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from the Old Testament, every other may, by a similar rule; and the Sadducees may be justified by the law and the prophets, and the Pharisees condemned.

The prophet proceeds to declare the purpose of God, to unite Judah and Ephraim into one nation: "and David, my servant, shall be king over them," v. 24; "their prince forever," v. 25. "And the heathen shall know that I the Lord do sanctify Israel, when my sanctuary shall be in the midst of them for evermore," v. 28.

This is the eternal state subsequent to the resurrection : for it is both impossible for David to reign on earth again without rising from the dead, and also for any condition of things in this world to continue forever; seeing that the true Witness testifies of this heaven and earth that they shall pass away, and all things belonging to them are transitory. After this description of the resurrection of "the whole house of Israel," and of their union under David in one everlasting kingdom, which seems to accord and synchronize with the first resurrection, the prophet proceeds, in chapters xxxviii. and xxxix., to speak of the coming of Gog and all his bands, from Persia, Ethiopia, Libya, or Phut, Gomer, and Togarmah, against the mountains of Israel, "as a cloud to cover the land." The Lord will then appear in his anger, so that all men and things shall shake at his presence, and he will rain upon Gog, "and upon his bands, and upon the many people that are with him, an overflowing rain, and great hail-stones, fire and brimstone." The thirty-ninth chapter only carries out the doctrine and particulars of the preceding; leaving the reader in no doubt that this Gog and his destruction are the same which are so similarly described in Rev. xx., and no elsewhere expressly named in the Bible.

Chapter xl. to the end of the prophecy of Ezekiel enters into a particular description of the New Jerusalem, in language suited to the Mosaic dispensation, but manifestly intending that same which the Apocalypse describes coming down out of heaven, in the new creation which God will make, whose waters are waters of life, whose trees are the tree of life, whose inhabitants are the chosen people, whose temple is built of living stones, whose sacrifices are a pure offering of praise on the altar of the heart, whose form is four square, and whose walls are salvation, and her gates praise. "The Lamb is the light thereof;" and "the name of the city from that day shall be, The Lord is there;" IMMANUEL; "the tabernacle of God is with men." "This is the city the patriarchs eyed from afar, while as pilgrims they traced the thorny road; this is the Jerusalem which Ezek. xxxviii. 22.

* Rev. xx. 4.

Paul declares is free, which is above, and is the mother of us all."*

The coincidence of these two prophets, Ezekiel and St. John, is remarkable in the description of a dreadful overthrow of the nations, followed by a resurrection of the holy people, against whose mountains Gog, an enemy of a fearful name, comes like a cloud; and deliverance is wrought by fire from heaven, to the destruction of the innumerable host. Then follows the particular description of the holy, heavenly land, and the royal metropolis, named after her King forever, as the bride takes the name of the Bridegroom.

This parallelism of Ezekiel's prophecies and the Apocalypse, and these synchronisms of Daniel, Paul, and John, constitute the materials of Jacob's ladder, "set upon the earth, and the top of it reached to heaven: and behold, the angels of God ascending and descending on it."+ The portion which rests on the solid earth, we can feel and handle; but the top is a dizzy height, which angels, not mortals, may climb and comprehend. "Behold, the Lord stood above it, and said, I am the Lord God of Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac. I will not leave thee until I have done that which I have spoken to thee of." Heaven is represented with a wall around; and that implies an enemy without. The battlements and gates are of impregnable mould; they look toward the enemies' land. What though he come like a cloud? He comes never again; but he forever perishes, outside of the beloved city. "Awake, awake, stand up, O Jerusalem!" "Fear not, for thou shalt not be put to shame : for thy Maker is thy husband; the Lord of hosts is his name; and thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel; the God of the whole earth shall he be called." "For the Lord will comfort Zion, he will comfort all her waste places; and he will make her wilderness like Eden, and her desert like the garden of the Lord. Joy and gladness shall be found therein; thanksgiving and the voice of melody."||

Of the present discourse, this is the sum :—

From the fall of man and of the whole creation under the curse of sin and the dominion of death, until the times of the anapsyris, or resuscitation from the presence of the Lord, when he shall send Jesus Christ, who is now preached to us, and shall make all things new in the resurrection of the dead, the Holy Spirit has unceasingly testified of the coming of the great day of the Lord, and of his kingdom, with great

*Gal. iv. 26. Cox's "Second Coming," p. 134. † Gen. xxviii. 12. John i. 51.

