DIVINE PRINCIPLE
PART I
CHAPTER 4
ADVENT OF THE MESSIAH
The word "messiah" in Hebrew means the "anointed one", especially
signifying the king. The Israelites believed the Word of God that He would
send a king or Messiah to save them; this was the Messianic expectation of
the Israelites. In this sense, Jesus Christ came as the Messiah, "Christ"
meaning "Messiah" in the Hellenic language.
The Messiah must come in order that the purpose of God's providence of
salvation be fulfilled. Man needs salvation because of the human fall.
Therefore, we must understand the questions concerning the human fall in
order to solve the problems of salvation. "Fall" implies that God's purpose
of creation was left unfulfilled, so we must first elucidate the purpose of
creation before we discuss the questions concerning the human fall.
God's purpose of creation was to be fulfilled with the establishment of
the Kingdom of Heaven on earth. Due to the fall of man, an earthly hell was
brought about instead of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth. Ever since, God has
continued His providence to restore the Kingdom of Heaven on earth.
Consequently, the purpose of human endeavor is to restore the Kingdom of
Heaven on earth. These questions have already been discussed in detail (cf.
Part I, Ch. 3, Sec. I-II--100).
SECTION I - THE PROVIDENCE OF SALVATION THROUGH THE CROSS
1. THE PURPOSE OF JESUS' COMING AS THE MESSIAH
The purpose of Jesus' coming as the Messiah was to fulfill the providence
of restoration; his coming was primarily to save fallen men. Consequently,
the Kingdom of Heaven on earth should have been established by Jesus. We may
see this even from what Jesus said to his disciples, "You, therefore, must
be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect." (Matt. 5:48). According to
the principle of creation, a man who has fulfilled the purpose of creation
becomes one body with God, possesses deity, and cannot commit sins. This
kind of man, seen from the purpose of creation, is one who is perfect as the
heavenly Father is perfect. Therefore, Jesus' words to his disciples meant
that they should become citizens of the Heavenly Kingdom, after having been
restored as men who have fulfilled the purpose of creation.
Thus, Jesus came in order to establish the Kingdom of Heaven on earth,
having restored fallen men as citizens of the Heavenly Kingdom. For this
reason he told his disciples to pray that God's will be done on earth as it
is in Heaven (Matt. 6:10). He also urged the people to repent, for the
Kingdom of Heaven was at hand (Matt. 4:17). For the same reason, John the
Baptist, who had come to prepare the way of the Lord, also announced the
nearness of the Kingdom of Heaven (Matt. 3:2).
What would the man be like, then, who became perfect as the heavenly
Father is perfect, having restored himself as the man in whom the purpose of
creation is fulfilled? Such a man would become one body with God,
inseparable from Him, living in accordance with God's will. Feeling exactly
what God feels, he would possess deity. This man is not in need of
redemption or of a savior, nor does he need the life of prayer and faith
required by fallen men, because he is without original sin. Such a man,
being himself without original sin, comes to multiply children of goodness
without original sin; in consequence, his children are not in need of a
savior for the redemption of their sins.
2. WAS THE PROVIDENCE OF SALVATION FULFILLED THROUGH
REDEMPTION BY THE CROSS?
Since human history began, there has not been a single man, however
devout a saint he may have been, who has lived a life in complete oneness
with God. Not a single man has experienced God's own heart and feeling, or
possessed the same deity. Consequently, there has not yet been a saint who
did not need redemption from sin and a life of prayer and faith. Even a man
as devout as Paul was compelled to lead a life of faith and tearful prayers
(Rom. 7:18-25). All parents, however devout, cannot give birth to a child
without sin who may go to the Kingdom of Heaven without redemption by the
savior. From this, we perceive that parents are still transmitting original
sin to their children.
What does the reality of the life in faith of the Christian teach us? It
tells us straightforwardly that redemption through the cross cannot
completely liquidate our original sin, and that it leaves man's original
nature not yet perfectly restored. Jesus promised the Lord would come,
because Jesus knew he could not fulfill the purpose of his advent as the
Messiah through redemption by the cross. Christ had to come again to fulfill
perfectly the will of God, because God's predestination to restore the
Kingdom of Heaven on earth was absolute and unchangeable.
Did his sacrifice on the cross then come to naught? Not at all (John
3:16). If it had, Christian history could not have existed. We can never
deny the magnitude of the grace of redemption by the cross. Therefore, it is
true that our faith in the cross can bring about redemption. It is equally
true that redemption by the cross has been unable to remove our original sin
and restore us as men of the original nature who cannot commit sin; thus, it
has been unable to establish the Kingdom of Heaven on earth.
Then, the question arises as to the extent of redemption by the cross.
The faith of modern men of intellect cannot be directed unless we can solve
this problem.
