"There
shall be a time of trouble, such as never was
since there was a nation even to that same time;
and at that time thy people shall be delivered,
every one that shall be found written in the book."
Dan. 12:1
WE have been so accustomed to hear of the persecutions of the Church, both from the New
Testament and from the history of Christianity, that it is well if we have not at length
come to regard the account as words of course, to speak of them without understanding what
we say, and to receive no practical benefit from having been told of them: much less are
we likely to take them for what they really are, a characteristic mark of Christs
Church. They are not indeed the necessary lot of the Church, but at least one of her
appropriate badges; so that on the whole, looking at the course of history, you might set
down persecution as one of the peculiarities by which you recognize her. And our Lord
seems to intimate how becoming, how natural persecution is to the Church, by placing it
among His Beatitudes.
"Blessed are they who
are persecuted for righteousness sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven;"
giving it the same high and honourable rank in the assemblage of evangelical graces, which
the Sabbath holds among the ten Commandments, I mean, as a sort of sign and token of
His followers, and, as such, placed in the moral code, though in itself external to it.
He seems to show us this in another way, viz., as intimating to us the fact, that in
persecution the Church begins and ends. He left her in persecution, and He will find her
in persecution. He recognizes her as His own,He framed, and He will claim
her,as a persecuted Church, bearing His Cross. And that awful relic of Him which He
gave her, and which she is found with at the end, she cannot have lost by the way.
The text speaks of the great persecution yet to comeand seems referred to by our
LORD in His solemn prophecy before His passion, in which He comprises both series of
events, both those which attended His first, and those which will attend at His second
comingboth persecutions of His Church, the early and the late. He speaks as follows:
"Then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to
this time, no, nor ever shall be; and except those days should be shortened, there should
no flesh be saved; but for the elects sake those days shall be shortened."
Having been led, at this season of the year, to speak of that dreadful visitation which
will precede the return of CHRIST to judge the world, I mean the coming of Antichrist, I
will end the subject now with a few brief remarks on the persecution which will attend it.
In saying that a persecution will attend it, I do but speak the opinion of the early
Church, as I have tried to do all along, and shall do in what follows.
The Last Great
Persecution
First, I will cite some of the principal texts which seem to refer to this last
persecution
"Another shall rise after them, and .... he shall speak great words against the most
High, and shall wear out the saints of the most High, and think to change times and laws;
and they shall be given into his hand until a time, times, and the dividing of
time:"i. e. three years and a half.
"They shall pollute the Sanctuary of strength, and shall take away the Daily
Sacrifice, and they shall place the Abomination that maketh desolate, and such as do
wickedly against the Covenant shall he corrupt by flatteries; but the people that do know
their GOD shall be strong and do exploits. 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."
"Many shall be purified, and made white, and tried; but the wicked shall do wickedly
. . . and from the time 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."
"Then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the
world," and so on, as I just now read it.
"The beast that ascendeth out of the bottomless pit shall make war against them, and
shall overcome them, and kill them. .... 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 on the earth."
"And the woman fled into the wilderness, where she hath a place prepared of GOD, that
they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and threescore days."
"And there was given unto him a mouth speaking great things and blasphemies; and
power was given unto him to continue forty and two months. And he opened his mouth in
blasphemy against GOD, to blaspheme His name, and His tabernacle, and them that dwell in
heaven: and it was given unto him to make war with the saints, and to overcome them . . .
and all that dwell upon the earth shall worship him, whose names are not written in the
book of life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world."
"I saw an Angel come down from heaven, having the key of the bottomless pit, and a
great chain in his hand; and he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is the
devil and Satan, and bound him a thousand years....and after that he must be loosed a
little season .... and shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four quarters
of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to battle: the number of whom is as
the sand of the sea. And they went up on the breadth of the earth, and compassed the camp
of the saints about, and the beloved city."
These passages were understood by the early Christians to relate to the persecution, which
was to come in the last times; and they seem, evidently, to bear upon them that meaning.
