societies of the day; and we are told that those will be blessed who watch, that is, for his coming, and the signs of the times, and that keepeth his garments unspotted from these worldly institutions, which engender strife and animosity among brethren. Be warned, dear Christian, “ enter into thy chamber, and hide thyself for a little moment, until the indignation be over and past, that ye need not be ashamed before him at his coming.” It will also be a battle of religious principles, as is evident by the following scripture, Rev. xix. 11—16> w And I saw heaven opened, and behold, a white horse; and he that sat upon him was called Faithful and True* and in righteousness he doth judge and make war. His eyes were as a flame of fire, and on his head were many crowns; and he had a name written that no man knew but he himself and he was clothed with a vesture 'dipped in blood; and his name is called The Word of God. And the armies which were in heaven followed him upon white horses, clothed in fine linen, white and clean. And -out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it he shpuld smite the nations; and he shall rule them with a rod of iron; and he treadeth the wine-press of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God.” This passage proves that there will be at the close of this dispensation, immediately preceding the marriage of the Lamb to his bride, a great and .last struggle between error and truth, between infidelity and the word of God. And you may inquire, perhaps, and with propriety too, How shall we know on which side we are engaged in this great war of principle ? 1 answer, “ In righteousness,” he doth make war. But, say you, we are so prone to follow tradition or prepossessed notions, and think we are right, that, like Paul, we may be found at last fighting against God. You must see to it, that you are “ faithful and tmftfhave faith in his name, “and his name is The Word ofGod.” This is your only rule — The Word of God. Be careful; lay yourselves on this word. Try yourselves by this standard. If your life, faith, experi Christ’s secoitd comuvo. 215 ence, and hope, are built on this foundation, you can never fail; for he that is The Word of God, is “ KING OF KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS.” Again: it is to be a literal battle with the sword, for Christ says, “He that taketh the sword Shall die by the sword.” And kings, Papal Rome, and the Mahometans, have ruled the world by the sword, and their swords, during all the days of their power, have been red with the blood of their subjects, and the innocent victims of their hate. And in Rev. xix. 17—20, it is evident, by the “fowls” spoken of in the 17th verse, is meant, warriors in favor of liberty who are to “ eat (destroy) the flesh (strength or power) of kings, and the flesh of captains, and the flesh of mighty men, and the flesh of horses, and them that sit on them, (armies are undoubtedly meant in this passage,) and the flesh of all men,” who are e kings, papal Rome, or false prophet, * both small and great.” “ And I saw the beast and the kings of the earth, and their armies, gathered together to make war against him that sat on the horse, and against his army.” v“ And he gathered them together into a place called in the Hebrew tongue Armageddon,” (awake to the spoil,) Rev. xvi. 16—21. These will be the means the dragon will nse in his last great struggle to gain ascendency over the minds, consciences, and bodies of men. He will fen up their political animosities; he will stir up strife and division among religious communities; and, last of all, and not least, he will encourage an intolerable thirst for blood. * In which battle Christ will come, chain the dragon, give his body to the burning flame^ confine the spirits of all -who worship the dragon, beast or false prophet, tfl pit of woe; raise the saints^ purify, cleanse, and glorify them with his own glory. IV. We are to speak of the time the saints, or church, were to be in the wilderness, “ one thousand two hundred and threescore days.” I believe all commentators agree that these days are to be understood years; and, as I have proved this point in a former lecture, I jeed not stop to argue this given principle at this time, out will proceed to give some proof when this time be- 216 LECTUN& XIV. gan and when it ended* The time given in our text is the same length of time as given by Daniel for the reign of the little born* See Daniel vii. 25* It is, also, the same time John has given for the image beast to have power M to continue forty and two months.” Thirty days to a month is 1260 days, Rev. xiii. 5. It is, also, the same length of time that was given the Gentiles to tread the holy city under foot. See /Rev. xi. 2. Also for the witnesses to prophesy, clothed in sackcloth. Rev. xi. 3. And there can hardly be a shadow of a doubt but that all these times had their beginning and ending at one and the same time. If so, then the arguments used here-tofore may have their proper bearing in this place. But let us consider a few things in addition to our former reasons. 1st What may we understand by the woman M fleeing into the wilderness,” and “ from the face of the serpent” We must consider it in a state of obscurity ; this was true iu the time we have stated, A. D. 538. Historians tell us but little about any regular church but the Roman church, and this has never been in an obscure state; of course the Roman is not the church in the wilderness. But they do tell us that, io the days of Justinian, emperor of Constantinople, there were many schismatics, as they were called, who opposed the power of the bishop or pope of Rome, and doings of councils in the east and west, and a large share of the latter part of Justinian’s life was spent in religious broils and expelling from bis kingdom these schismatics; and the code of laws which be published about A. D. 533,1 forbade any Christians any rights or privileges as citizens in his empire who would not acknowledge the bishop of Rome as head. And in these laws he gave the bishop 'power to hold courts and try all matters of faith within his kingdom. These, and other things of like import, drove all true followers of the word of God to seek a rest out of the jurisdiction of the city of nations; and, of course, became outlaws to the Roman government Then* if we fix the beginning ef the exile of t then wKohjto CHRIST’S SECOITO COMING. 317 remark, that the code of laws passed by Justinian Were biftili force in the kingdoms belonging to* cr under the Patrol o$ thepope of Rome, respecting the rights and privilege* of those who might difler from the Catholic fhith, until the French took Rome, in 1798, and declaibd "Italy a republic; when free toleration wasgiven.for any religious opinion or privilege whatsoever. sHere, then, -the ehuflch, in whatever form she might appear, was permitted to enjoy the rights and privileges of citizens, and to worship God as their conscience might dictate. This is the first time, during the 1260 years, that free toleration of religion was granted in any kingdom where the Catholic church had power; and, although Catholic minces and popes have since had rule in Italy and France, yet they have never dared, as yet, to pursue their former intolerant course of conduct towards Prot-, estants. And it is very evident, my dear friends, that the church is now out of the wilderness; that is, if she ever was; for there never has been a time since the days of the apostles, no, nor even then, that the church, in all its several branches, has enjoyed greater privileges than for nearly forty years past She has spread her wings over every land, and carried the news of salvation into every language on the known world. Her reapers have followed the sowers of seed, and there is handsfull of corn in the tops of all the mountains; but the harvest is short. The church has had rest as long as she has ever had since Christ left her and ascended to his Father. The dragon begins to show his anger; the trumpet begins to sound to the onset; the armies of the beast begin to muster for the battle, they are furbishing their swords for the slaughter; the kings of the eaf& are combining against the freedom of tneir subjects ; the great men and nobles are riveting closer the chains of their vassals; tyrants are braiding in firmer knot* their scorpion whips for their slaves; expediency has taken the room of moral law, and anarchy has crowded order from his seat; mobs have taken the place of judges, and law is popular will; the liberty of the press is but the nod of demagogues, and the freedom of speech iq 218 LECTURE XIV* called fanaticism. Division seems to be the order of the day, and our valuable institutions are tottering to their base. Be warned, then, O my friends, to seek safety under the banner of the gospel before the armies afo filled up, “And the dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make war with the remnant of her seed which keep the commandments of God, and have the testimony or Jesus Christ” “The spirit of prophecy * \*m****-*^,~- LECTURE XT. BEV. nL 17. And die seventh angel poured out his vial into the air $ Rod then came a great voice out of the temple of heaven, from the throne, saying, It is done. This text is the account we have in the word of God of the last plague that will ever visit our worlds or the inhabitants who hereafter will be permitted to dwell thereon. That is evident, because it is the seventh of the last seven. For John says, Rev. xv. 1, u And I saw another sign in heaven, great and marvellous, seven angels having the seven lari plagues; for in them is filled up the wrath of God.” And the wrath of God is filled up, that is, the cup of God’s wrath of which he will make all nations drink; and he will give unto Babylon u the cup of the wine of the fierceness of his wrath.” Then it cannot be uninteresting to those who wish or who may desire to learn where ana when the last plagues have been poured out, and how many yet remain for us to experience. These seven last plagues have had their shadows in the plagues which Goa sent on slave-holding Egypt, when he delivered his people, the Jews, from their Egyptian bondage, the least of which plagues destroyed Pharaoh and his host, just in the moment when Israel were shouting deliverance on the banks of the Red Sea. So likewise, in the seven last plagues, they ate poured out upon spiritual Egypt, slave-holding Babylon, who has enslaved the people of God for centuries, and has trafficked in the bodies and souls of men. She, like LECTURE XV. 22Q Egypt, has appointed task-masters over the church, and has endeavored to strangle her children in the birth. She has commanded the kings and rulers of the earth to destroy the children of the church, as did the Egyptians the Hebrew midwives; but the church has found favor in the eyes of some of the kings and princes of the earth, and the earth has helped the woman, and her children are not all dead. And their cry has gone up to the Lord of Sabaoth, and he has come down in these seven last plagues to deliver his people from the hand of the spoiler, and from the power of the beast, the anti-Christian abomination; and when this last vial is poured into the air, all the doctrines of men and devils, and all the theories of men and the wisdom of this world will be confounded and brought to nought The Lord will overwhelm with the red and fiery wrath of his last judgment the kings of the earth, the beast or Catholic church of abomination, the false prophet and all his followers, the great moo of the earth, mighty men and captains, tyrants, slave-holders, rxoh ami poor, bond aud free: &H who have worshipped the beast or his image, will, like the host of Pharaoh, be destroyed in the general conflagration of the world, and the saints will shout deliver-1 once in the New Jerusalem State. P shall, therefore, L Give the history of theseven last plagues, or the seven vials of wrath. H. Show whafrmay be understood by “B is done” I. Then we are to give the history ofthe seven vials or last plagues; and far this purpose we must give a comment on the sixteenth chapter of Revelation. Verse I, tt And I heard a great voice out of the temple, saying to the seven a&gels, Go your ways, and pour out the vials of the wrath of God upon the earth.” This verse shows ua that these plagues axe poured upon the earth at the command of him who sits in the temple of God. Verse 2, ^ And the first went, afed poured out his viiU upon the earth; and there fell a noisonae and grievous sort upon the men winch had the mark of the beast, and upon them which worshipped his image.” This first vial was poured upon the earth, meaning toe kingdom of toe beast or tho Roman government, a noisome, a grievous sore, indr- | Christ’s seconb coming. 