3. THE CRUCIFIXION OF JESUS
Let us first examine Jesus' crucifixion from the viewpoint of the words
and actions of the disciples that were recorded in the Bible. There was one
evident feeling common among the disciples concerning Jesus' death. They
were grieved and mortified by Jesus' death. They were indignant at the
ignorance and disbelief of the people who caused the crucifixion of Jesus
(Acts 7:51-53). Christians since have commonly entertained the same feeling
as did the disciples of Jesus' days. If Jesus' death had been a natural
result of God's predestination, there would have been no reason for the
disciples to decry it, though it may have been inevitable for them to grieve
over his death. From this, we can ascertain that Jesus' having to take the
path of death was unjust and undue.
Next, let us further investigate from the viewpoint of God's providence
whether Jesus' crucifixion was a natural result of God's predestination. God
called the chosen people of Israel, the descendants of Abraham; He raised
and protected them, and at times led them through the discipline of trials
and hardships. He comforted them by sending prophets who promised that in
the future He would send them a Messiah. He had the people erect tabernacles
and temples in preparation for the Messiah. He sent the wise men from the
East as well as Simon, Anna, John the Baptist and others to testify widely
to the birth and the appearance of the Messiah.
Especially concerning the birth of John the Baptist, all the Jews knew
that the angel appeared to testify to his conception (Luke 1:13); and the
signs which occurred at the time of his birth stirred all Judea in
expectation (Luke 1:63-66). Besides, his ascetic practices in the wilderness
were so impressive that the Jewish people questioned in their hearts whether
perhaps he were the Christ (Luke 3:15). Needless to say, God sent such a
great man as John the Baptist to bear witness to Jesus as the Messiah so
that the Jewish people would believe in Jesus. Since God's will was thus to
have the Israelites believe that Jesus was the Messiah, the Israelites, who
were supposed to live according to God's will, should have believed in him
as the Messiah. If they had believed in Jesus as the Messiah according to
God's will, how could they have crucified him, after having waited for him
for such a long time? It was because, against God's will, they did not
believe that Jesus was the Messiah, that the Israelites crucified him. We,
therefore, must realize that Jesus did not come to die on the cross.
Next, let us further investigate, according to Jesus' own words and
deeds, whether his crucifixion was truly the means to fulfill the whole
purpose of his coming as the Messiah. As the Bible clearly states, Jesus
expressed in both word and deed his wish to have the people believe he was
the Messiah. When the people asked him what they must do to be doing the
works of God, Jesus answered them, "This is the work of God, that you
believe in him whom He has sent." (John 6:29).
Jesus grieved over the treachery of the Jewish people; and finding none
to appeal to, he wept over the city of Jerusalem and even cursed the city to
be destroyed so utterly that not one stone would be left upon another, not
to mention the Israelites, the chosen people, whom God had led in love and
care for 2000 years. Jesus clearly pointed out their ignorance, saying,
"...you did not know the time of your visitation." (Luke 19:44).
Jesus lamented over the disbelief and stubbornness of the people, saying:
O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, killing the prophets and stoning those who are
sent to you! How often would I have gathered your children together as a
hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you would not! (Matt. 23:37)
Jesus reproached them for their ignorance which kept them from believing
in him even though they read the Scriptures, which testified to him, and he
said in great sorrow:
You search the scriptures, because you think that in them you have
eternal life; and it is they that bear witness to me; yet you refuse to
come to me that you may have life. (John 5:39-40)
Again, he said sorrowfully, "I have come in my Father's name, and you do
not receive me", and he went on to say, "If you believed Moses, you would
believe me, for he wrote of me." (John 5:43-46).
Jesus performed many miracles and signs in the hope that he might restore
the people's belief. However, they condemned him as being possessed by
Beelzebub when they saw the amazing works which Jesus did. Seeing the
painful situation, Jesus said, "...even though you do not believe me,
believe the works, that you may know and understand that the Father is in me
and I am in the Father." (John 10:38). On another occasion, he even cursed
them in great indignation, prophesying that they would suffer (Matt.
23:13-36). Jesus himself, through his words and deeds, tried to make them
believe in him, because it was God's will for them to do so. If the Jewish
people believed that he was the Messiah, as both God and Jesus wanted, could
they have crucified him?
From the above, we can see that Jesus' crucifixion was the result of the
ignorance and disbelief of the Jewish people and was not God's
predestination to fulfill the whole purpose of Jesus' coming as the Messiah.
I Corinthians 2:8 says, "None of the rulers of this age understood this; for
if they had, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory.". This should
be sufficient proof.
If Jesus' crucifixion had originally been God's predestination, how could
he have prayed even three times that the cup of death might pass from him?
(Matt. 26:39). In fact, he thus prayed desperately because he knew too well
that the history of affliction would be prolonged until the time of the
Second Advent if the disbelief of the people should forbid the realization
of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth, which God had endeavored to establish.