Our SAVIOURS words, indeed, about the fierce trial which was coming, might seem at
first sight to refer to the early persecutions, those to which the first Christians were
exposed; and doubtless so they do: yet, violent as these persecutions were, they were not
considered by those who suffered them to be the proper fulfilment of the prophecy; and
this surely is itself a strong reason for thinking they were not so. And it is confirmed
by parallel passages, such as the text, which certainly speak of a persecution still
future; yet surely our SAVIOUR used the very words of the text, and referred to what it
refers to; and therefore, whatever partial accomplishment His prediction had in the early
Church, He surely speaks of nothing short of the last persecution when His words are
viewed in their full scope. He says, "There shall be great tribulation, such as was
not since the beginning of the world to this time, lo, nor ever shall be: and except those
days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved; but for the elects sake
those days shall be shortened." And immediately after, "There shall arise false
Christs and false prophets, and shall show great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it
were possible, they shall deceive the very elect." In accordance with this language,
the text says, "There shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a
nation, even to that same time: and at that time thy people shall be delivered, every one
that shall be found written in the book." One of the passages I quoted from the
Revelations says the same, and as strongly: "It was given him to make war with the
Saints, and to overcome them....and all that dwell on the earth shall worship him, whose
names are not written in the book of life."
Let us then apprehend and realize the idea, thus clearly brought before us, that,
sheltered as the Church has been from persecution for 1500 years, yet a persecution awaits
it, before the end, fierce and more perilous than any which occurred at its first rise.
Further, this persecution is to be attended with the cessation of all religious worship
"They shall take away the Daily Sacrifice,"words which the early Fathers
interpret to mean, that Antichrist will suppress for three years and a half all religious
worship. St. Augustine questions whether baptism even will be administered to infants
during that season.
And further, we are told: "They shall place the Abomination that maketh
desolate,"they shall "set it up:" our SAVIOUR declares the same. What
this means we cannot pronounce. In the former fulfilment of this prophecy, it has been the
introduction of heathen idols into GODS house.
Moreover the reign of Antichrist will be supported, it would appear, with a display of
miracles, such as the magicians of Egypt effected against Moses. On this subject, of
course, we wait for a fuller explanation of the prophetical language, such as the event
alone can give us. So far, how ever, is clear, that whether real miracles or not, whether
pretended, or the result, as some have conjectured, of discoveries in physical science,
they will produce the same effect as if they were real, viz. the overpowering the
imaginations of such as have not the love of GOD deeply lodged in their hearts,of
all but the elect. Scripture is remarkably precise and consistent in this prediction.
"Signs and
wonders," says our LORD, "insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive
the very elect." St. Paul speaks of Antichrist as one "whose coming is after the
working of Satan, with all power, and signs, and lying wonders, and with all
deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish; because they received not the love
of the Truth, that they might be saved. And for this cause GOD shall send them strong
delusion, that they should believe a lie." And St. John: "He doeth great
wonders, so that He maketh fire come down from heaven on the earth in the sight of men,
and deceiveth them that dwell on the earth by the means of those miracles which he had
power to do in the sight of the beast."
In these four respects, then, not to look for others, will the last persecution be more
awful than any of the earlier ones: in its being in itself fiercer and more horrible; in
its being attended by a cessation of the ordinances of grace, "the Daily
Sacrifice;" and by an open and blasphemous establishment of infidelity, or some such
enormity, in the holiest recesses of the Church; lastly, in being supported by a power of
working miracles. Well is it for Christians that the days are shortened!shortened
for the elects sake, lest they should be overwhelmed, shortened, as it would
seem, to three years and a half.
Much might be said, of course, on each of these four particulars; but I will confine
myself to making one remark on the first of them, the sharpness of the
persecution.It is to be worse than any persecution before it. Now, to understand the
force of this announcement, we should understand in some degree what those former
persecutions were.
