The
Coming of Christ
by
Charles R. Erdman*
The return of Christ is a fundamental doctrine of the Christian
faith.
It is embodied in hymns of hope; it forms the climax of the creeds; it
is the sublime motive for evangelistic and missionary activity; and
daily it is voiced in the inspired prayer: "Even so: Come, Lord Jesus."
It is peculiarly a Scriptural doctrine. It is not, on the one hand, a
dream of ignorant fanatics, nor, on the other, a creation of
speculative theologians; but it is a truth divinely revealed, and
recorded in the Bible with marked clearness, emphasis and prominence.
Like the other great truths of revelation it is a controverted
doctrine. The essential fact is held universally by all who admit the
authority of Scripture; but as to certain incidental, although
important, elements of the teaching, there is difference of opinion
among even the most careful and reverent students. Any consideration of
the theme demands, therefore, modesty, humility and abundant charity.
According to the familiar view outlined in this paper, the Bible
describes the "second coming of Christ" as personal, glorious, imminent.
1. His Coming Will Be Personal
By personal is meant all that may be suggested by the words visible,
bodily, local; and all that may be contrasted with that which is
spiritual, providential, figurative. Of course, the spiritual presence
of Christ is a blessed reality; one of the most comforting and
inspiring of truths is the teaching that Christ does come to each
believer, by His Holy Spirit, and dwells within, and empowers for
service and suffering and growth in grace; but this is to be held in
harmony with the other blessed truth that Christ will some day
literally appear again in bodily form, and "we shall see Him" and shall
then "be like Him," when "we see Him as He is."
Nor yet did that special manifestation of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost
fulfill the promise of Christ’s return. Subsequent to Pentecost, Peter
urged the Jews to repent in order that Jesus, whom for a time "the
heavens had received," might be "sent back again;" he wrote his
epistles of comfort based upon the hope of a returning Lord, while Paul
and the other inspired Apostles, long after Pentecost, emphasized the
coming of Christ as the highest incentive for life and service.
According to the interpretation of others, Christ is said "to come" in
various providential events of history, as notably in the destruction
of Jerusalem. This tragedy of history is supposed by many to fulfill
the prophecies spoken by Christ in His great discourse on the Mount of
Olives, recorded in Matthew 24, and Mark 13, and Luke 21. When one
combines these predictions, it becomes evident that the capture of the
holy city by Titus was a real but only a partial fulfillment of the
words of Christ. As in the case of so many Old Testament prophecies,
the nearer event furnished the colors in which were depicted scenes and
occurrences which belonged to a distant future, and in this case to
"the end of the age." When Jerusalem fell, the people of God were not
delivered nor the enemies of God punished, nor did "the sign of the Son
of Man" appear in the heavens, as was predicted of the time when He
comes again; and long after the fall of the city, John wrote in Gospel
and in Apocalypse of the coming of the King.
Nor is the coming of Christ to be confused with death. It is true that
this dark messenger ushers us into an experience which is, for the
believer, one of great blessedness; "to depart is to be with Christ
which is very far better," "to be absent from the body" is "to be at
home with the Lord;" but death is for us inseparable from pain and loss
and sorrow and tears and anguish; and even those who are now with their
Lord, in heavenly joy, are waiting for their bodies of glory and for
the rewards and reunions which will be theirs at the appearing of
Christ.
More marvelous than the scenes at Pentecost, more startling than the
fall of Jerusalem, more blessed than the indwelling of the Spirit or
the departure to be with the Lord, will be the literal, visible,
bodily, return of Christ. No event may seem less probable to unaided
human reason; no event is more certain in the light of inspired
Scripture. "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."
"Behold, He cometh with clouds; and every eye shall see Him" Acts 1:11;
Revelation 1:7.
2. His Coming, Glorious
This coming of Christ is to be glorious, not only in its attendant
circumstances, but also in its effects upon the Church and the world.
Our Lord predicted that He would return "in His own glory, and the
glory of His Father, and of the holy angels" Luke 9:26. He will then be
revealed in His Divine majesty. Once during His earthly ministry, on
the mount of transfiguration, there was given to His followers a
glimpse of the royal splendor He had for a time laid aside, and in
which He will again appear.