281 cates the dissolution of the body afflicted, and that the constitution is laboring under some inward:disease, or affectedly contagion from without It is therefore a fit emblem to represent the exposure of the corruptions of the church of Rome, and breaking out of those loath* some diseases of internal abominations which had been hid for ages from the world by the cunning craftiness of this Papal beast The men spoken of in mis passage are those who worship the beast, and who are the professed followers of this corrupt society, and all who live under the influence and control of the idolatrous city of nations, and who traffic in her indulgences and abominable practices. This vial then began to be poured out when the Protestants first published to the world the corruptions and abominable practices of the church of Rome, when the world began to see the noisome and grievous sores that covered the men who pretended to preach or proclaim the doctrine, laws, or commands of this beast And of course this plague was sent on the Romish church about the year A. IX 1529, under the preaching of Luther, 'Calvin, and others who, opposed and exposed the corruptions of the church of Rome* Verse 3, “And the second angel poured out his vial upon the sea, and it became as the blood of a dead man; and every living soul died in the sea.” The sea, in propheticftlanguage, is the centre of some great nation, or society of men, as in a restless and turbulent state; and the things living in the sea, are the persons living under the power or control of this nation, or society. Living soul denotes those persons who have been bom of the Spirit, and are in possession of that living faith in God, and love for all men* ** As the blood of a dead man.” There is something veiy striking in this figure— not an ordinary figure of blood, which denotes war and mortal controversy, but cold, congealed bloody the blood of a dead man denoting' a massacre in cool bk>od*with-out any resistance on the part of those murdered. •. Ibis vial was, then, poured out in France, the principal kingdom in the Roman ton horns, in the year A. D. J572, at the massacre of the Huguenots on St Bartholomew’s eve, when 50,000 were slain in one night, and the streets 19 * LECWRE XV. ran blood, as Sully* tells us, in some places ankle deep, in the city of Pam • This massacre was in cold blood ; for the same historian tells us, that the king stood in his balcony, and shot down his naked and defenceless subjects aa they were fleeing.through the streets. This happened inFrance, the stoutest of the Papal horns--the chief instrument in establishing, building up, and supporting that cruel, murderous power of Papacy. Verse 4, “ And the third angel poured out his vial upon the rivers and fountains of waters, and they became blood.” By “rivers and fountains of water,” I understand the nations and states who live around the centre, or sea, as it was called in the preceding vial. By u blood,” I understand destructive war. “And I heard the angel of the waters say, Thou art righteous, O Lord, which art, and want, and shalt be, because thou hast judged thus. For they have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and thou hast given them blood to drink, for they are worthy. And I heard another out of the altar say, Even so, Lord God Almighty, true and righteous are thy judgments.” In these verses we have the reasons given, why they were visited with this scourge of war, because, in -the preceding vial, they had shed the blood of saints; which proves that the exposition of* that vial, which I have already given, is correct This vial, then, was poured out upon the nations that had given their strength and their power to the beast; and the governments were filled with war and blood. This vial was poured out about A. D. 1630, and lasted nearly fifty years. Spain and Portugal carried on a blpody and destructive war for more than thirty years of this time. France was tom by civil and intestine warn during a long period. The civil wars in England began under king Charles L, 1642, which lasted with but little cessation* until long George L ascended the throne, in 1714. Gerttianv whs filled with blood, between the contentions of'the Evangelical league and Catholic league, “ which gave-rise to a ruinous war, which lasted thirty years.” See Guthrie, vol. i., page 443. This war was headed, on the part of the Protestants, by Gustavus Adolphus, king of Sweden, who was killed at the battle of Lutzen, A. Christ’s second coming. 293 D. 1632, Which war lasted until the peace of Munster 1648. The other kingdoms of the ancient empire of Rome were more or less drenched in bloody and civil *ars, on account of their religious tenets, and contention of their rulers and sovereign princes. These were the heavy judgments which God saw fit to inflict upon the kingdoms and states of the church of Rome, for the innocent blood which she had shed of the Protestants who had protested algainst her cruel and blasphemous practices. “ Pot they have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and thou hast given them blood to drink, for they are worthy.” u And the fourth angel poured out his vial upon the sun, and power was given unto him to scorch men with fire. And men were scorched with great heat; and blasphemed the name of God, which hath power over these plagues; and they repented not to give him glory.” The sun is the great source of light and heat, and, in prophetic language, is an emblem of the gospel, as explained in the 10th Psalm, 4—10. “ Their line has gone out through all the earth, and their words to the end of the world. In them hath he set a taberna- cle for the sun,” &c. To u scorch men ” with fire, signifies to make men angry; “ great heat,” uncommonly angry, vengeful, malicious. This vial was poured out in the last century, when the gospel was proclaimed in these kingdom® of the beast Now, during the greater part of the last century, and in all the kingdoms where the gospel was preached, there were manifested insidious attempts and a systematic opposition against the gospel of Jesus Christ, or the Holy Scriptures. This opposition was headed by Frederick, king of Prussia, and aided by all the wits, men of genius and learning^ as they boasted, of all Europe and America; and in their secret assemblies, or clubs, they went so &r as to calculate about what longth of time it would take for them to destroy and exterminate the religion of the “ G-alilean and his twelve fishermenand no writers that ever Wrote took such unwearied pains, showed so much virulence and anger, blasphemed the name of God: to such a degree, as these writers; and none, either before or-since, nave ever dared to cxliibit the like. a And they re- m LECTURE XV. pented not to give him the glory.” I believe it is not ■ Known, that any of these principal deistical writers were converted to the religion of Jesus Christ before their death, to give God the glory. Yet I think we have some account of mahy of them dying in horror, at the frightfuL view of the future, in consequence of their blasphemous lives against the majesty of the King of kings. Therefore, in the history of the Deists in the eighteenth century, we have the history of the plague of the fourth vial. “ And the fifth angel poured out his vial upon the seat of the beast; and his kingdom was full of darkness aud they gnawed their tongues for pain, and blasphemed the God of heaven, because of their pains and their sores, and repented not of their deeds.” w The seat of the beast” must mean those ten kingdoms on which the woman sitteth, which is ancient Rome. w Full of darkness ” must mean full of wickedness, confusion, and every evil work. “Gnawed their tongues for pain” shows shame, disgrace, and disappointment. This vial was poured out in the French revolution, about 1798. When Bonaparte began his extraordinary career, exalted .to the pinnacle of power, he dethrones the pope, (whose power and authority had made kings and emperors quail at his feet, who had ruled over the nations with despotic sway for more than 1200 years,) and makes ff^Hne the second city of France; conquers the ancient moijfrchies; deluges every country with blood; masters every king; fathers spoils from every land, and humbles cities in the ust; changes the laws of kingdoms, and destroys the most sacred constitutions of the Roman states. In this revolution among the Roman kingdoms, and under this vial, the hostile was demolished, the inquisition destroyed, torture suppressed, and the power of the Papal clergy restrained. Their kingdoms were full of darkness; they were troubled, chafed, and grieved; a thousand plots were laid; many times they confederated against him, the master 6pirit of the times; but they prevailed not, until this vial had its accomplishment on the seat of the beast. Yet, after all this wonderful display of God's judgments upon the beast aud kingdoms of ancient Rome, they repented not, but, Pharaoh-like, they bias- Christ's second coming. 223 phemed God, because of their pains and their sorea “And the sixth angel poured out his vial upon the great river Euphrates; arid the water thereof was dried up, that the way of the kings of the east might be prepared.” The scene has now changed from Europe to Turkey. The “ river Euphrates ” means, in prophecy, the people of that country bordering on the nver, and, of course, refers to the Turkish power, as I have formerly shown in my lectnre on the fifth and sixth trumpet “Water thereof was dried up,”,*is an emblem of the power and strength of that kingdom being diminished, or taken away. This vial was poured out on Turkey, by the loss of a great share of the empire; first, Russia on the north, in her last war with the Turks, took away a number of provinces; then, by the revolt of Ali Pacha; then, by the rising of the Greeks; since, by the Albanians and Georgians, and other distant ports of the empire, becoming disaffected; which, all together, have so wasted the power of the Turks, that, now, it is very doubtful whether she can maintain her power against her own intestine enemies; and, to compare her now with her former greatness, would be like comparing a fordable stream with the great river Euphrates; bo that the way now; appears to be prepared for the kings to come ujLtb the battle of the great day, in which the false prophet is now to take his part, as we shall see in our next verse. “ And I saw three unclean spirits like frogs come out of the mouth of the dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out of the mouth of the false prophet; for they are the spirits of devils working miracles, which go forth unto the kings of the earth ana of the whole world, to gather them to the battle of the great day of God Almighty.” Now, if we can decipher this passage, we can tell what are now and what will be the signs of the times. “ Three unclean spirits.” By this we must understand three wicked principles. “ Progs ” I understand to show us that it is political. As frogs came over the land in the judgment on Egypt, and pervaded every house, even the palace of die king, so do politics. u Mouth ” denotes orders or commands. The dragon is LECTURE XV. a figure of the kings of the earth. The beast is used to represent Papacy. The false prophet evidently represents Mahometanism. These have all the spirit of devils. The devil pretends to claim power over all the kingdoms of the world, (see Rev. xiL 9,) there called the devil Papacy is said, in Rev. xiii. 2, to receive its power from the dragon, and to come out of the bottomless pit, and shall go into perdition; of course, must belong to Satan’s kingdom. The false prophet, too, is to be “cpst alive into a Jake of lire burning with brimstone.” ‘ All these powers have pretended to work miracles,: to establish their authority over the bodies and souls of men. But wbat are the principles which each of these teach their political followers ? The dragon and his political party, in whatever nation they may appear, (as all three of these political principles must pervade the whole earth,) will support tyranny, slavery, and aggrandizement of the few at the expense of many. The beast and his political party will be known only by their hypocrisy, bigotry, and superstition. Their principal object will be to operate on the hopes and fears of men, and so gain an ascendency over the minds of the individuals who may be so unfortunate as to be found in their ranks. The false prophet will fill his party with notions of infidelity, lust, and conquest Anq the spirit of all these parties, working at one and the same tune, in ay nations, and among all people, will produce an effect which only can be known to mortals in experiencing the conflict “ Behold, I come as a thief. Blessed is he that watcheth, and keepeth* his garments, lest he walk naked, and they see his shame.” This verse gives us notice of the near approach of him who hath ml power in heayen and earth. “ For when they say, Peace and safety, then sudden destruction coroeth upon them, and they shall not escape. But ye, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day shall overtake you as a thief.” Watett therefore, for if ye have put on the Lord Jesus Christ, keep, your garment, and let none take your crown,'that you may be found of him without spot and blameless. “And he gathered them together into a place called, in the Hebrew tongue, Armageddon; ” that Christ’s second coming. is, “Where the Lord will declare his precious fruit,* This gathering1 is the same spoken of m Mattxxv. 