This it is very difficult to do in a few words; yet a very slight survey of the history of
the Church will convince us that cruelties more shocking than those which the early
Christians suffered from their persecutors, are beyond our conception beforehand. St.
Pauls words, speaking of the persecutions prior to his time, but faintly describe
the trial which came upon the Church in his day and afterwards. He says of the Jewish
saints, "They were tortured, not accepting deliverance" ...... they "had
trials of cruel mockings and scourgings, yea moreover of bonds and imprisonment: they were
stoned, they were sawn asunder, were tempted, were slain with the sword: they wandered
about in sheepskins and goatskins, being destitute, afflicted, tormented." Such were
the trials of the Prophets under the Law, who in a measure anticipated the Gospel, as in
doctrine, so in suffering; yet the suffering, when the Gospel came, was as much sharper,
as the doctrine was clearer, than their foretaste of either.
To show you to what extent the early persecutions went, I will read you part of an account
of one of them in the south of France; and, as I read it, would have you bear in mind the
declaration in the text, that there is some suffering still to come, to which none which
has hitherto happened, is worthy to be compared, and therefore not even what I am now
going to read. It is written by eye-witnesses.
" ... The rage of the populace, governor, and soldiers, especially lighted on
Sanctus, a deacon; on Maturus, a late convert; on Attalus, and on Blandina, a slave,
through whom CHRIST showed that the things which are lowly esteemed among men, have high
account with GOD. For when we were all in fear, and her own mistress was in agony for her,
lest she should be unable to make even one bold confession, from the weakness of her body,
Blandina was filled with such strength, that even those, who tortured her by turns, in
every possible way, from morning till evening, were wearied and gave it up, confessing she
had conquered them. And they wondered at her remaining still alive, her whole body being
mangled and pierced in every part. But that blessed woman, like a brave combatant, renewed
her strength in confessing; and it was to her a recovery, a rest, and a respite, to say,
I am a Christian. Sanctus also endured exceedingly all the cruelties of men
with a noble patience...... and to all questions would say nothing but I am a
Christian. When they had nothing left to do to him, they fastened red hot plates of
brass on the tenderest parts of his body. But though his limbs were burning, he remained
upright and unshrinking, steadfast in his confession, bathed and strengthened from heaven
with that fountain of living water that springs from the well of CHRIST. But his body bore
witness of what had been done to it, being one entire wound, and deprived of the external
form of man."
After some days they were taken to the shows where the wild beasts were, and went through
every torture again, as though they had suffered nothing before. Again they were scourged,
forced into the iron chair (which was red hot), dragged about by the beasts, and so came
to their end. "But Blandina was hung up upon a cross, and placed to be devoured by
the beasts that were turned in." Afterwards she was scourged; at last placed in a
basket and thrown to a bull, and died under the tossings of the furious animal. But the
account is far too long and minute, and too dreadful, to allow of my going through it. I
give this merely as a specimen of the sufferings of the early Christians, from the malice
of the devil.
Take again the sufferings which the Arian Vandals inflicted at a later time. Out of four
hundred and sixty Bishops in Africa, they sent forty-six out of the country to an
unhealthy place, and confined them to hard labour, and three hundred and two to different
parts of Africa. After an interval of ten years, they banished two hundred and twenty
more. At another time they tore above four thousand Christians, clergy and laity, from
their homes, and marched them across the sands, till they died either of fatigue or ill
usage. They lacerated others with scourges, burned them with hot iron, and cut off their
limbs.
Hear how one of the early Fathers, just when the first persecution was ceasing, meditates
on the prospect lying before the Church, looking earnestly at the events of his own day,
in order to discover from them, if he could, whether the predicted evil was coming.