As on the great day of atonement the high priest put off his usual
robes "for glory and for beauty" and appeared in spotless white, when
he offered the sacrifices for sin and went into the holy place to
intercede for the waiting people, so our Great High Priest laid aside
the robes of His imperial majesty when stooping from heaven He assumed
His garb of sinless flesh, and offered Himself as the perfect sacrifice
and entered into the holy places not made with hands to appear in the
presence of God for us; but as the high priest again assumed his
garments of scarlet and blue and purple and gold when he came forth to
complete his work in the presence of the people, so Christ, when He
returns to bless, and to receive the homage of the world, will be
manifest in His Divine glory. Hebrews 9:24-28. As He appeared to Isaiah
in his vision, to the disciples on the holy mount, to Saul on his way
to Damascus, to John on Patmos, so will the Son of Man appear when, as
He promised, He is seen "sitting at the right hand of Power, and coming
on the clouds of heaven" Matthew 26:64.
Nothing could be more natural than such a triumphant return of the
risen, ascended Lord. What a pathetic picture Christ would present in
the history of the race, if, after all His claims and promises, the
world should see Him, last of all, hanging on a cross as a malefactor,
or laid lifeless in a tomb! "He was despised and rejected of men;" but
He is to return again "with power and great glory," attended by
thousands of the heavenly host. As the Epistle to the Hebrews
strikingly says: "When He again bringeth in the first born into the
inhabited earth He saith, And let all the angels of God worship Him"
Hebrews 1:6.
Then Christ will reign in glory over all the world. It is true that
now
"all power" has been given to Him "in heaven and on earth," but that
power has not been fully manifest; "we see not yet all things put under
Him." He has "sat down on the right hand of God," but He is "henceforth
expecting till His enemies be made the footstool of His feet." He is
now reigning, seated on His Father’s throne; but this world is still in
reality a revolted province, and Christ is yet to sit upon His own
throne; then "before Him every knee will bow, and every tongue confess
that He is Lord" Hebrews 10:12,13; Philippians 2:10,11.
These expressions need not be interpreted with such crass literalness
as to suggest that Christ will rule visibly in some one earthly
locality, "establishing in Jerusalem an oriental court;" but they at
least mean that the coming of Christ will be followed by the universal
reign of Christ.
He will determine who may enter and who must be excluded from His
kingdom. He will then say:
He will be the supreme Judge, but He will also be manifest as the
universal Ruler in His perfected kingdom. Then the voices will be heard
proclaiming:
In this glory of Christ His followers are to share. The resurrection
of
the dead will take place when He returns: "For as in Adam all die, so
also in Christ shall all be made alive. But each in his own order:
Christ the first fruits; then they that are Christ’s at His coming."
The body of the believer is thus to be raised in glory. "It is sown in
corruption; it is raised in incorruption: it is sown in dishonor; it is
raised in glory." As to how the spirits now with Christ are to he
united with their resurrection bodies, the Bible is absolutely silent;
but we know that this will be at the coming of the Lord. 1 Corinthians
15:22,23,42,43.
Then, too, the bodies of living believers will be glorified, and made
deathless and immortal like the body of their Divine Lord. "For our
citizenship is in heaven; whence also we wait for a Saviour, the Lord
Jesus Christ: who shall fashion anew the body of our humiliation, that
it may be conformed to the body of His glory" Philippians 3:20,21.
Sometimes it is carelessly said that "nothing is so sure as death"; one
thing is more sure; it is this: some Christians will never die. One
generation of believers will be living when Christ returns, and they
will be translated, without the experience of death. What "is mortal
will be swallowed up of life." They never will be unclothed," but
"clothed upon" with the glory of immortality.
Then, also, will be the blessed reunion in glory of
the risen and the transfigured followers of Christ.
The time of the return of the Lord will be, furthermore, the time of
the reward of His servants. The Son of Man is likened to a nobleman who
has gone "into a far country to receive for himself a kingdom, and to
return."
He has entrusted various talents to his servants with the command to
use them wisely, until his return. When he has "come back again, having
received the kingdom," then he "maketh a reckoning with them." It is
popularly said, and in a sense it is true, that when our loved ones go
to be with Christ "they have gone to their reward"; but more strictly
speaking, the full reward of the blessed awaits the coming of Christ.
Whatever may be meant by being "set over many things," or having
"authority over ten cities," the complete recompense of the faithful is
"at the resurrection of the just" Matthew 25:14-23; Luke 19: 11-27;
Luke 14:14.
