PURPOSE OF THE FLOOD THE ABRAHAMIC CURRENT RENDING
MOUNT OLIVET FORMER
EARTHQUAKES BOUNDARIES OF PALESTINE DAN
AND GAD TO GUARD THE
“GATES” GAD THE SCOTCHMAN THE
FUTURE JERUSALEM THE DEAD SEA AND
MEDITERRANEAN TO BE JOINED MISTAKE OF SPIRITUALISING
EVERYTHING.
“And His feet shall stand in that
day upon the Mount of Olives, which is before
Jerusalem on the East: and the Mount of Olives
shall cleave in the midst thereof toward the East
and toward the West, and there shall be a very
great valley; and half the mountain shall remove toward
the North, and half of it toward the South.” Zech.
xi.
Some four thousand years ago the earth
was washed with the regenerating waters of a terrible
flood. Millions were suddenly cut off, with their
handiwork and antediluvian civilisation. The
swelling floods subsided, and the God-avenging waters
retired to their appointed place. The earth
again stood forth in virgin strength, lonely, bare,
and citiless, but with a potency and promise inviting
and grand. Across these swelling floods one
craft had been safely borne; in it was stored the seed-stock
of a new world of man and beast. The destruction
had been complete and terrible. If we credit
Dr. Gurney and others who have written on this subject,
the population far exceeded the inhabitants of to-day.
But whether they did or did not, we know that many
must have perished, and civilisation must have been
hurled back to a primitive beginning. No doubt
the present seas and oceans cover over the ruins of
that age. Eliphaz, the Temanite, when addressing
Job, said: “Hast thou marked the old way,
which wicked men have trodden, which were cut down
out of time? whose foundation was overflown with
a flood?” Now is it not reasonable to suppose
that in this and every other great change in nature
God has a purpose a design agreeable with
His own exalted character? He is too wise to
err, and too good to be unkind. The flood came
for the same reason that He only gave Adam one wife.
And what was that reason? It was that He might
fill the world with a godly seed. “And
did not He make one? Yet had He the residue
of the Spirit. And wherefore one? That
He might seek a godly seed” (Mal. i.
The same Spirit which made one Eve could have made
twenty, for the residue of the Spirit was with Him.
It was in the interest of morality and godliness that
the flood came.
When this design began to fail of
being accomplished by the increased wickedness of
the post-diluvians, then God called Abram, and through
Abraham and his seed designed that this purpose should
flow on and be fulfilled. Through this Abrahamic
channel flow all the purposes of a Divine Providence
in this world. Through his seed all the nations
of the earth are to be blessed. The children
of Abraham are the appointed and Divinely authorised
agents of God. Through them, as primary, he has,
and is, and will evangelise the world. Abraham
stands to the generations of earth as the Gulf-stream
to Europe and the isles of the sea. This Gulf-stream
is our largest river; being the longest, broadest,
and deepest. Its bottom and banks are cold water.
Compressed by the straits of Florida, it rushes forth
to warm and replenish the earth and isles of the sea.
So the forces of a Divine Providence compressed in
Abraham go forth to bless mankind. The Gulf-stream
is water in water, and Abraham’s seed are men
among men. Providence is at once clear and intelligible,
and history is at once plain, reasonable, and harmonious,
when interpreted in harmony with the Abrahamic covenant.
The scattering and returning of Israel and Judah
to Palestine, and the intervening history, from the
time of dispersion to the Return, is clear as noon-day.
Their location, oppression, prosperity, and victories,
have long been foretold by prophets inspired of God.
Through all the changes in nature
God has a design. He prepared the world for
Adam and his seed, and He did so by some wonderful
upheaving and overturning; this scientists will admit.
This world, in its present shape and condition, indicates
fierce and protracted struggles. The outlines
of strange and sublime revolutions are imprinted on
her rock-ribbed bosom. Look at her cloud-capped
mountains, her snow-crowned peaks, her wild and rocky
wastes, her barren plains and sandy deserts, her fruitful
hills and luxuriant valleys, her mighty oceans and
swelling seas, her inland lakes and rolling rivers;
these tell us of a time long ago of the
time when the Mighty One went forth to work a work,
to build a house and make a home for His creature,
man. And as it was necessary in the preparatory
stage to tune nature to the coming man, so all along
through the history of the centuries we find nature
holding a subordinate relation to man. The world
is not run on one principle and man on another, but
both are permeated by a Divine force and led on to
a Divine end. All things are ours, and we are
Christ’s, and Christ is God’s; this is
the established order of subordination. Most
certainly it cannot be unscientific in the Author
of nature to make the same His messenger for good
or evil. It is not unscientific to throw a line
from the shore to a ship in distress, even though
thrown from the mouth of a cannon, nor is it counted
unscientific to use that same cannon in war to destroy
men.
The earthquake spoken of in the text
is, indeed, a small affair in comparison to some that
have occurred in this world; and if the same God be
living now as then, surely He can rend in twain the
little mountain of Olivet. And if we grant to
the infidel scientist of to-day the fact that there
is no God, still the thing prophesied of is neither
unreasonable or impossible, because what has been
may be again; and as the demand in this case is small
in comparison to what has been, surely this thing may
come to pass. In times past Providence and the
wants of the Church have been timely aided by convulsions
in nature, and if they were only so accidentally,
why then accidentally they may all agree again.
To the scientist, especially the geologist, there
can be no great difficulty in crediting the miracles
of the text when we think of the successive revolutions
that have taken place. Fires, and floods, and
earthquakes, have done sublime service in the past,
whether we credit the same to Nature or to God.
