WAITING for the coming of the Lord
is one of the blessed characteristics of true Christianity.
In the parable of the ten virgins the three great
marks of a true believer are stated by our Lord.
These are: Separation, indicated by the
virgins having gone forth. Manifestation, they
had lamps, which are for the giving of light, and
Expectation, they went forth to meet the Bridegroom.
With five of them it was only an outward profession.
The foolish virgins are the type of such who are Christians
in name only and do not know the reality of these
characteristics. The Lord knew them not.
These three characteristics are seen in Paul’s
first epistle to the Thessalonians. That model
assembly was composed of such members who possessed
these three things. They had turned to God from
idols (separation); they served the true and the living
God (manifestation); they waited for His Son from
heaven (expectation), 1 Thess. i:9, 10. The same
is revealed in the epistle to Titus. “For
the Grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared
to all men.” That Grace accepted separates
unto God.
“Teaching us that, denying ungodliness
and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously
and godly, in this present world.” This
is manifestation. The Grace of God enables us
to live thus. “Looking for that blessed
hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and
our Saviour Jesus Christ.” Here we have
expectation. Other similar passages could be
quoted. If we divide the New Testament Scriptures
into three parts we have the same order. In the
Gospels the Grace of God in the Son of God appeared.
In the Epistles we are taught how to manifest Him
by walking in the Spirit. The great New Testament
prophetic book, the Revelation, looks on towards His
Coming. And how His Coming is forgotten!
How few of His people truly wait for Him! How
few pray that important and almost forgotten prayer,
Even so, Come Lord Jesus! But we must also remember
that our Lord is likewise waiting. Innumerable
multitudes of disembodied spirits who are saved by
Grace are waiting in His own presence for the moment
when they will receive their resurrection bodies, which
will be when He descends from Heaven and comes into
the air. The faithful remnant of His people on
earth wait for His Coming. Israel and all creation
wait for Him as well as the unseen beings in the Heavenly.
But He Himself is waiting. This is the testimony
of the Word of God. First it is the subject of
prophecy. In the brief but great 110th Psalm
that waiting is predicted. The Christ, who is
so often seen in the Psalms and in the Prophets as
King, ruling in His earthly kingdom, whose glories
in that rule are so blessedly described, is seen in
the beginning of that Psalm seated at the right hand
of God; this heavenly place will be occupied by Him
till His enemies are made His footstool. How
the Holy Spirit witnessed to this fact at once after
His descent on the day of Pentecost is more fully
revealed in the second chapter of Acts. In Hebrews
x:13 we read of His waiting attitude in heaven.
“But this man, after He had offered one
sacrifice for sins forever, sat down at the right
hand of God, from henceforth expecting till His enemies
be made His footstool.” The better word
for expecting is “waiting.” We may
well emphasize the word “Man.” Our
blessed Lord is not in the presence of God as a Spirit
Being, but He is there in the form of Man. The
blessed body He had on earth, which He gave on the
cross and which laid in the tomb could not see corruption.
He was raised on the third day. He ascended in
that glorified body into heaven and He is on the right
hand of God as Man, in Him dwells the fullness of the
Godhead bodily. Just one Man is there in Glory.
But oh! what it means! He is the Head of His
body, the church and in the future all His redeemed
people will possess glorified bodies, like unto His
glorious body. No wonder the enemy ever aims at
the denial of the Lord’s bodily presence.
From many pulpits it is declared to be “too
material.” The denial of this great truth,
the Man in glory, is a denial of the entire
Gospel. It is at this the enemy strikes.
As the glorified Man on the Father’s
throne He is waiting till His enemies are made His
footstool. This does not mean, as so many believe
and teach, that the Lord Jesus Christ is waiting till
His enemies are gradually overcome, till the church
on earth succeeds in converting the whole world.
It does not mean that. His enemies will be made
His footstool in a far different way. It will
be a sudden event. All His enemies will be humbled,
all things will be subjected under His feet at the
time of His second Coming. As there was an appointed
time by the Father for His first Coming, so is there
an appointed time for His second Coming, when the
power of God and His own power will triumph over all
His enemies. As He is in His redemptive work
subject to the Father, therefore is He waiting for
that hour. Then the Father will bring in the firstbegotten
into the world (Heb. i:6) and He will receive the
nations for His inheritance (Psalm ii).
He is waiting for this great event.
But He is also waiting for His co-heirs, which constitute
the church. The church, His body, must be first
completed as to numbers before the hour can come in
which His enemies are made His footstool.
He is patiently waiting for that moment.
John speaks of that when he calls himself “a
companion in tribulation and in the kingdom and patience
of Jesus Christ” (Rev. i:9). Centuries have
come and gone since He took that place upon the Father’s
throne, unseen by human eyes, and during all this
time, while the calling out of the church proceeded,
He has waited patiently. Some day His waiting
will come to an end. His church will be completed
and then He Himself arises from His seat and descends
to that place in the air, where He will meet His own,
for whom His loving heart yearns so much. What
a moment that will be at last! Then His waiting
as well as His patience will be ended and He will
receive His kingdom and be crowned Lord of lords and
King of kings. No longer will He then be unseen,
but His Glory will flash out of heaven and He Himself
will be manifested in Glory. Then the world can
reject Him no longer but must accept His righteous
rule in which His redeemed people will share.
What child of God does not wish this to be soon, very
soon. Oh that we might cry more earnestly, more
in the Spirit, yes, incessantly, “Come Lord
Jesus.”
But while He waits and the hour has
not yet come we must wait as He waits on the throne.
To the Thessalonians who had listened to teachers
who judaized the blessed hope, fearing they were facing
the day of the Lord with its tribulation and wrath,
the Apostle wrote: “And the Lord direct
your hearts in the love of God, and into the patient
waiting for Christ” (2 Thess. iii:5). But
we must not only wait patiently for Him but
also wait with Him. He is the rejected
One. The world cast Him out. As the rejected
One He waits in patience for the hour of His triumph
and His Glory. This place of rejection is our
greatest privilege to share. And where is He more
rejected than in that which calls itself by His Name!
To bear His reproach in these closing days of this
present age is our blessed opportunity. To suffer
with Him, if not for Him, should be that for which
our hearts should long, yea, pray. And we will
be glad to be rejected with Him, to be nothing at
this present time, to have fellowship with His sufferings,
if He as the patient waiting Lord is ever before our
hearts.
At the close of the one hundred and
tenth psalm stands a word, which we should also remember.
“He shall drink of the brook
in the way,
Therefore shall He lift up the head.”
It has puzzled many readers what this
saying might mean. It speaks to our hearts of
His humiliation and exaltation. One thinks at
once of the three hundred of Gideon and how they stooped
down to drink. The brook is the type of death.
He drank of the brook in the way. His way was
from Glory to Glory, and between were His sufferings.
And, therefore, He shall lift up the head. Wherefore,
God has highly exalted Him. May we all, dear
readers, follow in His path and suffer with Him; ere
long in His triumph and glory we shall triumph and
glory.
“And if children then heirs;
heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ; if so be
we suffer with Him, that we may be also glorified
together. For I reckon that the sufferings of
this present time are not worthy to be compared with
the glory which shall be revealed in us” (Rom.
viii:17-18).