That the real coronation day of the Christian is not at death but at
"the appearing of Christ" was strikingly suggested by Paul when,
realizing that he was to die before the Lord returned, he gave to
Timothy his triumphant farewell:
So Peter encourages pastors to be faithful, by the familiar promise:
"And when the chief Shepherd shall be manifested, ye shall receive the
crown of glory that fadeth not away" 1 Peter 5:1-4. In large measure
this reward will consist in being changed into a moral likeness to
Christ. This is far more marvelous than the transfiguration of our
bodies, but no less real.
The reward which awaits the followers of Christ further includes the
fulfillment of the blessed prophecies which declare the saints are to
reign with Christ .... "Know ye not that the saints shall judge the
earth … Know ye not that we shall judge angels?" "If we endure we shall
also reign with Him." "I appoint unto you a kingdom … and ye shall sit
on thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel." 1 Corinthians 6:2,3; 2
Timothy 2:12; Luke 22:30.
Whatever may be denoted by promises so full of wonder and mystery, they
do not mean that "the saints are to rule on earth in the flesh."
Believers will previously have been "raised in glory," transfigured,
translated. As coregents with their Lord they may be privileged to
perform blessed ministries for the world, but they nevertheless will
belong to His immortal and heavenly kingdom.
Such a rule of Christ and His people must secure unparalleled
blessedness for the world. "The end of the world" does not mean, in
prophecy, the end of the earth and the destruction of its inhabitants;
but the end of "the present age," which is to be followed by an age of
glory. The "present evil age" is predicted to close amid scenes of
fiery judgment upon the enemies of God, and with portents and
convulsions which will affect the very earth itself; but the results
will be what is figuratively described as the "new heavens and the new
earth wherein dwelleth righteousness." Nature itself will become more
beautiful and joyous.
In spite of the sin and failures of man, we are not to look for the
destruction of this globe, but for an era when the true full life of
humanity will be realized, when all shall know the Lord from the least
unto the greatest, when all art and science and social institutions
shall be Christian, when "nation shall not lift up sword against
nation, neither shall they learn war anymore" Isaiah 2:1-4. Such an
age, of which poets have sung and philosophers have dreamed, such an
era as psalmists, and prophets, and apostles have promised, will dawn
at the coming of the King, Inspired by such a hope the waiting Church
has learned to sing:
"Come, Lord, and tarry not; Bring the long looked for day; O, why these
years of waiting here, These ages of delay? "Come, and make all things
new; Build up this ruined earth; Restore our faded Paradise, Creation’s
second birth. "Come, and begin Thy reign Of everlasting peace; Come,
take the kingdom to Thyself, Great King of righteousness."
The Bible further describes the
coming of Christ as imminent. It is an
event which may occur in any lifetime. Whatever difficulties
the fact
involves, there is no doubt that all the inspired writers and their
fellow Christians believed that Christ might return in their
generation. This has been the normal attitude of the Church ever since.
Paul describes believers as men "who have turned to God from idols" and
who "wait for His Son from heaven." Christians are further described as
"those that wait for Him," and as "those that love His appearing." They
are everywhere in the New Testament exhorted to "watch," and to be
ready for the return of their Lord. His coming is their constant
encouragement and inspiration and hope. 1 Thessalonians 4:10; 2 Peter
4:8; Matthew 24:42; Mark 13:35,37; Luke 21:36; Philippians 4:5.
However, "imminent" does not mean "immediate." Confusion of these ideas
has led some writers to assert that "Paul and the early Christians were
mistaken in their views as to the Lord’s return." But, when Paul used
such a phrase as "we that are alive and remain unto the coming of the
Lord," he meant simply to identify himself with his fellow Christians,
and to suggest that, if he lived until Christ came, their blessed
experience would also be his. He could not have said, "ye that are
alive and remain;" that would have indicated that Paul was to die
first. This he did not then know. He believed that the Lord might
return in his life time; he never asserted that He would.
"Imminence" as related to our Lord’s
return indicates uncertainty as to
time, but possibility of nearness. "Take ye heed, watch, for
ye
know
not when the time is" Mark 13:33. Such statements rebuke those who have
brought the doctrine into disrepute by announcing dates for "the end of
the world," and by setting times for the coming of Christ. So, too,
they suggest caution to those who assert that the age is now drawing to
its close; it may be, but of this there is no certainty. These
Scriptural exhortations to watch seem to contradict, also, those who
teach that a "Millennium," a thousand years or a protracted period of
righteousness, must intervene between the present time and the advent
of Christ.