In John 3:14 we read, "As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness,
so must the Son of man be lifted up.". When the Israelites were on their way
from Egypt into the land of Canaan, they failed to believe in Moses, and at
that time fiery serpents appeared and began to kill the people; then God had
a bronze serpent lifted up on a pole, and those who looked at it survived.
Similarly, due to the Jewish people's disbelief in Jesus, all were destined
to hell; and Jesus, foreseeing that after his crucifixion as the "bronze
serpent" only those who looked at him and believed in him would be saved,
said this with a deeply sorrowful heart.
Another way we may know that Jesus was crucified due to the disbelief of
the people is from the fact, as Jesus foretold, that the chosen nation of
Israel declined after his death (Luke 19:44).
Isaiah 9:6-7 says:
For to us a child is born, to us a son is given; and the government
will be upon his shoulder, and his name will be called 'Wonderful
Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.'. Of the
increase of his government and of peace there will be no end, upon the
throne of David and over his kingdom, to establish it, and to uphold it
with justice and with righteousness from this time forth and for evermore.
The zeal of the Lord of hosts will do this.
This is the prediction that Jesus would come upon the throne of David and
establish a kingdom that would never perish throughout eternity. Therefore,
an angel appeared to Mary at the time she conceived Jesus and said:
And behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you
shall call his name Jesus. He will be great, and will be called the son of
the Most high; and the Lord God will give to him the throne of his father
David, and he will reign over the house of Jacob for ever; and of his
kingdom there will be no end. (Luke 1:31-33)
From these passages, we can see plainly that God called the Israelites,
the chosen people, and had led them through afflictions and hardships for
2000 years, in order to establish an everlasting Kingdom of God on earth by
sending Jesus as the Messiah. Jesus came as the Messiah; but, due to the
disbelief of and persecution by the people, he was crucified. Since then,
the Jews have lost their qualification as the chosen people and have been
scattered, suffering persecution through the present day.
4. THE LIMIT OF SALVATION THROUGH REDEMPTION BY THE CROSS,
AND THE PURPOSE OF THE LORD'S SECOND ADVENT
If Jesus had not been crucified, what would have happened? He would have
accomplished the providence of salvation both spiritually and physically. He
would have established the Kingdom of Heaven on earth which would last
forever, as expressed in the prophecy of Isaiah (Is. 9:6-7), in the
instruction of the angel appearing to Mary (Luke 1:31-33), and in Jesus' own
words announcing the imminence of the Kingdom of Heaven (Matt. 4:17).
God first created man's flesh with the earth, and then He breathed into
his nostrils the breath of life and made him into a living soul (Gen. 2:7).
Man was created to have both spirit and body; his fall also came about both
spiritually and physically. Naturally, salvation must include both spirit
and body.
Since the purpose of Jesus' advent as the Messiah was to accomplish the
providence of restoration, he should have fulfilled the salvation of both
spirit and body. To believe in Jesus means to become one body with him;
therefore, Jesus likened himself to the true vine, and his followers to its
branches (John 15:5). He said, "...you will know that I am in my Father, and
you in me, and I in you." (John 14:20). Jesus said this because coming in
the flesh, he wanted to save fallen men both spiritually and physically. If
they had become one with him in both spirit and body by believing in him,
fallen men could have been saved both spiritually and physically. Because
the Jewish people disbelieved Jesus and delivered him up for crucifixion,
his body was invaded by Satan, and he was killed. Therefore, even when
Christians believe in and become one body with Jesus, whose body was invaded
by Satan, their bodies still remain subject to Satan's invasion.
In this manner, however devout a man of faith may be, he cannot fulfill
physical salvation by redemption through Jesus' crucifixion alone. Since the
original sin lineally transmitted from Adam has not been liquidated, any
saint, however devout he may be, still has original sin and cannot help
giving birth to the children of original sin. To prevent the condition of
Satanic invasion which constantly comes through the flesh due to the
original sin, we have to torment and deny our flesh, in order to live a
religious life. We must pray constantly (I Thess. 5:17) in order to prevent
the condition of Satanic invasion that comes because of original sin, which
has not been annihilated, even through redemption by the cross.
Jesus could not accomplish the purpose of the providence of physical
salvation because his body was invaded by Satan. However, he could establish
the basis for spiritual salvation by forming a triumphant foundation for
resurrection through the redemption by the blood of the cross. Therefore,
all the saints since the resurrection of Jesus through the present day have
enjoyed the benefit of the providence of spiritual salvation only. Salvation
through redemption by the cross is spiritual only. Even in devout men of
faith, the original sin remains in the flesh and is transmitted continuously
from generation to generation. The more devout a saint becomes in his faith,
therefore, the more severe becomes his fight against sin. Thus, Christ must
come again on the earth to accomplish the purpose of the providence of the
physical, as well as the spiritual salvation, by redeeming the original sin
which has not been liquidated even through the cross.
