THE GOSPEL OF THE
KINGDOM
With an Examination of
DISPENSATIONALISM and the
"Scofield Bible"
By Philip
Mauro
Chapter 4: The Beginning Of The Gospel Of Jesus Christ, The Son
Of God
THE words of our chapter heading are the first words of the Gospel by
Mark. They are enlightening words; and indeed they are quite sufficient
in themselves to answer a question that confronts us at this point:
When did the Gospel era begin? It is exceedingly important that we
should have the right answer to that question; and we know where to
seek it.
We have seen that the Bible distinguishes two great eras, and those two
eras are closely related, the one to the other, though there are marked
differences between them; the first being variously designated as, "the
old covenant," "the law and the prophets," or simply "the law"; and the
second being variously designated as, "the new covenant," "the kingdom
of God," or simply "the gospel." Our Scripture tells us we are now at
the "beginning" of something; and that that something is "the gospel of
Jesus Christ." Could we have a plainer answer to our question?
And the passage goes on to tell what it was that marked "the beginning
of the gospel"; and further to declare that the event that marked it
was something that had been foretold in the Scriptures. For we read:
"As it is written in the prophets, Behold, I send my messenger before
Thy face, which shall prepare Thy way before Thee. The voice of one
crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make His
paths straight." The reference is to Isaiah 40:3; and the prophecy was
fulfilled, as this first chapter of Mark's Gospel declares, in the
preaching and ministry of John the Baptist.
This was the very "beginning," the very first event of that long
expected era, "THE GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST, THE SON OF GOD. But John's
ministry was of short duration; for the enmity of the Jews was speedily
aroused, because of the contradiction between his preaching and their
expectations; and he was cast into prison. And then happened another
event of transcendent interest; for the public ministry of Christ
Himself (whose "way" John had been sent to "prepare") forthwith began.
For it is written:
Now after that John was put in prison, Jesus came into Galilee,
preaching the gospel of the Kingdom of God, and saying, The time is
fulfilled, and the Kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe
the gospel" (vv 14,15).
These words make it evident that "the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son
of God," and "the gospel of the Kingdom of God" are one and the same.
Moreover, the words, "The time is fulfilled" manifestly point to
something of exceptional importance whereof promises had been given by
the prophets. They refer, of course, to that promised era of victory
over sin, that era of the bruising of the serpent's head, of the
salvation of God for all men through the coming of the promised
Deliverer, the era of the everlasting covenant and the sure mercies of
David; in a word, they referred to the appointed time for the
fulfilment of all the glorious things that God had spoken by the mouth
of all His holy prophets since the world began. "The time" for the
thing for which all believing hearts had looked and longed, was
"fulfilled." So said Christ; and He also exhorted those who heard the
announcement, to "repent, and believe the gospel." Note that the
proclamation that the time was fulfilled He calls "the gospel."
But, in direct contradiction to these statements (which are as plain as
is possible for anyone to make) the "Scofield Bible" asserts that the
dispensation of the law, with its "pitiless severity" and all the
appalling characteristics of condemnation, death and the curse which
that publication attributes to it, continued until the crucifixion of
Christ; and it further asserts that "the Kingdom of God" (which that
dispensational authority takes to mean the earthly kingdom of Jewish
expectancy) was not "at hand," but was in the far distant future. Here
then we have a very serious situation. For if this era of John the
Baptist were not "the beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son
of God," then the plainest of plain Bible words, which have been
understood for nineteen centuries in accordance with their apparent
sense, have a meaning altogether different to what has always been
supposed. And if the Kingdom our Lord said was then "at hand," was not
at hand at all, but far away, then He certainly caused those who heard
Him believingly and all who have listened to His words for nearly two
thousand years, to believe what was not true.
We take up first the question:
What Kingdom was it that Christ said was at hand?