32, “And before him shall be gathered all nations; and he shall separate them one from another, as a shepherd di> videth his sheep from the goats.” In the place Armageddon, the Lord will manifest who are his; he will separate the chaff from the wheat, the ^wicked from the just The wheat he will gather into his garnet ; they will be caught up to meet the Lord in the air, while the chaff will be burnt with unquenchable fire. His own right hand shall save us while his last plague shall be poured out upon the head of his enemies. “ Am^jthe seventh angel poured his vial into the air; and Were came a great voice out of the temple of heaven from the throne, saying, It is done.” The seventh and last vial of God’s wrath will be poured into the air about the year 1840, if my former calculations are correct, when this judgment will have a quick and rapid circulation over the whole globe. Like the air, it will pervade every kingdom, circulate into every nation, sow the seeds of anarchy in every society, and disorganize every bond of union among men, except the gospel. u And there were voices, and thunders, and lightnings, and a great earthquake, such as was not since men were upon the earth, so mighty an earthquake, and so great” Voices, political strife. Thunders is an emblem of divisions. Lightning is a representation of anger and war. Great earthquake denotej a great revolution. And there will be, when this vial is poured out, political strife among all nations, divisions among all sects, societies, and associations of men upon earth. Anger, war, and bloodshed will fill the countries with horror and dismay; and a great revolution, sueh as was not since men were upon earth, so mighty a revolution and so great u And, the great city was divided into three parts, and the cities of the nations fell; and great Babylon came itt remembrancebefore God, to giv£ unto her the cup Of the wine of the fierceness of his wrath.” The great cUy \b the woman which reigneth over the kings of the earth, says the angel, Rev. xvii. 18. And the woman is Papacy. Papacy must also be divided into three parties, to show LECTURE XT. her dissolution. And the cities of the nations fell. As city denoted the papal power and religion, so does ctfiw represent the power and religion of all other nations. Therefore all the power, and all national religion, will fall in and under this vial, and the anti-Ghiistian power will be judged f all their (fins, cruel persecutions, and bloody deeds, will -foebrought into judgment into remembrance befor$ j&od9 ana he will fill to her the cup which she has made others drink, and Bhe in her turn must drink the dregs. w And every island fled away, and the mountains were not found.” Islands and mountains are figures of great and small kingdoms and gov-erftents. This text alludes to the same time and circumstances which Nebuchadnezzar’s dream does, Daniel ii. 35, 45 —when the stone cut out without hands shall smite the image upon his feet, and all the kingdoms of the earth be carried away, that no place shall be found for them. In this verse it is, the “ mountains were not found.” u And there fell upon men a great hail out Of heaven, every stone about the weight of a talent, and men blasphemed God because of the plague of the hail; for the plague thereof was exceeding great.” This closes the history of the seven last plagues, and this storm of hail is the last part of the seventh vial; it is the closing up of the judgments of God on an ungodly world. Whether we are to understand this hail figuratively or literally, I am not able to say ; but my prevailing opinion is, that we are to understand it literally, for this reason—I have never been able in the word of God to find any figurative explanation, although it is used in a number of places with particular reference to the last day. Isa. xxviii. 17, “ Judgment also will 1 lay to the line, and righteousness to the plummet, and the hail -shall sweep away the refuge of lies, and the waters shall overflow the hiding-places.” xxx. 30, “ And the Lord shall Cause his glorious voice to he heard, and shall show the lighting down of his arm, with the indignation of his anger, and with the flame of a devouring fire, with scattering, and tempest, and hailstones.” Ezek. xiii. 11, 13, “Say unto them which daub it with untempered mortar, that it shall fall; there Christ’s second coming. 229, fibril he an overflowing shower; and ye,0 great hail-stones, shall fall ; and a stormy wind shall; r@nd it Therefore, thus saith the Lord Gqd, I will even rend it with a stormy 1Nmd in my fury; and there slufll hd an overflowing shower in mine anger, and great hail-stones in my fury, to consume it” Ezek. xxxviii. 22, u And I will plead against him with pestilence and with blood; and 1 will rain upon him, and upon his bands, and upon the many people that are with him, an overflowing rain, and great hail-stones, fire and brimstone.” Also, Rev. xi. 19, “ And there were lightnings, and voices, and thunderings, and an earthquake, and great hail.” By reading the connection of these texts, you cannot but be struck with the agreement of the prophets in their descriptions of this last and dreadful judgment of God upon the world. All of them evidently fix it on the last day; all call it apparently a rain of great hail-stones, like those which fell upon Egypt in the days of Moses. Exodus ix. 23—25, “ And Moses stretched forth his rod toward heaven; and the Lord sent thunder and hail, and the fire ran along upon the ground; and the Lord rained hail upon the land of Egypt So there was hail, and fire mingled with the hail, veiy grievous, such as there was none like it in all the land of Egypt since it became a nation. And the hail smote throughout all the land of Egypt, all that was in the field, both man and beast; and the hail smote every herb of the field, and brake every tree of the field.” This, it is evident, is the type of the last part of the seventh plague. And now, mv friends, will you believe ? Six of these plagues have been accomplished in as literal a manner as we could expect, after a fair and scriptural explanation of the figures and metaphors used. And again I ask, Do you believe? You think, perhaps, you wnlwait until you see the hail come, and then you willheUeve* But wjll you not recollect that our text says, “ 4^4 they blasphemed God because of the plague of the hail”? Will you thus tempt God through six successive judgments, and wait for the last before you will believe ? What hope or prospect have you that the seventh will do what the six preceding could not do—that is, make LECTURfc XV. you believe P Is there one rational conviction that yon will be then convinced? No, not one. Then will you not see and learn wisdom by what is gone before ? Pharaoh had no space for repentance under, or even just before the last plague. And so it will be with you; the door will have been shut before any part of the seventh vial will be poured out, for then will be heard a great voice reverberating through the upper vault of heaven, and, sounding even to the dark cells of the pit of woe, shaking the middle air writh its deep-toned thunder, and, like the lightning* darting its vivid flash of fire from east to west, will pierce the deafest ear", and make the hardest heart to break, although a thousand fold more hard than the adamantine rock, saying, “ It is doneThis brings me to show, II. What we may understand by «It is done.” The first question which naturally arises on the mind is, What is done ?* When Christ was about expiating for the sins of the world; when he was closing up the work which his Father gave him to do on earth in the' flesh; when the spirit was about leaving the tenement of clay which it had inhabited through a life of thirty-three years of pain, sufferings, deprivations, sorrows, groans, and’ tearsj made more acute by temptations trying as the arch-demon of hell could invent; suffering - reproach from the haughty Pharisee, and the more obstinate Sadducee, and contempt and ridicule from the base rabble of his own people; persecuted even until death by the envy, malice, and hatred of those who had received boons and blessings of life at his hands, — he had saved them from disease, death, and the rage of demons; yet, in this moment of great need, he was forsaken of all; they stood afar off; and when he was about giving up the ghost, he cried, «It is finished! ” and bowed his head, and died. The fratricide man could do no more; he had followed him to death; beyond that the envy of his brother could not reach him. The rabble, who a few days before had cried, Hosannas to the Son of David ! this day were crying, Crucify him! crucify him! now could cry no more, hut with downcast looks, retained into the city. The Pharisees and rulers could do no more; they had plotted his death, and obtained Christ’s second coming. 231 their object; but into the dark recess of the tomb they dare not, they would not, follow. The great red dragon (the Roman power) had sought his life when a child, but the hour had not come. Herod sought his life when a man, but he could not succeed until the last day of the seventy weeks should be accomplished. Then the powers of earth, wicked men, and devils, could combine to take the life of the Lord of glory. Then, while these powers had control, the heavens hid their face; nature stood back aghast, and the material world shuddered'with a groan. Then, at that awful, fitful period, he who had been the object of all this malice, cried with a loud voice,w It is finished! ” The work on earth in the flesh is finished; the temptations of Satan are finished; the persecution of his brethren are finished; envy, malice, and hatred towards the person of Christ are finished; the power of earth, hell, and wicked men to do any thing with him, is finished; death has no more terrors over him. It is finished. Although Christ had finished his work, and had endured all the sufferings Which he wajs to finish; yet in his spiritual body, the church, the measure of his sufferings was to be filled up. His people must pass through the same scenes in the world as their divine Master had experienced from satanic temptations and the hatred of the world. “ The world will hate you and persecute you for my name’s sake, even as they hated me before they hated you,” says our blessed Redeemer. Therefore the same manifestations of cruelty, contempt, persecution, and death, were to be acted over again in the church until the 2300 years should be accomplished, when Christ would come again, receive home his weary, persecuted people, conquer death, and him that had the power of death, which is the deviL “ And there came a great voice out of the temple of heaven from the throne, saying, It is done.” The power of earth, hell, and wicked men over the dear people of God, is done. Their temptation in the flesh is done; their trials, persecutions, sufferings, darkness, fi&ars, and death itself, are done. As the sufferings of the head was finished in Christ, so will all the pains of the body be completed when the seventh and last vial shall be poured into the air, and LECTURE XV. cleanse the atmosphere from all noxious vapoTS, pes-. tilence, and death. “ Then shall the sanctuary be cleansed,” and then will the great voice from the throne say, It is done. These old heavens and this old earth will have passed away, and the New Jerusalem come “down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband,” Rev. xxi. 3—6. M And I heard a great voice out of