As mentioned before, even the saints redeemed by the cross have had to
continue to fight against original sin. That is why even Paul, who was the
center of faith among the disciples, lamented over his inability to prevent
sin from invading his flesh, saying, "...So then, I of myself serve the law
of God with my mind, but with my flesh I serve the law of sin." (Rom.
7:22-25). He said this to express the joy of the fulfillment of spiritual
salvation as well as to deplore the failure to accomplish physical
salvation. Again, in I John 1:8-10 John confessed, saying:
If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in
us...If we say we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not
in us.
Thus, we who can gain salvation through the crucifixion of Jesus cannot
escape from being sinners because the original sin still works in us.
5. TWO KINDS OF PROPHECY CONCERNING THE CROSS
What must be the reason, then, that in Isaiah 53 Jesus' suffering on the
cross is prophesied, if his crucifixion was not the result of God's
predestination? Until now, many people have thought that the prophecies in
the Bible about Jesus foretold only his suffering. When we read the Bible
anew with a knowledge of the Principle, we can understand that, just as the
prophet Isaiah foretold in the Old Testament Age (Is. 9, 11, 60), and as the
angel of God prophesied to Mary, Jesus was expected to become king of the
Jews in his lifetime and establish on earth an everlasting kingdom of which
"there will be no end" (Luke 1:31-33). Let us then investigate why there
were two kinds of prophecies.
God created man to be perfected only by accomplishing his portion of
responsibility (cf. Part I, Ch. 1, Sec. V, 2.2--55). However, in actuality,
the first human ancestors fell without having accomplished their portion of
responsibility. Thus, man could either accomplish his portion of
responsibility in accordance with God's will, or, on the contrary, not
accomplish it against God's will.
To give an example from the Bible, it was man's portion of responsibility
not to eat the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. Adam
could perfect himself by obeying God's commandment not to eat of the fruit;
on the other hand, he could die by eating the fruit, as actually happened.
God gave the Ten Commandments to the people of the Old Testament Age as a
condition of man's responsibility in the providence of salvation. Thus, man
could be saved by keeping the Commandments, or be ruined by not keeping
them. It was the Israelites' portion of responsibility to obey Moses'
command on their way from Egypt to the blessed land of Canaan. They could
enter the blessed land of Canaan by obeying Moses' command, or not enter it
by disobeying his command. In fact, God willed that Moses lead the
Israelites into the blessed land of Canaan (Ex. 3:8) and commanded him to do
so; but due to their disbelief, the people perished in the wilderness,
leaving only their posterity to reach the destination.
Man thus has his own responsibility to accomplish, and he may fulfill it
according to God's will or not fulfill it against His will, thus resulting
in only one of the two possibilities being realized. Therefore, it was
inevitable for God to give two kinds of prophecy regarding the fulfillment
of His will.
It was God's portion of responsibility to send the Messiah, but to
believe in him was man's responsibility. Therefore, the Jewish people could
either believe in the Messiah according to God's will or not believe in him,
against His will. Therefore, God had to give two kinds of prophecy, thus
providing for two possible results, according to man's success or failure to
accomplish his responsibility. God prophesied both about what might happen
if the Jewish people failed to believe in the Messiah, as was written in
Isaiah 53, and about what would happen if they fulfilled His will in glory
by believing in and serving the Messiah, as was recorded in Isaiah 9, 11,
and 60, and Luke 1:30. However, due to the disbelief of the people, Jesus
died on the cross, and the prophecy of Isaiah 53 was realized, thus leaving
the others to be accomplished after the Lord's Second Advent.
6. BIBLICAL VERSES WRITTEN AS IF JESUS' CRUCIFIXION WERE
INEVITABLE
In the Bible we find many verses written as if Jesus' suffering through
crucifixion were inevitable. One of the representative examples of this is
that Jesus reproached Peter, who tried to dissuade him when he prophesied
about his suffering on the cross, and said, "Get behind me, Satan!" (Matt.
16:23). Otherwise, how could Jesus reproach Peter so bitterly? In fact,
Jesus was then resolved to take the cross as the condition of indemnity to
pay for the accomplishment of even the spiritual salvation of man when he
found that he was unable to accomplish the providence of both spiritual and
physical salvation (Luke 9:31). In that situation, Peter's dissuading him
from taking the way of the cross was a hindrance to the providence of
spiritual salvation through the cross; so, he reproached Peter.
In the next place, when Jesus uttered his last words on the cross,
saying, "It is finished" (John 19:30), he did not mean that the whole
purpose of the providence of salvation was attained through the cross.
Knowing that the disbelief of the people was at that point inalterable,
Jesus chose the way of the cross in order to establish the foundation of the
providence of spiritual salvation, leaving the providence of physical
salvation to the time of the Second Advent. Therefore, Jesus meant by the
words "it is finished" that he finished establishing the basis for the
providence of spiritual salvation through the cross, which was the secondary
providence of salvation.