In considering this question let it be noted that there was a "Kingdom
of God" then at hand; for Christ's servants shortly thereafter began to
preach it as a present reality (Acts 8:12; 14:22; 20:25, etc.); and
moreover, the apostle Paul, in his great Gospel letter, gave a
definition of it (Rom. 14:17). Are there then two different Kingdoms of
God; one of which was at hand, and one afar off in the future? Is God
the author of confusion? And if there were two Kingdoms of God, one
then close by and the other afar off, is it conceivable that the
Kingdom of God which Christ said was then "at hand" was the one that
was actually in the remote future?
How is it possible, I ask, for any who undertake to explain the
Scriptures to arrive at the conclusion that the "Kingdom of God" which
actually was "at hand," is not the "Kingdom of God" which the Lord said
to be "at hand"; or, (to state it the other way) that the "Kingdom of
God" which the Lord publicly declared at hand, proved to be not at hand
at all; whereas, marvelous to relate! another "Kingdom of God" whereof
He made no mention, was at hand?
I have carefully examined the notes of the "Scofield Bible" in quest of
the explanation of this. I find on one hand that no Scripture is cited
to support the editor's view; for there is not one word in the Bible to
the effect that the Kingdom announced by the Lord has been "postponed"
or is "in abeyance." The Lord's own statement, from first to last,
never modified, but proclaimed with ever increasing emphasis, was that
the Kingdom was "at hand."
But the teaching of the Scofield Bible as to the Kingdom of God is
founded nevertheless upon the baseless assumption that the prophets of
Israel, in predicting the coming of the Messiah and of an era of
blessing, salvation and victory for His people, were foretelling the
restoration of the earthly greatness of the natural Israel. Therefore
the editor of the publication, having committed himself thoroughly to
this startlingly novel idea, and having lost sight of the many
interpretations of those prophecies in the New Testament which show
that they referred (in figurative language) to Redemption and to the
Spiritual Kingdom based thereon, has attempted in his notes to make the
New Testament agree with his mistaken theory.
But the attempt is an impossibility. In fact the editor himself
abandons it completely after carrying it partly through the Gospel of
Matthew. Anyone can see this for himself who will take a little pains
to examine the matter. For we have to begin with the bold but unfounded
assumption that the words "Kingdom of God" and "Kingdom of heaven" in
our Lord's lips meant the earthly kingdom of Israel. Then we have the
equally bold and equally unfounded assumption that the supposed "offer"
of the earthly kingdom to the Jews of Christ's day was rejected by
them, and that, as the result of such supposed rejection, it was
withdrawn and postponed; though there is no trace whatever in the
inspired records of any such offer, or rejection, or withdrawal, or
postponement; and though there is no hint that God's purpose to
introduce the Kingdom which He had announced (and announced without any
qualification whatever) was, or could have been, defeated or postponed
by the action of the Jews of Christ's day.
In the "notes," the alleged rejection is located at Matthew 11: 20, as
appears by the following statement:
"The Kingdom of heaven announced as 'at hand' by John the Baptist, by
the King Himself, and by the twelve, and attested by mighty works, has
been morally rejected."
Then the Lord's words recorded in Matthew 11:28,29, are called by the
editor, "The new message of Jesus--not the kingdom but rest and
service"; and this, we are told, is "the pivotal point in the ministry
of Jesus," --that is to say the point at which He abandoned His message
about the Kingdom's being at hand, and began to substitute a message of
entirely different character.
I earnestly protest that these statements are wholly erroneous, and
confidently maintain that the Lord had but one message, which was the
gospel of God, and that the Kingdom which He preached while on earth
and introduced when He sent the Holy Ghost from heaven, is the very
"rest and service" which He offered and still offers to all the weary
and heavy laden ones.
Following this is a note (on Mat. 12:46) which asserts that our Lord,
"rejected by Israel," now intimates the formation of the "new family of
faith." But the fact is that the "new family"--composed of the children
of His Father in heaven--had been previously addressed at length and in
the most precise terms as to their relationship with God, in the Sermon
on the Mount. But inasmuch as it would upset the editor's theory
completely to find any hint of the "new family" in that part of
Matthew, he firmly closes his eyes to the conspicuous presentation of
it in those chapters, and locates the first "intimation" of it in
chapter 12. For it is as plain to any babe in Christ as the sun in the
sky at noonday, that in the Sermon on the Mount God, the "Father in
heaven," is speaking to His own "children" on earth, by the lips of His
own Son. But that fact, so vital to all the household of God, would, if
acknowledged, completely destroy the editor's theory, so he ignores and
even contradicts it.