Those who hold this last view are commonly called "Post-Millennialists"
to distinguish them from "Pre-Millennialists," who hold that the return
of Christ will precede and usher in such an age of universal
blessedness. The great objection to the Pre-Millennial position is the
apparent prediction of 2 Peter 3, that at the coming of Christ, in "the
day of the Lord," the earth will be destroyed; there could then be no
place for a millennium. The difficulty in the Post-Millennial theory is
the repeated description of this present age as one of mingled good and
evil, in which iniquity, as well as righteousness, continues to develop
uninterruptedly; there is thus no time for a millennium before the Lord
returns. As to the passage from Peter, it is obviously no more
subversive of one of these theories than of the other.
No one can possibly review the picture, which the Apostle draws in his
two epistles, of the apostasy and skepticism and godlessness already
prevailing and surely deepening as "the day of the Lord" draws near,
and find any place for a previous millennium before "that day." The
predictions of fiery judgments and consequent "new heavens and new
earth" must be read in connection with Isaiah 65 and 66, from which
Peter is quoting. It will then be seen that these expressions are
in-so-far figurative that the earth still continues with its life, its
nations, its progress, after these judgments are over. Terrific
convulsions, and governmental, social and cosmic changes, only
introduce a new and better age. So, too, "the day of the Lord" is a
familiar phrase, and as we read Zechariah 14 we see that while, in that
day, the Lord comes amidst appalling portents, His coming and the day
itself are followed by a scene of great blessedness on this same earth;
the Nile is still flowing in its course and the nations are going up to
Jerusalem to worship. (Note also that in 2 Peter 3:10 the most ancient
manuscripts do not read "burned up" but "discovered.")
There are other positive statements of Scripture which intimate that
the millennium follows the coming of Christ. According to Daniel, it is
after the Son of Man comes with the clouds of heaven that He is given
"dominion and glory and a kingdom, that all peoples, nations and
languages should serve Him, … and the kingdom and the dominion and the
greatness of the kingdom under the whole heaven," are "given to the
people of the saints of the Most High; … and all dominions shall serve
and obey Him" Daniel 7:13,14,27.
According to the Psalms, the appearing of the Lord, in flaming fire
upon His adversaries, prepares the way for the establishment of His
glorious kingdom, as "He comes to rule the world with righteousness and
the peoples with equity" (Psalm 96, Psalm 97, Psalm 98, etc.).
According to Paul (2 Thessalonians 1--2) the advent described by Daniel
is not to an earth which is enjoying millennial peace, but it is "in
flaming fire" to destroy an existing "Man of Sin" whose career is the
culmination of the lawlessness already manifest and to continue until
the personal coming of Christ. According to our Lord Himself His return
is to bring "the regeneration," not the destruction of the world
Matthew 19:28; Luke 22:28-30. But this rule of blessedness is preceded
by judgments that come "as a snare on all the earth" Luke 21:29-36.
According to Peter, "seasons of refreshing" and "the restitution of all
things," not annihilation of the globe, will come with the return of
Christ Acts 3:19- 21. According to John, the coming of Christ
(Revelation 19) precedes the millennium (Revelation 20).
However, great the divergence of views among students of prophecy may
seem to be, and in spite of the many varieties of opinion among the
representatives of the two schools which have been mentioned in
passing, the points of agreement are far more important. The main
difference is as to the order, rather than as to the reality of events.
The great body of believers are united in expecting both an age of
glory and a personal return of Christ. As to many related events they
differ; but as to the one great precedent condition of that coming age
or that promised return of the Lord there is absolute harmony of
conviction: the Gospel must first be preached to all nations Matthew
24:14. The Church must continue to "make disciples of all the nations …
even unto the end of the age" Matthew 28:19,20.
This is therefore a time, not for unkindly criticism of fellow
Christians, but for friendly conference; not for disputing over
divergent views, but for united action; not for dogmatic assertion of
prophetic programs, but for the humble acknowledgment that "we know in
part;" not for idle dreaming, but for the immediate task of
evangelizing a lost world.
For such effort, no one truth is more inspiring, than that of the
return of Christ. None other can make us sit more lightly by the things
of time, none other is more familiar as a Scriptural motive to purity,
holiness, patience, vigilance, love. Strengthened by this blessed hope
let us press forward with passionate zeal to the task that awaits us:
* Dr. Charles R. Erdman (1866-1960) was an American Presbyterian minister and professor of theology at Princeton Theological Seminary.