Is. li. 17 and liv. 4, 5.

Gen. xxviii. 13, 15.
Is. li. 3.

power and glory; when Jesus will not only change these vile bodies like unto his own glorious body; but also these heavens and earth, bestowing on them an atmosphere of blessedness, and a soil of fatness, with a salubrity that knows of no sickness, and a joy which knows of no pang, separation, sighing, or sorrow any more. For this value the fathers, Adam, Abraham, and David, received the promises. They did not dream of having them fulfilled in this land of death, in which they dwelt as sojourners and travellers; but they expected the redemption of the Lord's pledges in the resurrection of the dead, and in the heavenly land of immortal life.

In this light they, together with the prophets, foresaw Christ's day and were glad. In this light the prophets described the New Jerusalem, and the righteous nation, and their everlasting King on the throne of his father David, in his endless kingdom over all God blessed forever. In this explicit manner the holy gospel describes the kingdom of heaven, and the angelic nature of those who are found worthy to attain that world, and the resurrection of the dead, through Jesus our Nobleman that is gone to receive a kingdom and to return. In this manner, and coming in this kingdom, the apostles preached "Jesus and the resurrection," through all the world. In this faith the primitive church for three centuries steadfastly looked for his coming. In this faith Luther and Melancthon and the great reformers of the sixteenth century expected the coming of the Lord, while they grappled in mortal agonies with the gigantic power of the Latin hierarchy. In this manner, and in this kingdom, all our creeds and standards of faith confess the hope of the coming of the Lord Jesus; and all believers daily pray that he will come, and will not tarry: "Thy kingdom come; thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven." And when the hopes and prayers of all ages of the holy people, from Adam to this day, are answered and fulfilled, then will be the anticipated millennium: "The dispensation of the fulness of times,' heaven in earth, when creation will no longer sigh and groan and travail in pain together, as it does now, waiting for the manifestation of the sons of God; but creation itself will attain with us, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, redemption of the body from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of that eternal world, where "they neither marry nor are given in marriage, neither can they die any more, for they are equal unto the angels, and are the children of God, being the children of the resurrection."*

*Luke xx. 35.

• 74 HISTORY AND DOCTRINE OF THE MILLENNIUM.

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So long as the clover-seed brings clover, and the barleycorn barley; so long as the acorn brings the oak, and coffee the acorn raises coffee; so long as wool grows on the sheep, and cotton springs from seed planted in the ground; so long as the robin's egg hatches a robin, and the hen's egg a chicken; so a sh long as grass grows, bees swarm, waters run, and the breath of man is in his nostrils, the children of Adam will bring, in his likeness, an erring, suffering, dying race, whose brow is doomed to sweat with toil, or to wrinkle with care, and to mingle with dust at last. Religion, common sense, experience, and philosophy, unite to tell us so. "Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; neither doth corruption inherit incorruption." This transitory world cannot inherit the promises: a long rest to its troubled waters is contrary to the laws of nature, and to the word of the blessed God. Promises, apparently to the contrary, are to be rightly understood of "the world to come," in the new heavens and earth. In this world, wars, fightings and commotions are to continue, "the sea and the waves roaring, men's hearts failing them for fear," to the very last, so long as summer and winter, seed-time and harvest, succeed each other, and man is born of woman: but when man is born of the earth; when the earth brings forth at once, and a nation is born in a day;† when "the earth shall cast out the dead," and man is born a new creature, in the new creation and restitution of all things, at the coming of the Lord from heaven, who shall change this vile body, and fashion it like unto his glorious body then will Immanuel and heaven, immortality, glory, and joy be in the earth, with Jerusalem new and holy; and the saints will reign on the earth, in "JESUS AND the resurRECTION."

This is our millennium. Our faith sees no other, our hope anchors in no other, our heart embraces no other, for ourselves, for faithful Abraham, or for any of his seed, or for any of the seed of Adam.

* 1 Cor. xv. 50.

+ Is. lxvi. 8.

Is. xxvi. 19.

§ Phil. iii. 21.

THE

MILLENNIUM:

THE

GOOD TIME COMING.

WITH A

HISTORY OF EXPERIMENTS

ON THE

ODIC FORCE.

BY THE AUTHOR OF

MILLENNIAL INSTITUTIONS, THE SEVENTH VIAL, AND THE THEOLOGICAL MYSTERY.

SPRINGFIELD, MASS.:

SAMUEL BOWLES & COMPANY, PRINTERS.
1862.

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