In order to obtain an appearance of support to his views, the editor
states in a note on the Lord's interview with the woman of
Syrophenicia, (Mat. 15:21), that "For the first time the rejected Son
of David ministers to a Gentile." This is necessary to the theory we
are examining; for if Christ should be found ministering to a Gentile
prior to Matthew 11, that action on His part would destroy the "Jewish"
and "legal" character which the editor imputes to that part of the
Lord's ministry; and would demolish the theory completely. Now is it
possible then that the editor and associate editors and all who have
been helping to correct the errors of his edition for more than a score
of years, have been blinded to the fact that the Lord healed the
centurion's servant, as recorded in Matthew 8:5-10, and in connection
therewith used those remarkable words, "Verily, I say unto you, I have
not found so great faith no not in Israel"? And how can we account for
the failure on the part of all those learned men to observe the record
in Matthew 4:24 that the fame of Jesus went throughout all Syria, and
they brought to Him all sick people, and He healed them? And for their
failure to observe also that, even before the Lord began to preach
publicly in Galilee, He ministered and revealed Himself as "Christ" to
the woman of Samaria, and that many of the Samaritans believed on Him?
(John 4).
These are but a few of many instances which show that the advocates of
the postponement theory are mysteriously blinded to the plainest facts
when those facts are in conflict with that theory; while on the other
hand they claim the ability to "see" things in the text of Scripture
which support their theory, although others are utterly unable to find
a trace of them. But, without dwelling upon this, I would ask
particular attention to the fact that, even according to the kind of
proof by which our friends seek to maintain their theory, the facts
concerning the centurion's servant and the Lord's personal ministry of
salvation (the "living water") to the Samaritans, refute that theory
completely.
Pursuing the notes of the aforesaid "Reference Bible" we come to the
very important chapter 16 of Matthew's Gospel, where the "church" is
first mentioned by name; and there, as a comment on verse 20, in which
the Lord charged His disciples "that they should tell no man that He
Jesus was the Christ" (Gr.), is the following note:
"The disciples had been proclaiming Jesus as the Christ, i.e. the
covenanted King of a kingdom covenanted to the Jews and 'at hand.' The
church on the contrary must be built on the testimony to Him as
crucified, risen from the dead, ascended and made Head over all things
to the church (Eph. 1:20-23). The former testimony was ended; the new
testimony was not yet ready etc." (italics are mine).
I ask special attention to these statements, for they are of capital
importance; and they embody errors of a very serious character; though
happily the errors are clearly to be seen in the light of the Scripture.
1. To begin with the disciples had not been "proclaiming Jesus as the
Christ," and the text to which this grievously misleading note is
appended makes that fact startlingly clear. Indeed the note completely
contradicts and falsities the text, as anyone with but slight attention
can see plainly. For the whole point of the Lord's words at Caesarea
Philippi depends upon the fact that the disciples at last had become
aware, through the revelation of God the Father, that He, Jesus, was
the Christ. If they had been proclaiming Him, or if He had been
proclaiming Himself in their hearing, as "the Christ the covenanted
King," and had been offering to the Jews the Kingdom they were
expecting, what point would there have been to His question, "But whom
say ye that I am?" or to His words to Simon (when the latter made the
great confession "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God"),
that "flesh and blood" had not revealed this to him, but "My Father Who
is in heaven"? Plainly it is impossible that He should have uttered
those words if the statements of Dr. Scofield's note were true.