"There will be a time of affliction, such as never happened since there was a nation
upon the earth till that time. The fearful monster, the great serpent, the unconquerable
enemy of mankind, ready to devour......The LORD knowing the greatness of the enemy, in
mercy to the religious, says, Let those that are in Judaea flee to the
mountains. However, if any feel within him a strong heart to wrestle with Satan, let
him remain (for I do not despair of the Churchs strength of nerve), let him remain,
and let him say, Who shall separate us from the love of CHRIST?. . . .Thanks
to GOD, who limits the greatness of the affliction to a few days, for the elects
sake those days shall be cut short. Antichrist shall reign only three years and a
half," a time, times, and the dividing of time . . . ." Blessed surely he who
then shall be a martyr for CHRIST! I consider that the martyrs at that season will be
greater than all martyrs; for the former ones wrestled with man only, but these, in the
time of Antichrist, will battle with Satan himself personally. Persecuting emperors
slaughtered the former; but they did not pretend to raise the dead, nor made show of signs
and wonders: but here there will be the persuasion both of force and of fraud, so as to
deceive, if possible, even the elect. Let no one at that day say in his heart, What
could CHRIST do more than this by what virtue worketh he these things? Unless GOD willed
it, He would not have permitted it. No: the Apostle forewarns you, saying
beforehand, GOD shall send them a strong delusion,not that they may be
excused, but condemned; those, who believe not in the Truth, that is, the true CHRIST, but
take pleasure in unrighteousness, that is, in Antichrist . . . . . Prepare thyself,
therefore, O man! thou hearest the signs of Antichrist; nor remind only thyself of them,
but communicate them liberally to all around thee. If thou hast a child according to the
flesh, delay not to instruct him. If thou art a teacher, prepare also thy spiritual
children, lest they take the false for the True. For the mystery of iniquity doth
already work. I fear the wars of the nations; I fear the divisions among Christians;
I fear the hatred among brethren. Enough; but GOD forbid that it should be fulfilled in
our day. However, let us be prepared."
To these observations I will add only two remarks: first, that it is quite certain, that
if such a persecution has been foretold, it has not yet come, and therefore is to come. We
may be wrong in thinking that Scripture foretels it, though it has been the common belief,
I may say, of all ages; but if there be, it is still future. So that every generation of
Christians should be on the watch-tower, looking out, nay, the more and more,
as time goes on.
Next, I observe that signs do occur from time to time, not to enable us to fix the day,
for that is hidden, but to show us it is coming. The world grows oldthe earth is
crumbling awaythe night is far spentthe day is at hand. The shadows begin to
movethe old forms of empire which have lasted ever since CHRIST was with us, heave
and tremble before our eyes, and nod to their fall. They are they which keep CHRIST from
us He is behind them. When they go, Antichrist will be released from that which
letteth, and after his short but fearful season CHRIST will come.
For instance: one sign is the present state of the Roman Empire, if it may be said to
exist, though it does exist; but it is like a man on his death-bed, who after many throes
and pangs, at last goes off when you least expect, or perhaps you know not when. You watch
the sick man, and you say every day will be the last; yet day after day goes onyou
know not when the end will come he lingers ongets
betterrelapses,yet you are sure after all he must dieit is a mere matter
of time, you call it a matter of time: so is it with the old Roman Empire, which now lies
so still and helpless. It is not dead, but it is on its death-bed.
We suppose indeed that it
will not die without some violence even yet, without convulsions. Antichrist is to head
it; yet in another sense it dies to make way for Antichrist, and this latter form of death
is surely hastening on, whether it comes a few years sooner or later. It may outlast our
time, and the time of our children; for we are creatures of a day, and a generation is
like the striking of a clock; but it tends to dissolution, and its hours are numbered.
Again, another anxious sign at the present time is what appears in the approaching
destruction of the Mahometan power. This too may outlive our day; still it tends visibly
to annihilation, and as it crumbles, perchance the sands of the worlds life are
running out.
