The Fundamentals - 1917: Vol.4

The Hope of the Church 297 lives of the early Christians, surely k is unfair to banish it from the Church today. I t is unfair to the world, for this truth is part of the Gospel which should be delivered to the world. ^I t is unfair to the Church, for it deprives the people of Christ of one of the most powerful motives for spiritual life and service. I t is unfair to Christ Himself, for it ob­ scures the reality of His personal presence within the heav­ enly veil and substitutes for it the thin air of a mere spiritual influence. The hope of the second coming of our Lord has an im­ portant bearing upon Christian life and doctrine. It has a vital relation especially to some points of our faith which are being attacked or obscured by the subtle tendencies of modern thought. 1. I t is bound up with belief in the supreme and infallible authority o f the Holy Scriptures. I t would never be adopted on rationalistic grounds. Those who receive it rest their be­ lief wholly on the authority of Scripture, believing that therein God has spoken in a way that can be trusted. They accept the Bible as the record of God’s revelation to man, and be­ lieve that in prophecy He has disclosed His purpose concern­ ing the future of the world. I t is a protest against the ten­ dency within the Church to exalt the human reason above the Word of God, and to reduce inspired prophecy to the level of merely human foresight. 2. I t bears testimony to the presence of God in human history. The tendency of our times is to explain away the supernatural element in history whether in the past, the pres­ ent, or the future. To this tendency those who accept the doctrine of the second coming refuse to yield. The history of the world is controlled by God; His hand is on the affairs of men. In the person of Jesus Christ He has already super- naturally intervened in thé course of human history. I t is believed, on the authority of His Word, that He will super-

Made with FlippingBook flipbook maker