Let it not be forgotten that, according to the theory we are examining,
the Lord had been preached all over the land as the Christ of God, come
to set up the earthly throne of David. Yet His own question "Whom do
men say that I, the Son of man am?" and the reply of the apostles, show
plainly that He was practically unknown. For if He had announced
Himself as Christ the King, and had been so proclaimed by His apostles,
He could not have asked that question. Nor could they in that case,
have said: "Some say Thou art John the Baptist, some Elias, and others
Jeremias, or one of the prophets." And furthermore, if He had been
publicly proclaimed as "Christ the King" He could not have charged them
to tell no man that He was the Christ.
There is no ground whatever for such a misstatement; for the plain
facts are that the Lord had never proclaimed Himself as Christ the
King. His way had always been to let His works speak for Him (Mat.
11:4,5; John 5:36; 10:25, etc.) The name by which He almost invariably
called Himself was "The Son of man," a name which connects Him with
Gentiles as much as with Jews.
When the Lord crossed the sea with the disciples after feeding the five
thousand, and stilled the wind and waves by His Word, they wondered
what manner of man He was; and it is recorded in Mark 6:52, that "they
considered not the miracle of the loaves; for their heart was
hardened"; (literally the verse reads "they understood not by the
loaves"); or in other words the great truth of His Messiahship was not
yet apprehended by them. Still later, after feeding the four thousand,
He had occasion again to rebuke them, saying: "Perceive ye not yet,
neither understand? Have ye your heart yet hardened? Having eyes see ye
not, and ears hear ye not?" And He concludes the long list of
reproachful questions with the pointed one: "How is it that ye do not
understand?" (Mk. 8:14;2I).
From first to last then it is evident that He could not permit Himself
to be proclaimed as Christ the King, until He had endured the appointed
"sufferings of Christ." For whatever the "throne" which was promised to
Him, whether heavenly or earthly, the only pathway to it lay through
the predicted sufferings and death that awaited Him. The concurrent
testimony of all the Scriptures is that the prophecies concerning
David's promised Son were to be fulfilled only in resurrection. (See
for example Acts 2:29-32; and 13:22-24 and 32-34). His "Father's
business" upon which He had come was not at all in connection with the
earthly expectations of Israel, but was for the Redemption of the whole
world, and the introduction of a spiritual Kingdom composed of redeemed
sinners out of every nation under heaven.
2. Consider now the following: statement of the above quoted note: "The
former testimony was ended, the new testimony was not yet ready." I
have shown that what the editor takes to be "the former testimony,"
namely the testimony of Christ as King Who had come to set up the
earthly kingdom, which testimony he says was "ended" had not been begun
up to that time; for the apostles themselves had just apprehended that
He was the Christ. It Is also clear that, in the Divine program (which
of course was perfectly carried out) the Lord Jesus was not to be
preached as "the Christ" until He was risen from the dead and enthroned
in heaven. This passage therefore is quite sufficient in itself to
settle the whole question as to what sort of a "Kingdom" the Lord and
His forerunner had announced. The "Christ" or "Messiah" was, according
to Psalm 2, the promised King of Israel. If therefore the Lord forbade
His disciples to announce Him as "the Christ," He in effect forbade
them to announce Him as the King of Israel. The Scripture will be
searched in vain for any occasion when they proclaimed Him as either
Christ or King before He rose from the dead. In fact, before Pentecost
they did not preach the Lord Jesus--the Person--at all, but only
announced the nearness of the Kingdom.
But regardless of what was meant by "the Kingdom of heaven" and
"Kingdom of God," the fact is that, instead of the preaching of the
Kingdom being "ended" at this point, as the theory demands and as the
Scofield Bible dogmatically asserts, the very same proclamation
continued right on to the end of the Lord's earthly ministry, not only
with undiminished energy, but even with increased diligence. For, on
His last journey to Jerusalem, during which He told His disciples again
and again that He was about to be betrayed to the chief priests and
scribes, and be crucified, and would rise again from the dead the third
day, He appointed "other seventy," in addition to the original twelve,
and set them forth to proclaim the Kingdom of God as at hand. (See for
example Luke 18:31-34, and notice that subject of the Lord's discourse
is the Kingdom of God. Ch. 16:16; 17:20:18:16-30).