And lastly, not to mention many other tokens which might be observed upon, here is this
remarkable one. In one of the passages I just now read from the book of Revelations, it is
said that in the last times, and in order to the last persecution, Satan, being loosed
from his prison, shall deceive the nations in the extremities of the earth, Gog and Magog,
and bring them to battle against the Church. These words had been already used by the
prophet Ezekiel, who borrows the latter of them from the tenth chapter of Genesis. We read
in that chapter that after the flood the sons of Japheth were Gomer, and Magog, and Madan,
and Javan, and Tubal, and Meshech, and Tiras." Magog is supposed to be the ancestor
of the nations in the north, the Tartars or Scythians.
Whatever then Gog means,
which is not known, here is a prophecy that the northern nations should be stirred up
against the Church, and be one of the instruments of its suffering. And it is to le
observed that twice since that prophecy was delivered, the northern nations have invaded
the Church, and both times they have brought with them, or rather (as the text in the
Revelations expresses it) they have been deceived into an Antichristian
delusion,been deceived into it, not invented it. The first irruption was that of the
Goths and Vandals in the early times of the Church, and they were deceived into and fought
for the Arian heresy. The next was that of the Turks, and they in like manner were
deceived into and fought for Mahomedanism. Here then history since, as in other instances,
is in part a comment upon the prophecy.
Now, I do not mean that as
to the present time, we see how this is to be accomplished in its fulness, after the
pattern of the Shadows which have gone before. But thus much we seewe see that in
matter of fact the nations of the North are gathering strength, and beginning to frown
over the seat of the Roman Empire as they never have done since the time when the Turks
came down. Here then we have a sign of Antichrists appearanceI do not say of
his instant coming, or his certain coming, for it may after all be but a type or shadow:
still, so far as it goes, it is a preparation, a warning, a call to sober
thoughtjust as a cloud in the sky (to use our Lords instance) warns us about
the weather. It is no sure proof of what is to be, but we think it prudent to keep our eye
upon it.
This is what I have to say about the last persecution and its signs. And surely it is
profitable to think about it, though we be quite mistaken in the detail. For instance,
after all it may not be a persecution of blood and death, but of craft and subtilty
onlynot of miracles, but of natural wonders and powers of human skill, human
acquirements in the hands of the devil. Satan may adopt the more alarming weapons of
deceithe may hide himselfhe may attempt to seduce us in little things, and so
to move the Church, not all at once, but by little and little from her true position. I do
believe he has done much in this way in the course of the last few centuries. I believe he
has moved every part of the Church, this way or that way, but some way or other from the
truth as it is in JESUS, from the old faith on which it was built "before the
division of the east and west."
It is his policy to split
us up and divide us, to dislodge us gradually from our rock of strength. And if there is
to be a persecution, perhaps it will be then; then, perhaps, when we are all of us in all
parts of Christendom so divided, and so reduced, so full of schism, so close upon heresy.
When we have cast ourselves upon the world and depend for protection upon it, and have
given up our independence and our strength, then he may burst upon us in fury as far as
God allows him. Then suddenly the Roman Empire nay break; up, and Antichrist appear as a
persecutor, and the barbarous nations around break in. But all these things are in
GODS hand and GODS knowledge, and there let us leave them.
This alone, I will say, in conclusion, as I have already said several times, that such
meditations as these may be turned to good account. What a curb upon our self-willed,
selfish hearts, to believe that a persecution is in store for the Church, whether or not
it comes in our days! Surely with this thought before us, we cannot bear to give ourselves
up to thoughts of ease and comfort, of making money, settling well, or rising in the
world. Surely with this thought before us, we cannot but feel that we are, what all
Christians really are in the best estate, (nay rather would wish to be had they their
will, if they be Christians in heart) pilgrims, watchers waiting for the morning, waiting
for the light, eagerly straining our eyes for the first dawn of daylooking out for
our SAVIOURS coming, His glorious advent, when He will end the reign of sin and
wickedness, accomplish the number of His elect, and perfect those who at present struggle
with infirmity, yet in their hearts love and obey Him.
May He perform all this in His own good time, according to His infinite mercies! May He
give us strength according to our days, and peace at the last! |