heaven, saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, afld God himself shall be with them and be their God, and God shall wipe ^ away all tears from their eyes •/ and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain, for the former things are passed away. And he that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I make all things new. And he said unto me, Write; for these words are true and faithful. And he said unto me, It is done.” Here we have the same expression as in our text, having the same identical meaning, the same “ great voice,” in one as in the other; the same throne, and the same voice speaking, alluding to the same period of time when the old things are done away and the new heavens are finished, to the, same point in prophecy, u the end.” Therefore, as we have passed the sixth vial, the seventh and last hangs trembling in the air. The drops of this vial are already contaminating the minds of men; already wo see the unclean spirit going forth; the great city is being divided, and the signs of the heavens denote a moral conflict, and on the earth a speedy revolution. Then, my fiiends, let us be wise; let us make peace with Him who has power to save or to destroy. For we learn by our subject that the world and worldly scenes are passing away; every vestige of mortal grandeur, eveiy form of carnal pride, every fashion of human glory will soon be eclipsed by the grandeur of that great white throne from whose face the heavens and earth will flee a war,' and the great voice from the throne will sound the last requiem, u It is done? “ Yet when the sound shall tear the skies, And lightning burn the globe below, Saints, you may lift your joyful eyes; —There’s a hew heaven ana earth for you.” LECTURE XYI. MATT. Mv. 1. Then shall the kingdom of heaven be likened unto ten virgin* which took their lamps and weut forth to meet the bridegroom. Parables are always given to illustrate some doctrine or subject which the speaker wishes to communicate, and is an easy or familiar manner of making his hearers or readers understand the subject, and receive a lasting impression! Nothing has so good an effect on the mind as to teach by parables moral precepts or spiritual truths. In this way we are taught by visible things, or familiar objects, to realize, in some measure, the truths and subjects presented. This was the manner Christ taught his disciples and followers, that their memories might the more easily retain, and be often refreshed, when they beheld any scene like the representation of the parable; and in this way, they might always keep in view the important truth that is likened to the parable. A parable, rightly applied and clearly understood, gives good instruction, and is a lasting illustration of the truth. But if we apply the parable wrong, if we put on a false construction, it will serve to lead us into an en*or, and blind us, instead of producing light,—as Christ said of the Pharisees, he spake to them in parables, that, “ seeing, they might see and not perceive, and hearing, they might hear and not understand.” Men often explain parables by fancy, to suit their own notions, without any evidence but their own ingenuity; and by this means there will be as many 234 LECTURE XVI, differen^explanations as there are ingenious men. But I dare not trifle thus with the word of God: if we can* not, by the word of God, explain, we had better leave the same as we And it, and not attempt what must only result in guess-work at last; but follow Scripture rule,> and we cannot get far from .the truth. Christ has given us rules by which rrTW thcfl a part if not na^MjuU^ faguaga.I This, surely, is setting SuT^orff of life in a conspicuous situation, that it may five light to all in the world. This has not been done y the exertions of Christians or professors only, but by the aid of all classes and societies of men. Kings have opened their coffers, and favored those engaged in the work; nobles have used their influence, and have cast LECTURE XVI. m into the treasury of the Lord of their abundance; rich men have bestowed of their riches ; and in many cases the miser has forgot his parsimony, the poor have replenished the funds of the Lord’s house, and the widow has cast in her mite. How easy to work the work of the Lord when the hearts of men are made willing by his power! But shall we forget those who have forsaken the land of their fathers, the home of their nativity, and have spent lonesome years of toil among strangers, yes worse than strangers, among heathen idolaters, and the savage of the wilderness, in the cold regions of the north, and under the scorching rays of a vertical sun, among the suffocating sands of the desert, or in the pestilential atmosphere of India; who have risked their lives to learn a language, and prepare themselves to trim a lamp for those who sit in darkness and the shadow of death ? No, we will not forget them; .the prayers of thousands have ascended before the golden altar, morning and evening, on their behalf, and Israel’s God has been their protector. Surely we may hope that these have oil in their lamps, who have sacrificed so much to bestow a lamp upon others. But remember, my brethren, the Lord he is God, and let him have all the glory. This is the time, and the same time that Gabriel informed Daniel, “ many should run to and fro, and knowledge should increase.” This, too, is the same time when the angel flying through the midst of heaven had the everlasting gospel to preach to them who dwelt upon theearth. Here are Christ’s words fulfilled,where he say s^“ Ahd tEiS^tJJffTeT'orChe^cmgdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all nations; and then shall the end come.” r2dly. It is plain to any diligent observer of the signs or the times, that all the societies for moral reform in our world at the present day are parts of the fulfilment of the parable, giving more light What of our Bible societies ? Are not these trimming^ the lamp for" mil-iiofiy oi human beings ? 'thirty years past, more than three fourths of the families in what we call Christian lands were without the lamp of life, and now nearly all supplied.) Many of those who sat in heathenish dark- Christ’s second coming. 245 ness then, are now rejoicing in the light ofGod’s book. And much of this has been performed, through the instrumentality of Bible societies, and not onfy through the agency of the church, but political men, men of the world, the great men, merchants of the earth and those who trade in 9hips, all who live under the influence of the gospel, the “ kingdom of heaven,” have engaged in the work. Will not the most skeptical acknowledge, that this society has succeeded beyond the most sanguine expectation of its most ardent advocates ? And is not this strong circumstantial evidence that the Bridegroom is near, even at the door ? { 3d. The missionary societies of all sects and denominations, whrch HaV'd^FeiT^taBlished within forty years, have as far exceeded all former exertions of this kind as the overflowing Nile does the waters of the brook Kid-ron. See the missionary spirit extending from east to west, and from north to south, warming the breast of the philanthropist, giving life and vigor to the cold-hearted moralist, and animating and enlivening the social circle of the pious devotee. Every nation, from India to Oregon, from Kamtschatka to New Zealand, have been visited by these wise servants (as we hope) of the cross, proclaiming “ the acceptable year of the Lord, and the day of vengeance of our God,” carrying the lamp, the word of God in their hands, and oil, faith in God, in their hearts.^ All classes of men are engaged in this cause, from the gi#y hairs of old age down to the sprightly youth of ten years. Who, then, can doubt but that the virgins in this sense have and are trimming their lamps, and the bride is making herself ready? “ Go ye out to meet him.” part of the ^^menfc^^ep^L^^^^Srly an ev$* dence that the This system of teaching the young and lgimrantTook its rise between forty and fifty years since, at the very time that the Christian world were praying, and ardently praying, for the coming of Christ, before that part of the Savior’s prayer was forgotten, “ Thy kingdom come.’y Prom a little fountain this stream of water has be-21 * 346 LECTURE XVI. come a groat, river, and encompassed the whole land. Every quarter of the globe are drinking at this fountain or stream of knowledge, and the youth are taught to trim their lamps. And when the bridegroom shall come, may we not reasonably hope that the thousands of the young men and young women who have assisted in giving light to others, may be found having oil in their vessels, and their lamps trimmed and burning, and they looking and waiting for the coming of their Master, that when he comes they may rise to meet him in the air, with ten thousand oi their pupils, who will sing the new eong in the New Jerusalem forever and ever? Search diligently, my young friends, and see to it that ye believe in this word, “ which is able to make you wise unto salvation.” 5. Tract societies are of much use, and grppnpflpr.mnt ^riflitbe lam ire; like snutt’ers Slat take away tne preventives to meJ light, so are tracts. They take away from the mind the prejudice that thousands have against reading the word of God. They remove those rooted and groundless opinions which many have that they cannot understand the Bible; they serve to excite the mind to this kind of reading; they enlighten the understanding into some scriptural truths; they are pioneers, in many instances, to conversion; they ean be sent where the word of God cannot at first be received; in one word, they are the harbingers of light, the forerunners of the Bible. And in this,%>o, all men in this probationary state seem to be more or less engaged, from the king on the throne down to the poor peasant in the cottage, writing, printing, folding, transporting, paying, or reading, these silent little messengers of the virgins’ lamp. “Then all those virgins arose and trimmest their lamps.” Has not God’s hand been 6een in all this? Yes, glory be to him who hath disposed the hearts of men to work the work that God bids them, and to fulfil the blessed word which he hath given them. This institution took its rise about the same time with the Bible society. 1 6. societies. Threat j&ua$se IJ5L JtfSJPSfbjg . the wayfor the Christ’s second coming. 247 viryips to go out and meet thej&ricfogrQprq, Our world, twenty years‘%oy mlpit^Be called aVonf of fashionable drunkards; almost all men drank of the intoxicating bowl, and thought it no harm. But when the lamp began to dart its rays around our t&bemacles, it was found by woful experience that those who drank of the poisonous cup were totally and wholly unprepared to receive the warning voice, or hear the midnight cry, u Behold, the bridegroom cometh.” ^ No, “they that* were drunken, were drunken in the night,” says the apostle. M Therefore let us watch and be sober.” And Peter tells us, “ But the end of all things is at hand; be ye therefore sober, and watch unto prayer.” How foolish would it have been for a drunken man to be set on a watch, or a praying man to be found drunk! Therefore, in order that men might be in a suitable frame of mind to receive instruction at the close of this dispensation, and be in a situation to listen to the midnight cry, God ordered the virgins, and they arose and trimmed their lamps ; and in all human probability thousands who would have met a drunkard’s grave if .this society had not arose, are now watching, with their lamps trimmed and burning, ready to meet the Bridegroom at his coming.£ fffirhana thia Judge stands at the door; go ye out to meet him. This society, like the others before mentioned, is a general thing, and all sects, denominations, and classes of men are engaged in it, and it has an important influence upon all men who are in this probationary state, and who may be termed, as in our text, “ virgins.”