That an earthquake, or any peculiar expression of
nature, should be timed to meet a special condition
of the Church or the special purposes of a Providence,
is not strange. In such an event there really
is no more wonder than that a man should set an alarm
on his clock to go off at three minutes past four
in the morning. Some men can swallow big things
if you will only allow them to make out the author
to be Nature. But whether we attribute the things
past to Nature or to God, we know that wonderful things
have happened.
Seismology, the science of earthquakes,
is by no means void of interest. The earthquake
catalogue of the British Association takes notice of,
and records the occurrence of, over 6,000 that happened
between 1606 B.C. and 1842 A.D. Some of these
have been terrible in force, destruction, and extent,
oftentimes changing the whole face of a country, its
climate, and river courses. The great earthquake
of 1783 in Calabria, probably caused the death of
100,000 people; it was felt over a great part of Europe.
The city of Lisbon was visited on the morning of November
1st, 1755, with an earthquake so severe that in a
few minutes 60,000 persons perished, and most of the
city was destroyed and buried beneath the water of
the bay some 600 feet.
The country given to Abraham embraces
all of what we call Syria. It is central, and
specially adapted for the future purposes of God through
Abraham’s seed. Beginning with the North-west
corner, the boundaries will be Mount Taurus, river
Euphrates, Persian Gulf, Arabian Sea, Red Sea, River
Nile, and Mediterranean, enclosing Syria, Arabia Deserts,
Arabia Felix and Arabia Petroea. Thus it will
be seen that the Abrahamic inheritance is surrounded
by water, except at two points namely, the
North-west land boundary, which is between the Euphrates
and the Mediterranean Sea. The entrance is through
the mountain range of Taurus, and forms a natural
gate or mountain pass from Europe and Asia into Palestine.
Here, when the Tribes are resettled in the land of
Palestine, this gate will be in the allotment of Dan.
Our Irish brethren will again be in the North-west,
where they will have to fight and defend the land
and the truth, as in days of old, for their brethren.
The fact is, “Dan shall judge his people as
one of the Tribes of Israel,” said old Jacob.
The judge in olden times sat in the gate. So
will Dan sit. Moses said that Dan was a lion’s
whelp. Among Israel it is customary to put lions
as guards at gateways. The Southwest corner,
between the Mediterranean and the Sea of Suez, forms
the other land boundary. Through this gate will
come the teeming millions of Africa. At this
gate will be the Tribe of Gad that is,
a portion of the Scotch, the lowlanders. The
Tribes will be hemmed in one by another so that they
cannot enlarge their territory; but Gad can, for a
vast country opens up beyond the gate. It is
barren; still the desert is to blossom as a rose.
Of Gad it was said by Moses, “Blessed be He
that enlargeth Gad; he dwelleth as a lion and teareth
the arm with the crown of the head. And he provided
the first part for himself, because there, in a portion
of the lawgiver, was he seated.” You remember
that Sinai is in this portion. What sight and
foresight Jacob and Moses had! The land as thus
bounded would be 600 miles broad from the Red Sea
to the River Euphrates, and 1,390 between the Red
Sea and Persian Gulf, and from the Mediterranean to
the Arabian Sea, 1,600. These boundaries you
will glean by taking note of the several promises
to Abraham and his seed, as recorded in Gen. x,
and Exod. xxii, and Deut. x.
The land so promised and given specially to Abraham
and his seed, the descendants of Abraham never yet
occupied, no, not half of it, even in the palmy days
of King Solomon. Will it ever be? We answer,
Yes, as sure as the seasons and night and day.
He is faithful that has promised, and will do it.
This remarkable peninsula will be
the theatre of the future glory of Israel and Judah.
As finely described by the Rev. A. B. Grimaldi, it
will be found to be most exactly and suitably placed
to enable them to fulfil their high destiny to all
nations, and become the centre of all lands, the praise
and beauty of the whole earth. This land has,
in fact, a central position for communication, commerce,
and all other advantages of civilisation not enjoyed
by any other portion of land in the whole world; while
the peculiar geographical formation is such that it
has an immense seaboard, and is therefore fitted for
vaster commercial and naval operations than have ever
yet been seen, commanding, as it does, the three most
important seas and the two largest rivers of the whole
world.
This land, as laid out by Ezekiel,
will be divided into thirteen longitudinal strips,
sixty miles long, and twenty broad. In the very
centre will be a portion, some fifty miles square,
which will be divided and apportioned to what is called
the holy oblation namely, in the very middle
will be the temple, a mile square, or larger than ever
the whole city of Jerusalem has yet been. Then
the city will be ten miles square. On one side
will be a portion for the priests; on another, a portion
for the Levites; and on the other two sides, the prince’s
or king’s portion. This portion, which
will be on the East and West sides, will be sixty
miles long by ten broad, or some 600 miles square.
But it is clear he will need it, for he will not
be supported by taxes. He will have to judge
the land. He cannot take any more land.
He will have to support his own family. No
public grant to his children. He will have to
be liberal with the temple. He will have sixty
miles of sea coast to defend and sixty miles of land
frontier to protect, and thus cover some of the weaker
tribes. The city will have 720 square miles as
a suburb, in which to raise supplies specially for
itself. It will in reality be in two parts one
called by the prophets the profane; here will the commercial
business be done. The other part will be sacred.
Into it strangers will not enter; it will be holy a
quiet habitation. “There the glorious Lord
will be unto us a place of broad rivers and streams,
wherein shall go no gaily with oars, neither shall
gallant ships pass thereby.” The city
proper will be some thirty miles North of the present
city of Jerusalem.