In order for us to have a right faith, we must first establish direct
rapport with God in spirit through ardent prayer and next, we must
understand the truth through correct reading of the Bible. This is the
reason that Jesus told us to worship God in spirit and truth (John 4:24).
From the time of Jesus through the present, all Christians have thought
that Jesus came to the world to die. This is because they did not know the
fundamental purpose of Jesus' coming as the Messiah and entertained the
wrong idea that spiritual salvation was the only mission for which Jesus
came to the world. Jesus came to accomplish the will of God in his lifetime,
but had to die a reluctant death due to the disbelief of the people. There
must first appear on the earth the bride who can relieve the humiliated and
grieving heart of Jesus before Christ as the bridegroom can come again--this
time to complete his mission with his bride. Jesus said, "Nevertheless, when
the Son of man comes, will he find faith on earth?" (Luke 18:8) in
lamentation over the possible ignorance of the people, which he could
foresee.
We have clarified the fact that Jesus did not come to die, but if we ask
Jesus directly through spiritual communication, we can see the fact even
more clearly. When direct rapport is impossible, we should seek the
testimony of someone with such a gift in order to have the kind of faith
that will entitle us to be the "bride", in order to receive the Messiah.
SECTION II - THE SECOND ADVENT OF ELIJAH AND JOHN THE BAPTIST
It was foretold by the prophet Malachi that Elijah would come again (Mal.
4:5), and it was Jesus' testimony that John the Baptist was none other than
the second advent of Elijah (Matt. 11:14, 17:13). However, John the Baptist
himself, as well as the Jewish people in general, did not know the fact that
John was the second advent of Elijah (John 1:21). John's doubt of Jesus
(Matt. 11:3), followed by the disbelief of the people, finally compelled
Jesus to take the way of the cross.
1. THE TREND OF JEWISH THOUGHT CONCERNING THE SECOND ADVENT
OF ELIJAH
During the period of the United Kingdom, the "ideal of the temple" was
invaded by Satan, due to the corruption of King Solomon.
God set up the ideal of the temple the second time. In order to prepare
the people to receive the Messiah as the substantial temple, He worked for
the separation from Satan by sending them four major prophets and twelve
minor prophets. It was to stop Satan from preventing the realization of this
ideal that God had his people destroy the god Baal by sending his special
prophet Elijah and having him fight against the prophets of Baal on Mt.
Carmel. However, Elijah ascended into heaven without having fully
accomplished his divine mission (II Kings 2:11), and Satan's power was again
rampant.
Therefore, in order that the ideal of the substantial temple, Jesus,
might be realized, there should first be the providence of having another
prophet succeed Elijah and accomplish the mission of separating Satan, which
he had left undone on the earth. Because of this providential necessity, the
prophet Malachi foretold the second advent of Elijah (Mal. 4:5).
The fervent hope of the Jewish people who believed in these prophecies
was, of course, the advent of the Messiah. But we must know that they
nonetheless longed for the second coming of Elijah. This is because God
clearly promised the people, through the prophet Malachi, that He would send
the prophet Elijah prior to the advent of the Messiah in order to have him
prepare the way of the Lord (Mal. 4:5). Meanwhile, the prophet Elijah had
ascended into heaven nearly 900 years before the birth of Jesus (II Kings
2:11), and we are familiar with the occasion when he appeared to Jesus'
disciples in spirit (Luke 9:31). The Jewish people believed that Elijah,
being in heaven, would come from heaven in the same manner as he had
ascended into heaven. Therefore, the Jewish people of that time were waiting
for Elijah to come again, looking up into heaven in the expectation that
Elijah would come on the clouds.
However, there had been as yet no rumor of Elijah's coming as Malachi had
prophesied, when Jesus appeared, claiming to be the Messiah; thus, great
confusion was caused in Jerusalem. So, the disciples were faced with an
argument against Jesus' being the Messiah (Matt. 17:10): if Jesus were he,
then where was Elijah who was to come before him? (Mal. 4:5). The disciples,
at a loss as to how to reply, asked Jesus directly; and he answered that
John the Baptist was none other than Elijah himself, for whom they had
waited (Matt. 11:14, 17:13). Jesus' disciples, who believed him to be the
Messiah, could believe without question Jesus' testimony that John the
Baptist was Elijah. But how could the Jewish people accept it, when they did
not know who Jesus was? Jesus himself, knowing that they would not easily
believe his testimony, said, "If you are willing to accept it, he is Elijah
who is to come." (Matt. 11:14). The Jewish people could not believe Jesus'
testimony that John the Baptist was Elijah because it came after John
himself clearly denied the fact (John 1:21).
2. THE WAY OF THE JEWISH PEOPLE
Jesus said that John the Baptist was none other than Elijah, for whom the
Jewish people had waited so long (Matt. 11:14), while on the contrary, John
the Baptist himself had already denied the fact. Then, whose words were they
to believe and follow? It depended upon which of the two appeared to be more
believable to the people at that time.