/ This society is of later origin than the others, and seems to be a rear guard to wake up a few stragglers which the other societies could not reach. And now, drunkards, is your time; Wisdom Stands at the door and knocks; let go the intoxicating bowl, be sober, and hoar the midnight ciy, “ itehfllfl.. For X&im souls’ sake drink not another drau^t^fiie come ’^nfieK'^'kn^'iffiat day unawares, an^fincTyotr sleeping.” O, be wise, ye intemperate men, for they only went in to the marriage who were found ready, “and the door was sbut/y 248 LECTURE XVI. u Then came also the other virgins, saying, Lord, Lord, open to us. But he answered and said, Verily, I say unto you,. I know you not Watch, therefore, for ye know neither the day nor the hour wherein the Son of Man cometh.” “But the wise shall understand,” says Daniel, xii. 10. And now, my Christian friends, let me inquire, Are your lampB trimmed and burning? And have you oil in your vessels? Are you prepared for the coming Bridegroom ? And are you awake to this important subject? What say you? If this parable, to which I have directed your minds, has reference to the last day and the coming of Christ; if the “ virgins ” has reference to all men in this probationary state, and dividing them into two classes, wise and foolish; if the “ lamp ” is the word of God, and “ oil ” means iaith in his word, or grace in the heart, as some say,-—then my conclusions are just, and the evidence is strong that we live at the end of the gospel kingdom, and upon the threshold of the glorifiea state of the righteous. Then examine your Bibles, and if you can as fairly prove any other exposition of this parable, as I have this, then believe yours, and time must settle the issue; but if you can find nothing in the Scriptures to controvert plainly my explanation, then believe, and prepare to go out to meet the Bridegroom; for behold he cometh. Awake, ye fathers and mothers in Zion; you have long looked and prayed for this day. Behold the signs! He is near, even at the door. And, ye children of God, lift up your heads and rejoice, for your redemption draweth nigh. For these things have begun to come to pass. And ye, little lambs of the flock, remember Jesus has promised to carry you in his arms, and that he will come and take you to himself, that where he is there ye may be also. Bat remember, all of you, the wise had oil in their lamps, and they were trimmed and burning. Search deep ^examine yourselves closely, be not deceived; and may the Spirit which searcheth all things, and knoweth what is in the mind of man, assist you. But, my impenitent friends, what shall I say to you ? Shall I say, as the master in the parable, “ Behold, the Christ’s second coming. 249 bridegroom cometh: go ye out to meet him ” ? Prepare to meet your Judge. Now he has given you a time for repentance; you have had a probationary season, and possibly now the sceptre of mercy is held out to you. Repent, or it will soon be said to you as Jeremiah said to the virgin, the daughter of Egypt, “ In vain shalt thou use many medicines; for thou shalt not be cured; ” or as in the parable, “ I know you not” Have you no oil in your lamps' ? Delay not a moment; believe the gospel, and you will live; believe in the word of God; receive the love of the Bridegroom, and make no delay; for while they went to buy, the bridegroom came; and they that were ready went in with him to the marriage, and the door was shut O, think what must be the exercise of your minds when these things shall be real; when you will stand without and knock, saying, Lord, Lord, open unto us. Again I ask, Will you repent, believe, and be saved ? Are you determined to resist the truth until it is too late ? Say, sinner, what think ye ? “We will risk the consequence. We do not believe in your day you tell us of. The world is the same it always was; no change, nor ever will be; but if it should come, it will not this ten thousand years; not in our day, certainly. You do not believe yourself. If you did, we should call you a fool*” Are these your arguments, sinner ? Yes. Well, if I had brought no more, no stronger arguments than these, I would not blame you for not believing, for not one of yours can you or have you supported with a particle of Sroof. They are mere assertions; your believing or not elieving will not alter the designs of God. The antediluvians believed not The citizens of the plain laughed at the folly of Lot And where are they now? Suffering the vengeance of eternal fire. LECTURE XVII. LEVITICUS xzvi. S3, 34. And if ye will not be reformed by me by these things, but will walk contrary unto me, then will I also walk contrary unto your and will punish you yet seven times for your sins. We are in the habit of reading the judgments and threatenings in the word of God, as denunciations against some other people but ourselves. We are very fond of throwing back upon the Jews what, upon the principle of equity and justice, would equally belong to us Gentiles. By this mode of reasoning, wicked, unbelieving idolaters, murderers, whoremongers, adulterers, and all liars, may and do resist the force of God’s word, and flatter themselves, in their lustful career, that the judgment is past, and that they may go on in sin with impunity. But it is not only this abominable class of mankind who pervert the word of God to their own condemnation, but many of those who profess to be pious, and even teachers and expounded of the word, do take the same unholy ground, to limit the Holy One in his justice and judgment* , And by this means they not only wrest the Scriptures to their own condemnation, but others^ who follow their pernicious ways, are led into the same errors, and the way of truth is evil spoken of. This manner of expounding Scripture has been used as the last resort against my appeals to the heart and consciences of sinners, to prepare to meet God in judgment Let me use what passage I please in the Scriptures, whether in the Old or New Testament, these Christ’s second coming. 251 wicked, lustful flatterers of mankind, are ready, with a host of learned commentaries, to show that it was applied to the Jews, and to them only; and then taunt me with this witty saying—“What! you, an unlearned man, think to teach us, contrary to our great and learned^ commentators!” This, my friends, is tjie only argument that has ever been produced against my warnings, and proofs of God’s near approach to judge the world in righteousness. And here, too, I pledge myself to show that many, and perhaps that, in many cases, a major part, of these commentators are on my side of the question. I know that, in the subject now about to be presented, this argument will be used — u O! that had reference to the Jews only;” and you will, like the wicked Jews, put far off the evil day, until you are caught in the snare, and perish in the pit The Jews in the days of the prophets said, Ezek. xii. 27, “ The vision that he seeth is for many days to come, and he prophesieth of the times that are far off.” You see, in this sample given us of the Jews, that the same ungodly, wicked perverting, putting off on to others what belongs to us in the visions and threate\iings of God against sin, was manifestly the character of the Jews in that day, as it is in ours. The difference is only circumstantial. They put it off a great while to come; we, a great while back. They cast it forward on to the backs of the Gentiles; we throw it back into the faces of the Jews. This is the wicked disposition of man m his natural state—self-righteous and self-justificatory. Therefore, use this weapon if you please; it will only discover to angels and men your true character, and God’s justice in your condemnation. “ He that covereth his sins shall not prosper; but whoso confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy,” Prov. xxviii. 13L Yet we shall find some things, at least, true, — that the law of God and punishment for sin are the same in all ages^ -and will be the same in all eternity. If the sins of the old world brought the flood and destruction upon the ungodly, so will the sins of the present world, if committed in the same ungodly spirit, bring down similar judgments LECTURE XVII. and destruction upon us. If Sodom and Gomorrah, and the cities of the plain, were destroyed for their abuse of the blessings which God had given them, so shall we be destroyed for our abuse of similar ones. And if the Jews, for their pride, arrogance, self-sufficiency, idolatry, and departure from the known commands of God’s house, were punished with the sword, pestilence, captivity and persecution; so, most assuredly, will the people of God, in every age, whether under Jews or Gentiles, suffer the like or similar judgments. This can be proved abundantly in all parts of the word of God, and in the history of the church in every age. And did we not pervert the word of God to support our sectarian principles, and to gratify our lustful appetites, we might foresee the consequence of apostasy from God, his laws and commands ; as we can foresee the effects of any or all the laws of nature, with which we are so well acquainted. When leaves put forth we know that summer is nigh. When the wind blows long from the south we know it will bring rain. Just so true are all the moral laws of God. Sm will bring death, and pride .must bring a fall. The laws of God’s house are equally as permanent as the laws of nature; and grace or mercy, call it which you please, are founded upon the law of cause and effect as strong as the laws of adhesion and repulsion. Go where you will,—climb up to heaven, or dig into the depths of hell,—you will find an immovable, fixed, and an eternal law of cause and effect Let a man love his Maker, obey his laws, and he is happy. Let him love self only, and disobey the laws and commands of God, and misery is the lot of his inheritance, although the world was at his command. Here, then, is the great secret, that mankind must be reformed, or they can never be happy; in one word, they must be bom of the Spirit, or they cannot enter the kingdom of God. . The text is a prophecy of God himself, given to Moses^ and by him revealed to the people; and is a part of those lively oracles which has been continued as binding upon us, who live under the gospel light, as upon them who lived in the days of the typical priesthood. CHRIST’S SECOND COMING. 283 It is a prophecy of what would happen to the people of God as a punishment for conduct therein specified. I shall, therefore, in explanation of our subject, show, I. For what the people of Qod are punished; II. Show how they are punished; and, IIL The time they will be punished. I. First, then, we are to examine the cause of their punishment The text tells us that it is because they “ will not be reformed bv me by these things, but will walk contrary unto me;” that is, unto God. 1st A perverse will. We should suppose that a man who has had his will subdued by the love bM Spirit of God, could not be in possession of a will so diametrically' opposed to the will of God. Yet history and facts show us plainly that it is so. David, a man after God’s own heart,; did perform, by his own will, that which was strictly forbidden in the law and commands of God. Peter, too, after his Lord told him he was every whit clean, and after lie boldly asserted that, if all men should forsake Christ, he Would riot, immediately and willingly, as it is implied, cursed and swore, and Stud he knew not the man. I am aware thafthetfafeOfy of die present day is contrary to the idea that the Christian has two wills, carnal and spiritual; but, upon thiB theory, 1 cannot account for the idea of Christians being punished at all, either on the principle of justice or equity. Therefore I am constrained to believe that, in the heart of a Christian, there are two wills. Sometimes he is in subjection to the will of God, and enjoys the sweets of reconciliation ; and again his owri will governs and controls his acts, and he must feel the chastising rod of Jus heavenly Father for his wilful disobedience oT frSglect of his religious duty. It cannot be the will of trod that his people “will not be reformed by him.” Here is another idea conveyed in our text, which show# that the heart of a Christian is not Wholly pure,—“will not he reformed by Godshowing the same independent spirit that our primitive father and mother did m the fttll, “ to be as gods” We cannot bear the idea of being dependent on God for our reformation. Let us have the power of doing it ourselves, and we will not reject it f but to say 254 LECTURE XVII. we are wholly dependent on God is a hard doctrine: we will not subscribe to 9uch humiliating terms.' How can we tell sinners to reform, if they cannot do it ? u Where is my guilt? If I cannot reform myself; surely God would be unjust to condemn roe for not doing what I cannot do.” And thus you argue, throwing all the blame upon God, when all that God has required in the text, is, that you should be willing that he should do the work of reformation for you. And surely God must be the best workman of the two. God says he punishes us, for “ye will not be reformed by me.” This, my Christian friend,; is our crime, for which the church has been and will be punished seven times. “ And if ye will