The appointment of those "other seventy also" is recorded in Luke
10:1-9, the sending forth of the twelve being mentioned in chapter 9,
before the Transfiguration.
The sending of the seventy, with identically the same instructions and
with identically the same announcement previously given to the twelve,
indicates that the time was getting so short for the preliminary
proclamation of the Kingdom (for the Passover at which the Lord was to
be slain was but a few weeks off, they being then on the way to
Jerusalem); that many additional messengers were needed to cover the
ground. It shows also that the announcement of the Kingdom of God as
'at hand' went side by side with the Lord's repeated explanation to His
own disciples of what was to befall Him at Jerusalem; and this is proof
that the Kingdom He had proclaimed awaited only His approaching death,
resurrection, ascension, and enthronement in heaven as "King of Glory,"
in fulfilment of Psalms 2, 14, and 110. When He ascended "the throne of
the Majesty in the heavens" (Heb. 8:1), then the "Kingdom of the
heavens" began.
Those who hold the postponement theory realize that the announcement of
Christ's sufferings and death could not possibly be coupled with that
of an earthly kingdom. Hence our friends have been sorely troubled by
John the Baptist's proclamation of Jesus as the Lamb of God Which
taketh away the sin of the world; since they are utterly unable to
explain that proclamation consistently with their theory. For that
theory demands that when Christ began to tell the disciples of His
approaching death He should cease to proclaim the Kingdom. If, however,
His death and resurrection were necessary to the introduction of the
Kingdom He had been announcing, then we should expect to find His
references thereto accompanied by an even more intense preaching of the
Kingdom; and that is precisely what we do find.
The instructions given to the seventy were that they should heal the
sick, and preach, saying: "The Kingdom of God is come nigh unto you"
(Lu. 10:9); and it should be observed that the words "is come nigh,"
are precisely the same in the original as the words "is at hand." So
the announcement of these seventy was identical with that of the Lord
Himself as recorded in Mark 1:15. And not only so: but there was an
added emphasis to the announcement as thus commanded by the Lord at the
very end of His ministry; for He instructed the seventy that in any
city which received them not they were to go out into the streets and
say: "Even the very dust of your city, which cleaveth on us, we do wipe
off against you; notwithstanding be ye sure of this that the Kingdom of
God is come nigh unto you" ( Lu. 10:9-11).
According to the postponement theory, when the kingdom proclaimed by
the Lord was rejected by the Jews, it was forthwith, and for that
reason, "withdrawn" and "postponed." But, according to the Lord's own
word, the messengers were to say to any cities which rejected the
message, "Nothwithstanding (your rejection) be ye sure of this, that
the Kingdom of God is come nigh unto you." So this Scripture demolishes
the theory completely.
We see then that, according to Scripture, the Lord proclaimed the
Kingdom of God as "at hand" from the very beginning to the very end of
His public ministry; and that, so far from abandoning the proclamation,
He gave it a wider publicity toward the end. The notes of the "Scofield
Bible" flatly contradict this clear record, and say that the testimony
of the kingdom was ended about the time of the beheading of John the
Baptist. And what is most remarkable is the fact that long after the
time when, according to the "Scofield Bible," the announcement of the
kingdom ceased, the Lord's messengers were, by His special command,
making that very announcement everywhere with the added words "Be ye
sure of this." We see then that the rejection of the message by the
Jews was not to change the declared purpose of God; and how could
anyone have supposed for a moment that it would? Indeed, the hatred and
opposition of the Jews did but serve to accomplish the eternal purpose
of God: and their attention was called to that fact by the apostle
Peter, who, after accusing them of having "killed the Prince of Life,"
went on to say: "But those things, which God before had showed by the
mouth of all His prophets, that Christ should suffer, He hath so
fulfilled" (Acts 3:13-18).
Here again is a Scripture which tells plainly what was the great topic
of all the prophets of God; and which also tells plainly that it was
not the restoration of the Jewish nation, but the sufferings of Christ
and the eternal and spiritual kingdom, "the Kingdom which cannot be
shaken," that was to be founded thereon.
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