Let us then examine how Jesus appeared to the Jewish people, from their
own standpoint. Jesus was a young man of little formal education. He had
been born and raised in the poor and lowly home of a carpenter. This young
man emerged unknown, calling himself the Lord of the Sabbath, and yet
violated the Sabbath which the Jews strictly observed (Matt. 12:1-8).
Therefore, Jesus came to be known as one who wanted to abolish the Law,
which was the symbol of salvation to the Jews (Matt. 5:17). Therefore, Jesus
was persecuted by Jewish leaders and had to gather fishermen to be his
disciples. He became a friend to tax-collectors, harlots, and sinners,
eating and drinking with them (Matt. 11:19). More than that, Jesus declared
that the tax-collectors and harlots would enter the Kingdom of Heaven ahead
of the Jewish leaders. (Matt. 21:31).
On one occasion, a woman, weeping, began to wet Jesus' feet with her
tears, wipe them with her hair, kiss them and anoint them with a flask of
precious ointment (Luke 7:37-38). Such conduct would not be acceptable even
in today's society and how much more unacceptable it would have been within
the strict ethics of Jewish society, in which they could stone an adulterous
woman to death. Nevertheless, Jesus not only accepted it, but reproached his
disciples, who had rebuked the woman; in fact, he also praised her (Luke
7:44-50, Matt. 26:7-13).
Moreover, Jesus placed himself on the same level as God (John 14:9) and
said that no one could enter the Kingdom of Heaven except through him (John
14:6). He even said that people should love him more than their parents,
brothers, husband or wife and their children (Matt. 10:37, Luke 14:26).
Because of the attitude which Jesus' words and actions seemed to convey,
the Jewish leaders derided him and accused him of being Beelzebub, the
Prince of Demons (Matt. 12:24). From all this we can gather that Jesus was
not accepted by the Jews of that time.
Next, let us investigate how John the Baptist appeared to the Jewish
people. John was born to a distinguished family as a son of Zechariah, a
chief priest (Luke 1:13). His birth greatly surprised the whole city because
of the miracles and signs surrounding his conception. His father, burning
incense in the holy place, saw the angel of the Lord, who announced that his
wife would conceive a son. Upon disbelieving the angel's words, Zechariah
was struck dumb, and his speech was restored only upon the birth of the
child (Luke 1:9-66). Moreover, John led a brilliant life of faith and
discipline, living on locusts and wild honey in the wilderness, and he
appeared so admirable to the Jewish people that even the chief priests, as
well as the people in general, asked him if he were the Messiah (Luke 3:15,
John 1:20).
Considering the above, when we compare Jesus and John the Baptist from
the standpoint of the Jewish people, whose words would they be more likely
to believe? It was only natural for them to believe the words of John the
Baptist. Consequently, they had to believe John's words when he denied being
Elijah more than they believed Jesus' testimony that John the Baptist was
Elijah. Since the Jewish people came to believe the words of John the
Baptist, Jesus' testimony appeared to be false, and thus he was condemned as
an imposter.
In this way, Jesus was condemned as a man of reckless words and his
manner was offensive to the Jewish people. Their disbelief in Jesus became
aggravated by degrees. Since the Jewish people believed the words of John
the Baptist rather than those of Jesus, they had to think that Elijah had
not yet come; accordingly, they could not even imagine that the Messiah had
arrived.
From this viewpoint, the Jews had to deny Jesus, who claimed to be the
Messiah, because, from the standpoint of believers in the prophecy of
Malachi, they could not believe that Elijah had come. Otherwise, they would
have to deny the Scriptures, which prophesied that the coming of the Messiah
would take place after the return of Elijah. In this way, the Jewish people,
who could not abandon the prophecy in the Scriptures, were compelled to
choose the way of disbelief in Jesus.
3. THE DISBELIEF OF JOHN THE BAPTIST
As already discussed in detail, the chief priests as well as all the
Jewish people of that time respected John the Baptist to such a degree that
they thought he might be the Messiah (Luke 3:15, John 1:20). Consequently,
if John the Baptist had declared himself to be Elijah as Jesus testified he
was, the Jewish people, who expected Elijah's return before the coming of
the Messiah, would have come to Jesus, because they were accustomed to
believing the testimony of John the Baptist. However, the ignorance of God's
providence on the part of John the Baptist, who protested to the last moment
that he was not Elijah, was the principal cause blocking the way of the
people to Jesus.
John the Baptist once testified:
I baptize you with water for repentance, but he who is coming after me
is mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry; he will
baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire. (Matt. 3:11)
Again in John 1:33-34 he confessed, saying:
I myself did not know him; but he [God] who sent me to baptize with
water said to me, 'He on whom you see the Spirit descend and remain, this
is he who baptizes with the Holy Spirit [Christ].'. And I have seen and
have borne witness that this is the Son of God.