not be reformed by me by these things.” What does God mean by “ these things ” ? I answer, It is God does the work, and he means his people shall give him the glory; and when they have passed through the furnace of affliction, and when seven times has passed over them, as it did over Nebuchadnezzar, then will the church, like that proud ibonaroh, learn that God rules in heaven and earth. But could we be willing to learn this lesson without this punishment, u hy these things,” that is, by the word of God, by the preached gospel, by the mercies of God, by blessings of heaven from above, by blessings ef the earth beneath, by the love of God, by the death of Christ, by the ministry of angels, by the strivings of the Holy Spirit; in one word, by all the means of grace; if all these things could teach us that God was the Author and Finisher of our faith, and make us willing to be reformed by him, then, indeed, he would not have punished us. But, alas! without chastisements we should b*;,? bastards, and not sons.” Therefore the cause why the Christian must be punished,—to subdue their proud,.rebellious wills, to humble tibeir haughty and selfish hearts. They must suffer all that wicked men or devils can heap upon them, they must fill up the measure of Christ's sufferings in his body, which is the church, in order to make them fit for heaven or happiness. They must, like gold, be seven times purified. As I have before said, all the mercies of God, and blessings of heaven and earth, could not save the church CHRIST’S SECOND COMING. Without the curse and punishment denounced in the word of God. And these, too, must be managed bv that all-powerful Arm, the great Jehovah, who, by his wisdom and power, by his grace and rod, will make all tilings work for the good of his church, and will finally redound to his glory. And at last it will be said, u These have come through great tribulation, having washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. II. I am to show how they are punished. 1st They are punished by their own deeds. David went with broken bones to his grave; and Peter, when his Lord looked upon him, went out and Wtipt bitterly. Paul had a thorn in his flesh lest he should he exalted above measure. The Jews courted an alliance with Babylon, and by that means were led into bondage and captivity many years. They, contrary to God’s express command, afterwards made a league with the Romans, and by them was their city and sanctuary destroyed, and their nation scattered to the four winds of heaven. The church, after the Christian era, courted the popular driven into the wilderness, and* passed through a thousand two hundred and sixty years of torture, darkness, and death. The church, recently, has been courting’ popularity from the world, raising up a learned ministry, worshipping at the shrine of ancient and modem philosophy ; and already her ranks are broken, her piety on the wane, her efforts paralyzed, and infidelity gaining ground. 2d. By wicked and designing mep* Ldfc us remember how Balaam taught B&Iak to cait stumbling-blocks before the children of Israel. Witness the false prophets in the days of the kings of Israel; also the wicked and designing men in the days of Jeremiah and the prophets ; and, finally, the division and subdivision by wicked men at the final destruction of Jerusalem. See some, also, in the apostles’ days —*fhbe apostles, deceitful workers, transforming themselves into the apostles of Christ, 2 Cor. xi. 13; some, also, “who subvert- iECTUMXTtt. 256 ed whole houses teething things they ought not for filthy lucre’s sake,” Titus i. 11; others, who crept into houses* leading captive silly women laden with divers lusts; some, teaching the doctrines and commandments of men, bringing in damnable heresies, and denying the Lord^hat bought them. And from that day unto this, in every age, and in every church, division, wounds, and putrefying sores, have been experienced through false, wicked, and designing professors. 3d. The chprch has been punished by the kings and zulep of this world. There was a season, in the days of Jiavid and Solomon, and after her deliverance from Egyptian bondage under Moses and Joshua, and so on down to the days of Manasseh, when the church, the people of God, were governed by their own rulers and laws in a great measure. But since the days of Ma-naaseh not a moment has she enjoyed of respite, but has been scattered among the kingdoms of the world, as Jeremiah th% prophet has prophesied she would. Jer xv. 4, “ And I will cause them to be removed into all kingdoms of the earth, because of Manasseh, the son of Heaekiah, long of Judah, for that which he did in Jerusalem.” Here began the a scattering of the power of the holy people,” and when seven times shall be accomplished, then all “these things” shall be finished; that $1, the church will then have passed the ordeal of trial *pd chastisement “ Manasseh made Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem to err, and to do worse than the heathen.” * Wherefore the Lord brought upon them the captains of the host of the king of Assyria, which took Manasseh among the thorns, and bound him with fetters, and carried him to, Babylon. And when he was in affliction. he besought the Lord his God, and humbled himself greatly before the God of his. fathers,” 2 Chron. xxxiii. 9—12. We learn in this passage the cause and eflbct The cause of their captivity was their errors apd wicked conduct The effect wan their captivity to the kings of Babylon, and their humility in their affliction. And although Manasseh was restored to his kingdom again after hw humiliation, yet the children of Judah and Jerusalem were never free ftom the Babylonish CHEIST 8 8BC0ND COMING. 257 yoke again while the kingdom of Babylon stood, but had to pay them tribute until the Medes and Persians conquered Babylon, which was about one hundred and forty years after the first captivity in Babylon of Judah and Jerusalem. Then the Medes and Persians reigned over the Jews, and made them pay tribute, and put a yoke of bondage upon them, until Alexttnder the Grecian conquered them, about two hundred and two years afterwards; when the Grecians became the masters of Judea,.and continued the yoke of bondage, carrying away into captivity many of the principal citizens of Jerusalem, aud obliging them to pay tribute* ond tfeeir young men to serve as soldiers in their armies; destroying their riches, defiling their sanctuary, and compelling them to worship their gods, and sacrifice to their idols. This government lasted one hundred and seventy-seven; years, when the Romans made the Grecian gene rid Bacchides withdraw his army from Jerusalem, and never trouble the Jews any more, as Maccabees tells us in his first book, viii. 31, 32; also, ix. 1, 72, 73. This was one hundred and fifty-eight years before Christ; the Babylonians, Medes and Persians, and Grecians, having each in their turn ruled over and . led into captivity, robbed and spoiled the children of Judah and Jerusalem, and scattered them among all the nations of the earth,. as Moses and all the prophets had foretold; in all; from: the captivity of Manasseh, five hundred and nineteen years. No man can read this prophecy, from which our text is taken, and the other prophets who have spoken of these things, aud understand them literally, and then read the history of the world, and compare them together carefully, and let reason decide, and be an infidel It would be impossible. The devil knows this; and; therefore, he uses all the art he is master of to prevent those whom he wishes to destroy from reading the prophecies. He tells them they are dark and intricate. And if this argument succeeds it is well; he is sure.of his prey. But if they reason on the subject, and say, “If God has revealed himself by the prophets, it must be for our good; and if God is wise, as all agree he is, if there is 258 LECTURE EVIL s God, tbeu it must be in the best possible maimer for man to understand. I will examine and see.” He then tells them it is presumption to look into futurity. “ If yon succeed in discovering the things to come, it will only make yon miserable.9* Should this temptation pre-veqtyou, from reading and trying-to understand, still he is sure of his prey. You “ will not be reformed by these things.9 But suppose you let season work, and think, “If God is speaking by his- prophets to us, surely it would be sin not to hear; for he has d legal right to our earn and attention; and only if our equal speaks to us, on ahy good or interesting subject, it is a piece of ill manners not to listen. I will read and hear what God says by the mouth of his servants ” Then the devil will tell you that it is a sealed book, — not to be understood until it is fulfilled. But reason will tell you, What God hot given for our faith and hope cannot be sealed in thissense; for it would all be lost labor in the prophets of God, and perfect folly in the Giver; for the history itself would reveal it as soon add as well as the prophecy could. And, in that case, says reason, faith and hope would have no food; for, without prophecy, neither the one nor the other could be exercised; for in what we know, how can it be' said we have faith ? or, in what is past, how can it be said we hope for it ? Then, if these ^temptations do not prevent you from reading and trying to tmdere tand the prophecies, Satan has one more weapon, and it is his last resort. u But,9 says the arch enemy, 44 if you are but prepared for happiness or heaven, it is no matter whether you understand prophecy or not.9 This secures and chains down the hypocrite and Pharisee forever; this is turning things upside down at once. For there never were hypocrites or Pharisees but what vainly imagined that they were, of all men, beet prepared for heaven; and so they will neither tiy their foirik, nor examine their hope, if they follow this temptation, until they awake in eternity, forever too late. WWiio^ On the other hand, there never were real children of .God, but what considered themselves unfit for heaven, the vilest of the vile; and if they should take with this deviee of Satan, they must finally end is Christ's second coming. despair; for they could gain no additional evidence of their faith or hope, only by a diligent study of God’s prophetic word.' So that I can boldly say, that reason itself wonld teach us that we ought to apply ourselves diligently and faithfully to tiy our faith by every word of God, and examine our hope in every ffessSble way in searching deep into the revealed truths, whether promises or prophecies, that the day of vengeance may not overtake us unawares. But not only the church under the Jewish dispensation must passthrough her scenes of tribulation, but so, also, must the church under the gospel; for John saw not only the elect Jews in his vision of the glorified state, but also a great number, which no man could number, from among all nations and languages under haven, “ who had come through great tribulation, and wBb had washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.” And, again, it is also evident that, like the Jews, they must suffer persecution from the kings and rulers of the earth, and from spiritual wickedness in high'(places. For John "saw the beast, and the kings of the earth, and their armies, gathered together to make war against him that sat on the horse, and against his army,” Rev. xix. 19. And Daniel saw the same beast u make war with the saints, and prevailed over them until the Ancient of days came, and judgment was given to the saints of the Most High; and the time came that the saints’ possessed the kingdom. Thus he said, “ The fourth beast is the fourth kingdom upon earth,” Dan. vii. 21—23, meaning the Roman kingdom. We must also notice that, like the Jews, they must be scattered among all the nations of the earth ; for here they are to have no continuing city, for they seek one which is to Come, whose Builder and Maker is God,” Hebrews xi. 19; that is, the New Jerusalem, which cometh down from God out of heaven. The proof I bring you that the church among the Gentiles were like the Jews, you will find in the prophecy of the high priest, when our Savior wa9 crucified, Johp xi. 52, “ And not for that nation only, (that is, the .Tews,) but that also jie should gather together in one the children of God that were LECTURE XVII. scattered abroad.” Also it is said, .Mark xiv. 27, u smite the shepherd, and the sheep shalTbe scattered.” And when Christ comes to judge the saints, at the resurrection of the just, he sends his angels into the uttermost parts of the earth, and under the uttermost part of heaven, and gathers together his elect, who have been scattered by the kings and beasts of the earth during the dark and cloudy day of persecution, from his crucifixion to his second coming. And if, in view of all that Christ, the prophets, and apostles, have said in relation to this subject, there is one doubt remaining on your mind as to the truth of these remarks, I beg of you to read but the past history of the church, and you cannot but acknowledge, that, Ithus far, it has been literally fulfilled. iHow soon after the Romans had crucified the Lord or glory, did they attack his church; and for nearly three hundred yS#s the apostles and eminent servants, of Christ suffered all the horrors of persecution by the authority of the RomaiP emperors and kings of the earthP They suffered in all manner of ways which the prophets had foretold they would— by the sword, by wild beasts, by flame, by captivity, and by spoil This was almost constantly until the days of Constantine, who fg a little season put a stop to these bloody scenes; but J^ras but short; for in the &ys of Julian the Apostate, it was renewed, and continued until the binbarians 0f the north overran Italy, and conquered the Roman empire. They tlic church mi fife^ 4MBP kingly uptil they were converted (to .l^c,xChnstian, ffi^iJh, when she enj oyed anotfier veys against dha saints, over them until the Ancient.of days should come, and the judgment should sit /This little horn was to rule over the kings, or the earth, a time, times, and a half, or JraO years ;*all which has been accomplished to the letter. III. I shall now show what is meant by u seven times,” in the text CHRISTAS SECOND COMING. m 1st “ Seven times*” in NebuciradnezzariS'dream, was fulfilled in seven years. Nebuchadnezzar/for bis pride and arrogancy against God, was driven among the beasto of the field, and was made to eat grass as oxen, until seven times passed over him, and until' he learned that the Most High ruled in the kingdoms of men, and gave it to whomsoever he would. This being a ihatter of history, and as an allegory or sample to the people of God for their pride and arrogancy, in refusing to be reformed by Goa, and claftoing the power and will to do l£ese things themselves, — they, too, like Nebuchadnezzar, must be driven among the beasts of the field, (meaning the kingdoms of the world,\ until they leam the sovereignty of God, and that he aispenses his favors to Whomsoever he will. That, being a matter of history, and a sample* only, was fulfilled in seven years; but this, befcg a prophecy, will only be fulfilled in seven prophet* ic times, which will be 7 times 960 years, which will feake 2520 years; for one half of 7 times, that is, 3 timed and a half, is balled, in Rev. xii. 6^ 1260 days, (fulfilled in so many years.) Seq also Rev. xii* 14. xiii. 5. Forty-two months is the one half of 2520, fbr twice 1260 is 25201 seven lames would Sie peoplb^TGod Be' punished for their sins, to fill up the measure of the sufferings of Christ, before they would be delivered from all their enemies, hnd come into possession of the glorified kingdom which was prepared for them from the foundation of the earth* And Ezekiel alludes to the same “aeseri times? Ezafc jragpJL 10^V And they that dwell in the cities of Israel' 'shall go forth, Jerem. xv. 1—3, and shall set on fire and burn the weapons, Jer. v. 14, both the shields and the bucklers, the bows and the arrows, and the handstaves and the spears, and they shall bum them 969 LECTURE XVII. with fire seven y^a/s: so that they shall take no wood out of the field, nof cut down any out of the forests; for they shall bum the weapons with fire; and they shall spoil those th$t spoiled them, and rob those that robbed them, saith the Lord God.” Ezekiel here gives us to understand that, by means of the people of God being driven out of their, cities, and by the word of God, they would be enabled to destroy or be destroying their enemies, and to spoil those who had beenv spoiling them, and rob those who had robbed them; and tins, too, would. taliS-seven ye^g, ur daughters shall prophesy; your old men shallaream dreams, your young men shall see visions.” The apostle told them that this scripture was fullilled at the day of pentecost, and this transaction was well known to the Jews. 21. The fulfilment of the seventy weeks spoken of by Daniel, ix. 24—27, which I have shown in a former lecture, was accomplished to a day. And. the Jews well understood it; for Caiaphas, being high priest that year, said to the Jews, “Ye know nothing at all, nor consider that it is expedient for us that one man should die for the people, and that the whole nation perish not And this spake he not of himtelf, but being high priest that year he prophesied (or taught the prophecy in Daniel) that Jesus should die for that nation, aud not for that nation LECTURE XIX. only, but that also he should gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad.” John xi. 49—52. This evidence was well understood among the rulers of the Jews ; yet notwithstanding all this scripture was fulfilled before their faces, and all these signs were actually accomplished in the short space of thirty-five years, and a cloud of witnesses testifying to all these facts, and they themselves had to consent that notable miracles had been done, they believed not Well may you say, dear hearer, that they deserved wrath, and God was just in destroying their nation and place. But how is it with us ? Do we believe in that word which we blame them for rejecting? Are we clear of the sin of unbelief? The Jews were looking for a temporal king and kingdom. And are not we looking for a temporal millennium — one in which the Christians will have the rule of the world ? Let us see to it that we do not stumble at the same stumbling-stone ; possibly we may have carnal notions as well as they. Therefore, let us inquire, II. What signs are now fulfilling, which are given us by Christ, the prophets, or apostles, of his second coming and ’ glorious reign ? And, 1. Christ tells us, Matt xxiv. 14, u This gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world as a witness, ana then shaft the enTcome.^ is not this sign already accomplished-? frQr,°1ofo/Hn1v% ferent languages; missionaries sent among dl^e nations knownTo us on {he globe, ahd refb^ation succeed-in eyeiy town, nook "or comer iq this land. The gospel has now spread over the four quartets' of the globe. It began in Asia. In the apostles’ days, that quarter was full of light From thence it went into Africa; and, for a number of centuries, Africa stretched out her hands unto God. Europe, too, has had a long visitation of gospel blessings; and now America, the last quarter of the globe, is reaping a harvest of souls for the last day. The gospel, like the sun, arose in theeast, and will set in the west 2. Thegoimqg outof the Holy Spirit, r and last reign of grace. Daniel tel^Tis, afteTKnagaxte^should come Christ’s second coming. tohis end, and none should frpipJiiipj. xii. i, “And at tSaftlmu shall MtCRaSTslanifliJ, the great prince which standeth for the children of thy people.” This 1 have shown, in a former lecture, is the same angel that stood upon the waters of the river, clothed in linen, Daniel xii. 6; also the same angel that John saw, Rev. x. 1—6, standing, his right foot upon the sea, and his left upon the earth, and in his hand a little book open. This angel told John that he must “ prophesy again before many people, and nations, and tongues, and kings; ” meaning that the gospel must again be published, as it had been in the apostolic days. And then would this angel lift his hand to heaven, and swear by him that liveth forever and ever, that time should be no longer. Again, James says, v. 7, 8, “ Be patient, therefore, brethren, unto the coming of the Lord. Behold, the husbandiman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth, and hath long patience for it, until he receive the early and latter rain. Be ye also patient; establish your hearts, for the coining of the Lord drawetli nigh.” And now, can any man, who has any knowledge of the present times, deny that God has poured out his spirit, in a remarkable manner, for twenty years past ? Has not the gospel been spread in as rapid and extensive a manner, as in the apostolic*' day ? Has not opposition and persecution of the kings of the earth, of the woman that sitteth on many waters, the sea, been in a great measure kept in check and powerless, by some invisible power, some mighty aim, until the servants of God should be sealed, the latter rain of grace descend, and God’s purposes completed concerning this latter, day ? Here, tnen, we have a clear and visible sign, that the coining of the Lord draweth nigh. 3. “ Many running to and fro.” This is another importantanaevidenTsigfnTtKe^nd. Daniel xii 4,u But thou, O Daniel, shut up the words and seal the book, even to the time of the end. Many shall run to and fra” Whether the prophet means to be understood, “ many shall run to and fro ” in a religious sense, of in a civil or temporal sense, or whether he means in both, is perfectly immaterial for my purpose. AH must acknowledge, that this text is remarkably fulfilled in this day, in eithe? 25 290 LECTURE XIX. point of view. If it means missionaries of the cross, no man can dispute the fulfilment See the heralds of salvation crossing and re-crossing on every part of the habitable globe. If it means common travellers, or the rapid means of travel, still our text bolds good, and the fulfilment obvious. No man, unless he is wilfully ignorant, can deny that this sign is not actually and literally fulfilled. 4. The great increase of knowledge given in the same text as above. “Even to the time of the end many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall be increased.” View this in any point you please, whether theological or sci-entifical, it is literally true; in this day of invention and improvement, knowledge increases. What of the fifty different moral societies, which have become general in the Christian world ? Is there no increase of knowledge in our Bible societies, Sabbath schools, tract societies, temperance societies, and a catalogue of others for moral reform ? What can we say of all the inventions in the arts? What of.all the improvements in science? In all this, is it not very evident that this sign is now ful-fillingto the very letter? 5. The great increase of riches, and desire for laying up worldly treasures, as describecTDy James v. 1—3, “ Go to, now, ye rich men, weep and howl for your miseries that shall come upon you; your riches are corrupted, and your garments are moth-eaten; your gold and your silver is cankered, and the rust of them shall be a witness against you, and shall eat your flesh as it were fire. Ye have heaped treasure together for the last days.” When, since the writer of this epistle was on our earth, has there been such an increase of gold and silver, and treasures of this life, as at this day ? Our rich men are laying up their gold, silver, and treasures in abundance. But, as though this individual exertion for riches would not completely fulfil our text, they have entered into all manner of companies and monopolies, to “heap treasure together.” When, in the history of the world, can there be shown so many banking institutions as now ? When so much insurance capital as is heaped together at this day ? Are not our rich men per- Christ’s second coming. 291 fectly infatuated with stocks of all kinds ? And monopoly is the order of the day; to grind down the poor, and heap treasure together for the laist days. Can any man, who has any knowledge of these things, deny that this sign of the last days is not evidently accomplished ? Go to, ye rich men, weep and howl, for your miseries are come upon you. 6. The unwillingness of men to hear sound doctrine, taughtisTf fore, before God and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the quick and the dead at his appearing and his kingdom. For the time will come, when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears; and they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables.” My brethren, need I say one word on this passage? There is none of you so blind, but you see that this passage does actually describe the most fashionable preaching at the present day. How many thousand do run after that kind of preaching which is only relating fables, and that doctrine which gives all power to man ? 