In this way, God directly manifested to John the Baptist that Jesus was
the Messiah, and even John himself testified to him as such, while in John
1:23 he said he came with the mission of making straight the way of the
Messiah. In addition, he declared in John 3:28 that he was the one who had
been sent before the Christ. Therefore, John the Baptist should have known
through his own wisdom that he was Elijah. Even if John the Baptist had not
realized on his own that he was Elijah, he should have nonetheless declared
that he was Elijah in obedience to Jesus' testimony, since he knew Jesus as
the Messiah through the testimony from God (John 1:33-34), and he knew that
Jesus bore witness that John was Elijah.
However, John not only denied Jesus' testimony (John 1:21) from his
ignorance of God's will (Matt. 11:19), but he also deviated form the
direction of providence even after that. We can well imagine how sad Jesus
must have been when he had to regard John the Baptist in that way, not to
mention the sorrow of God, when He looked at His son who was placed in such
a difficult situation.
In fact, the mission of John the Baptist as the witness ended with his
baptizing of and testifying to Jesus. Then what should his mission have been
after that? His father Zechariah, moved by the Holy Spirit, said about John,
who had just been born: "we...might serve him without fear, in holiness and
righteousness before him all the days of our life. And you, child, will be
called the prophet of the Most High; for you will go before the Lord to
prepare his ways..." (Luke 1:74-76), thus prophesying clearly about his
mission. John the Baptist should have ministered to Jesus as a disciple,
after having testified to him. Nevertheless, he went about baptizing people
separately from Jesus, thus confusing the Jewish people (Luke 3:15), even
the chief priests (John 1:20). Further, the disciples of Jesus and the
followers of John quarreled about "purification" among themselves, each
saying that his own teacher baptized more people (John 3:25-26). Besides,
John 3:30 tells us eloquently that John the Baptist did not bear the same
fate with Jesus, who said, "He must increase, but I must decrease.". How
could he ever decrease while Jesus increased, if he shared the same destiny
with Jesus? In fact, the gospel of Jesus should have been proclaimed by John
the Baptist himself. But through ignorance, he could not accomplish his
mission, and at last he degraded his life, which was to have been devoted to
Jesus, to a thing of practically no value.
John the Baptist knew Jesus was the Messiah, and when John was on God's
side, he testified to him. But when God no longer directly inspired him, and
John returned to his normal state, his disbelief of Jesus became aggravated
by his ignorance. John the Baptist, who did not realize that he was Elijah,
regarded Jesus from the same standpoint as other people, especially after
John's imprisonment. Accordingly, everything Jesus said or did seemed, from
the merely human standpoint of John the Baptist, to be strange and
incomprehensible. Moreover, John himself could not believe that Jesus, who
had appeared before the coming of Elijah, was the Messiah. At last John sent
his disciples to Jesus in an attempt to remove his doubt, by asking him,
"Are you he who is to come, or shall we look for another?" (Matt. 11:3).
Jesus, so questioned, answered indignantly, with an air of admonition
(Matt. 11:4-10). John the Baptist was chosen by God while he was still in
his mother's womb for the mission of serving Him throughout his life (Luke
1:76), and was trained in the wilderness, leading the bitter life of an
ascetic, in order to prepare the way of the Lord. When Jesus started his
public ministry, God first told John who Jesus was, then had him testify to
Jesus' being the Son of God. When John the Baptist, who was failing to
fulfill his mission and blessing from heaven, asked Jesus such a question,
Jesus did not answer straightforwardly that he was the Messiah, which should
have been plain enough. He answered in a roundabout way, saying:
Go and tell John what you hear and see! The blind receive their sight
and the lame walk, lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear, and the dead are
raised up, and the poor have good news preached to them. (Matt. 11:4-5)
Of course, John the Baptist was not ignorant of such miracles and wonders
done by Jesus. Nevertheless, Jesus gave such a lengthy explanation in order
to let him know who he was by reminding John the Baptist of what he was
doing.
We must understand that when Jesus said the poor had good news preached
to them (Matt. 11:5), he was indicating his grief over the disbelief of the
Jewish people, and especially that of John the Baptist. The chosen people of
Israel, especially John, had been richly blessed with divine love and care.
Nevertheless, they betrayed Jesus, and he was compelled to wander about the
seacoast of Galilee through the region of Samaria to search among the poor
for those who would listen to the Gospel. The ignorant fishermen,
tax-collectors and harlots were such poor people. Actually, the disciples
Jesus would have preferred were not people of this kind. Jesus, having come
to establish the Kingdom of Heaven on earth, was more in need of one person
qualified to lead a thousand than one thousand following him blindly. Did he
not, therefore, first preach the Gospel in the temple to the chief priests
and scribes in search of those who were able and well prepared?