7 Scoffers, saving “ Wher? is the promfo ftf hjs coming ? as Peter informs us in his 2 Epistle, iii. 3, 4, “ Knowing this first, that there shall come in the last days scoffers, walking after their own lusts, and saying, Where is the promise of his coming ? For, since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of the creation.” A right understanding of this text would show us, at once, that many of us, who fancy we are in the highway to heaven, are belonging to this class of scoffers. First, they walk after their own lusts; that is, after their own carnal notions concerning the coming of Christ They say all things will continue as they were from the creation; they must have a temporal millennium; man must be mamed and given in 'marriage ; the world will not be burnt, and, My Lord delay-eth his coming, some say a thousand years, and some say 365,000 years, and all the moral change that takes place on our earth, will be performed by the agency of man. Therefore, many scoff and ridicule the idea, that Scrip- LECTURE XIX. ture tells us of the second coming of Christ, the manner, object, and tima And many are willingly ignorant; will not hear or read on this subject 8. w Perilous times.” as described in 2 Tim. iii. 1—7, “This know, also, that, in, the last days, perilous times shall come; for men shall be lovers of their own selves, covetous^ boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, without natural affection, truce-breakers, false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despis-ers of those that are good, traitors, heady, high-minded, lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God, having the form of godliness, but denying the power thereof; from such turn away. For of this sort are they which creep into houses, and lead captive silly women laden with sins, led away with divers lusts, ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.” What better description of domestic and publie society could we expect from the most close observer of private characters, domestic circles, and public societies of our times, than is here given ? One would conclude, had he found this in any other book but the Bible, that it was a modern writer, well acquainted with the human heart, and the generations now on the earth. spirits, lies in hypocri- sy; having their conscience seared with a hot iron; forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats.” Thus Paul tells Timothy, 1 Epistle, iv. 1—3, “ Now the Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith,” &c. This, we must acknowledge, has been, and is now fulfilling. The whole, almost, of the Christian world have departed, or changed their faith within fifteen years; seducing spirits are evidently at work; hypocrites are multiplying among us ; Roman Catholics, Shakers, Pilgrims, Fanny Wright, Owen, and others forbid to many. Roman Catholics, and many others among us, axe teaching to abstain from meats and drinks, which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe and know the truth. 10. tfl?rhTti making merchandise of the gos- Christ’s second coming. 293 pel. See 2 Peter ii. 1—3, “But there were false prophets, also, among the people; even as there shall be false teachers among you, who privily shall bring in damnable heresies, even denying the liord that bought them, and bring upon themselves swift destruction; and many shall follow their pernicious ways, by reason of whom the way of truth shall be evil spoken of; and through covetousness shall they, with feigned words, make merchandise of you, whose judgment of a long time lingereth not, and their damnation slumbereth not” The apostle then goes on to show, that, as it was in the days of Noah and Lot, so it would be in the days of these false teachers; one generation would not pass off before the judgment would overtake them, who make merchandise of the gospel, and like Balaam, who loved the wages of unrighteousness. 11. Jude gives us a sign, 4 to 19 verses, inclusive, “How they told you there should be mockers in the last time, who should walk after their own ungodly lusts; these be they who separate themselves, sensual, having not the Spirit” Some preachers deny the agen- 12. Clirist gives a sign in Luke xxi. 25—28, “And there shall be signs ip mp -ann, ip J?1 the stars: and, upon the earth, aistress of nations, with pe9plexrcy; the sea and the waves roaring; men’s hearts failing them for fear, and for looking for those things which are coming on the earth; for the powers of the heavens shall be shaken; and then shall they see the Son of Man coming in a cloud with power and great glory. And when these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your heads, for your redemption draweth nigh. 13. Christ gives another sign in Matt xxiv. 23, 24, “ Then, if any man shall say unto you, Lo, here is Christ, or there, believe it not; for *hffle ?frfHlj7f7aQ f^fu> Qiriate and false propj^gts^ and snail snow great signs and womf^Tnebmuch that, if it were possible,' ......... 1 u.” There can be no 25* 294 XrCCTURE XIX, 14. The fulfilment of the .parableof the tea irirgins — the midnight cry tes goneTorth fiom every quarter of GodJs moral vineyard, “ Behold, the bridegroom cometh.” The world lias been, and are now, “ trimming their lamps;* witness the Bible translated ages j the ±nble societies'^sendL^^Bimesio every dy on the earth, the Sabbath schools and Bible classes studying its sacred precepts. of ^^ndT wlien hraihlMiave accomplished to scatter the power of the holy people, all these things shall be finished.* This prophecy is now fulfilling in a remarkable maimer Not one sect, who profess holiness, but are divided and subdivided into contending schisms, and that, too,^ with in twenty division of thg political world, as prophesied of by JdSn7Rev. x\a.Ti--l6, “And I saw three unclean spirits, like frogs, come out of the mouth of the dragon, and out of the mouth of the beast, and out of the mouth of the false prophet, for they are the spirits of devils* working miracles, which go forth unto the kings of the earth and of the whole world, to gather them to the battle of the great day of God. Almighty”—and 19th verse, “And the great city was divided into^ three parts, and the cities of the nations fell.” That these spirits are political, is evident, from the fact that they come (Catholic,) false prophet, (Mahometans and unclean* signifying theyarehof holjTtffifig^'xhis prophecy is now accomplishing. What nation, within our knowledge, is not already ^j^litict^^puxtjLes^? None, tffSmb is mwfuhyTOy M^^your speaker.' " }7- IffijrcwfriP &• wilderness^ spoken of m Rev. xii. 6, 14, “And the vftHKK'flwTinto the wilderness, where she hath a place prepared of God, that they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and threescore days.” These dpys wesauggidently accomplished in J798^ since which time the Protestant church nias enjoyed privileges even Christ’s second coming. in the city of nations, the Roman empire; and, according to Daniel, forty-five years will complete the whole plan of redemption. 18. rQ|g fwn witngafwffl prnvp that the 1260 years are ended; tor lfis kVulenFthat the 01 ^ ^ iy. T' t ^ -L. NOTE."', The author wishes to state that lecture VIIJ. in this work was written twelve years since j^and that the authorities he then conSuEedlixed the rise of the Turkish empire it 1298. He is now satisfied, by the examination of other authorities on the subject, that the foundation of that empire was laid in 1299. fience the things mentioned in Lecture VII. (p. 109,) relative to persecutions, &c., and to the coming of the third woe, as mentioned in Lecture XIII. (p. 202,) which he supposed would take place in 1839, according to the first computation, will not be realized until the year 1840. SUPPLEMENT. EXPOSITION OF MILLER’S CHART OP THE CHRONOLOGY OF THE WORLD, AND OF THE PROPHETIC PERIODS* See Chart, at the end of the book. I. The scale of the Chart repre- Period B.C. A.D, sents 6000 years from the creation. 6000 4157 1843 II. The first space on the Chart represents the six millenniums, be- a . . o fore the “ Great Sabbath of rest” to u +* § -3 See “Miller’s Vi^ws,” page 157, zs £ Lecture on the Great Sabbath, ,2 £ 2 fO Q> where this subject is fully ex- « ta O O) ■3 plained. ;s| -2 £ CC7* This space is also divided into ft) O a <2 4 different parts, showing the chronol- £ & s 2 Aj oey of the most important events in (3 O the history of the world and the church.* Perl- A. M. ac. 1. The flood, in the 600th year of ode. Noah’s age. 1656 1656 2501 2. From the flood to the Exode, 428 years. 428 2084 2073 * Hie critical student will readily observe the differing periods in this Exposition, marked on the twelve Sfraee* of the Chart, so that we hare no need to ftake distinct reference to them in every period described. 9 SUPPLEMENT. 3. The Israelites enter Canaan— 470 years from the Exode. 4. Administration of Joshua, and the Judges began, A. M. 2554, and continued 473 years—ending 5. Beginning of the Temple by Solomon, being a period of 108 years from Samuel the prophet, or the end of the Judges. 6. The . beginning of the four Monarchies represented in Nebuchadnezzar’s dream, Dan. ii. 31— 35, vii. 2—14. At this period, the people of God became permanently subject to the kingdoms of the world, as a punishment for their rebellion against God. The Ten Tribes were carried into captivity by Esarhaddon, king of Assyria, and were broken, scattered, and ceased to be a nation; Manasseh, king of Judah, was carried to Babylon in fetters of iron: making a period of 345 years from the foundation of the Temple. 7. The seventy years’ captivity began under Jehoichim, in the third year of his reign, by Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon. This included a period of 70 years. Here the Jubilees of the Jewish institution ceased. From the time of the bilee^Si^SO which brings us to the Grand Jvbuee of Jubilees. 8. Seventy weeks of Dan. ix. 24— 27, begin. The time of the going forth of the decree of Artaxerxcs (in the seventh year of his reign) to Ezra, Period 470 473 108 345 70 A.M. 2554 3027 3135 B.C. 1603 1130 1022 3480 677 3350 607 SUPPLEMENT* 3 ID restore the law and the captives; under the administration of Ezra and Nehemiah, the walls and streets were built in troublous times. At this date the vision of the Ram pushing—Persia against Grecia—commences;—it being a period of 150 years from the great captivity. 9. TWinning nf thpjRnman gov- or the period of its connexion with the people of God, by the league formed. A period of 299 years, during the governments of Persia and Grecia. 10. The birth of Christ, a period of 158 years from the league with the Romans. 11. The crucifixion—Death of the Messiah—a period of 33 years from his birth. 12. ;■ JSWWBied. to-the Christian faith, and become of “one mind.” Bfee sacrifice,.or ip;, was taken away.— Daniel’s 1290 days, the l$g> fayp, "at"^^" peri(3. Jjhp RSST'days carry us down to the time Vhen Daniel will “ stand in Ms lot” in the “first resurrection*” Dan. xii. 11—13. 13. kiugs “ °5S>keur,”i^ 30 ve^rs. in the Ro-mafi empire. Herethe abomination that maketh desolate, or Papal Rome, was set up. Shupawe^ori-j», ike,“ Code of Taws ” estahhshed hy Justinian, the e£pe-rpt ^ Rome, caDed the dragon; who “gave him his power, and Period A. M. B. CL 150 3700 299 3999 158 4157 33 4190 475 30 4695 4735 457 158 A. D. 33 508 508 JL 4 SUPPLEMENT. seat, and great authority;” and gave him a mouth speaking great things, and blasphemies; and power was given him to make war 42 months, or 1260 years. (Rev. xiii. 2—5.) The ten kings at mis period gave up their power and strength to the Papal beast. (Rev. xvii. 13— 17.) The blasphemous power of Papacy begins and continues 42 months, or 1260 days, meaning years. (Dan. vii. 25, Rev. xiii. 5.) The two witnesses clothed in sackcloth prophesying 1260 years. (Rev. xi. 3.) The church fled into the wilderness, where she was fed 1260 years. (Rev. xii. 6—14.) A period of 761 years. 14. Beginning of the Ottoman power1,, under the Fifth Trumpet. In Rev. ix. 5—10, we have the history of 150 years of the fifth Trumpet, in which the four angels were bound in the river Euphrates one hundred and fifty years. 15. Sixth Trumpet, which was to sound 391 years and 15 days. (Rev. ix. 13—21.) Here the four angels were loosed, viz., the Turks, Tartars, Arabs and Saracens. Me-hemet II. attacked the Greek empire, and in the year 1453 he took Constantinople, and constituted it the capital of the Ottoman empire. 16. The Seventh Trumpet. Here the Ottoman power, or the great River ^Euphrates, was dried up. (See Rev. xvi. (12.) And the seventh trumpet Begins to sound. (Rev. ix. 15-19. Period A. M. 761 5456 150 5606 391 5997 3 6000 AI> 1299 1449 1840* 1843"