However, as Jesus indicated in a parable, he had to call beggars roaming
about on the street to the feast, because the invited had not come. Jesus,
who himself had to go about bringing in those who were uninvited, at last
uttered bitter words of judgment in deep lamentation, saying, "blessed is he
who takes no offense at me." (Matt. 11:6). Jesus predicted John the
Baptist's destiny by saying, indirectly, that one who took offense at him
would not be blessed, however great he might be.
On the contrary, it was John the Baptist who had offended Jesus. How did
John the Baptists offend him? John failed to carry out his mission of
serving and ministering to Jesus.
After the disciples of John the Baptist left him, Jesus said:
Truly, I say to you, among those born of women there has risen no one
greater than John the Baptist; yet he who is least in the kingdom of
heaven is greater than he. (Matt. 11:11)
indicating that, from the standpoint of his ministry, John the Baptist
had come originally as the greatest of all the prophets, but that he was
failing to accomplish his mission.
All those in heaven had once been born of women and lived their earthly
lives before they died. Therefore, it would have been natural for him who
was the greatest of all those born of women to be the greatest also in
heaven. Then, why was John the Baptist worse than he who was least in the
Kingdom of heaven? Numerous prophets in the past had testified to the
Messiah from a distance, looking forward to his coming in the future. But
John the Baptist came with the mission of testifying to the Messiah
directly. Since it was the mission of the prophets to testify to the
Messiah, John the Baptist, who was to testify to the Messiah directly, was
greater than any of the other prophets, who testified to him indirectly.
However, seen from the point of ministering to the Messiah, he was the least
one. This is because the least in the Kingdom of Heaven recognizes Jesus as
the Messiah and serves him, while John the Baptist, who was called for the
mission of serving him closely in person (Luke 1:76), did not prepare the
way of Jesus and failed to serve him. Jesus went on to say, "From John the
Baptist until now, the Kingdom of Heaven has suffered violence, and men of
violence take it.". If John the Baptist, who was chosen in the womb and
trained in so difficult an ascetic life in the wilderness, had only served
Jesus as he should, he would no doubt have become his chief disciple. But
since John failed to accomplish his mission of serving Jesus, Peter took the
position of chief disciple.
In the passage, "From John the Baptist until now, the Kingdom of Heaven
has suffered violence", Jesus was not referring to the failure of people in
general, but that of John the Baptist himself. If John had acted wisely, he
would not have left Jesus, and his deeds would have remained for eternity as
righteous; but, unfortunately, he blocked the way for the Jewish people to
go to Jesus, as well as his own way.
Here, we have come to understand that the greatest factor leading to the
crucifixion of Jesus was the failure of John the Baptist. Paul lamented over
the ignorance of the people, including John the Baptist, who crucified
Jesus, saying:
None of the rulers of this age understood this; for if they had, they
would not have crucified the Lord of glory. (I Cor. 2:8)
4. THE REASON THAT JOHN THE BAPTIST WAS ELIJAH
According to what we have previously stated (cf. Sec. II, 1--153), we can
see that John the Baptist came to succeed Elijah and accomplish the mission
which Elijah had left unaccomplished on earth. As Luke 1:17 says, John was
born with the mission of going before the Lord in the spirit and power of
Elijah, to turn the hearts of the fathers to the children and the
disobedient to the wisdom of the just, and to make ready for the Lord a
people prepared. For this reason, John was the second advent of Elijah from
the standpoint of their identical mission. Details will be clarified in the
chapter on "Resurrection", but we know now that Elijah descended in spirit
to John the Baptist. By cooperating with John the Baptist he tried to
accomplish his mission, which he had left unaccomplished during his physical
life on earth, through the physical body of John the Baptist. John the
Baptist was in the position of representing Elijah's physical body, making
himself identical with Elijah from the standpoint of their mission
5. OUR ATTITUDE TOWARD THE BIBLE
We have learned from our study of the Bible that the ignorance and
disbelief of John the Baptist brought about the disbelief of the Jewish
people, which finally compelled Jesus to take the way of crucifixion. Since
the time of Jesus until the present, no one has been able to reveal this
heavenly secret. This is because we have hitherto read the Bible from the
standpoint that John the Baptist was the greatest prophet of all. We have
learned from the story of John the Baptist that we must abandon the
conservative attitude of faith which has caused us to be afraid to remove
old traditional concepts. If it would be unjust to believe that John the
Baptist had failed to accomplish his mission when he actually succeeded, it
would also no doubt be wrong to believe that he fulfilled his mission, when
on the contrary he had failed to do so. We must struggle to obtain the right
way of faith, both in spirit and truth.
We have now brought to light the true nature of the story of John the
Baptist as demonstrated in the Bible. Any Christian who, in spiritual
communication, can see John the Baptist directly in the spirit world will be
able to understand the authenticity of all these things. |