November 5th, 1942
Again
in our last issue we promised to try to write more on the above subject.
So we will try again to comply with the promise. This time we will start
our little article by calling attention to (Zechariah 13:1), which reads
as follows: In that day there shall be a fountain opened to the house of
David and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin and for uncleanness.
The word shall is used in different ways or senses. Sometimes it is used
in the sense of prophecy-simply telling beforehand what will come to
pass at some time in the future. Sometimes it is used in the sense of a
mere statement of fact. Sometimes it is used in the sense of a command,
or in the giving of a command. Sometimes it is used in the sense of
determination; it carries with it the idea of determination on the part
of the speaker. Let us look, for a few minutes, at ((Dan 12:10) (Daniel
12:10) “Many shall be purified, and made white, and tried; but the
wicked shall do wickedly, and none of the wicked shall understand; but
the wise shall understand.” In this text the word shall is used in the
first place in the sense of determination-” many shall
be purified, and made white, and tried.” This is not something which
they do themselves. It is something to be done by another, and done for
and to them. They “shall be purified, and made white.” The Lord
determined that they should be thus made-made pure; they “shall be
purified.” Poor sinners are made pure by the work
of the Lord. God the Holy Spirit makes the application of the blood of
Christ to them, and thus they are purified and made white. The Lord
determined to do this; and He chose those for and to whom this would be
done. He chose those whom He would purify from their sins, and make
white in the blood of the Lamb. The next clause says; “but the wicked
shall do wickedly.” They do not do wickedly because God determined that
they should; but they do wickedly because it is their nature to do
wickedly. Hence, that is simply a statement of a fact. It was that way
when the language was written; it was that way before the language was
written; and it is that way yet, and it will continue to be that way.
The wicked have always done wickedly because it was their nature to do
wickedly; and they will always do wickedly because it is their nature to
do that way. The next clause says: “and none of the wicked shall
understand.” Why is it that none of the wicked shall
understand? The Saviour answers that question for us very plainly. In
(John 8:43) He said to some wicked Jews, “Why do ye not understand my
speech? even because ye cannot hear my word.” The reason why the wicked
shall not understand is because they cannot hear His word-they cannot
understand it. “None of the wicked shall understand” because they cannot
understand. Something must be done for the sinner which he cannot do for
himself in order that he be able to understand-he must be changed first,
in order that he understand. In our text at the beginning of this
article the Lord declares that in a certain day a fountain shall
be opened. This carries with it the idea that the Lord had determined
the fountain to be opened, or that it should be opened. He was going to
see to it that this would come to pass; He was going to bring it to
pass. This certainly carries with it the idea that the Lord determined
this beforehand. That is God's predestination. Not only did He determine
that this fountain should be opened, but He determined that a certain
end should be reached- a certain thing should be accomplished by, and as
a result of, the opening of this fountain. Note, carefully, that the
text says “in that day.” This signifies a certain day, a fixed day-not
“in those days,” but “in that day.” The Lord determined to do this, or
that it should be done, in a certain day. The day was fixed, or
determined, as well as the thing to be done was determined. The
Lord determined that this should be done at a determined time-in a
certain day. “In that day there shall be a fountain opened.” The Lord
determined to do what He does, and determined the time that He wall do
it. When the Lord does a thing, it is but the fulfilling, or bringing to
pass, what He determined beforehand to do; and He does it at the time He
determined to do it. He never gets behind with His work, nor does He get
ahead with His work. He always does His work on time,and at the right
time. It is always at the right time for the thing to be accomplished
which He determined to be accomplished. The Lord did not say, in this
text, that the fountain should be opened for the benefit of all mankind,
or that all mankind might have access to it. Neither did He say that it
would be free for all who would accept it; but it “shall be opened to
the house of David and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem.” The fountain is
opened to these special people. It was not to be opened to the Amorites,
the Hittites, the Jebusites, or the Perizzites, or the Hivites but to
the Israelites; the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem. The
Lord made choice of those to whom the fountain should be opened. The
fountain was not to be opened a part of the way, and they to come the
rest of the way-but the fountain was to be opened to them; it was to
reach them, and to benefit them. It was to do something for them and to
them, or in them. The fountain was not to be opened in order that there
might be sin and uncleanness; but to take away sin and uncleanness. “The
blood of Jesus cleanseth us from all sin.” It is not baptism that takes
away sin, or that cleanses from sin; but it is the blood of Jesus which
does that. A fountain is self-sustaining. It requires no power
outside of itself to sustain it. A fountain is self-purifying. Place
poison in the fountainhead of a stream, and the fountain will remove and
carry the poison away itself. No power outside of itself is needed in
order that the poison be removed. All the sins of the chosen people of
God were laid on Jesus. “The Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us
all.” -Isaiah liii. 6. But the fountain has carried all those sins away
into the land of forgetfulness, and the Lord has said, “and their
sins and their iniquities will I remember no more.” -(Hebrews 8:12).
When the blessed Redeemer hung on Calvary's cross and bowed His head and
gave up the ghost, and poured out His blood on Calvary's hill, the
fountain was opened. It is self-sustaining. It needs not the help of men
or angels in order that it be sustained; nor does it need the help of
men or angels to make it sufficient to carry sins away into the land of
forgetfulness. “For this is my blood of the new testament, which is shed
for many for the remission of sins.” - (Matthew 26:28). The blood of
Jesus is sufficient to remit sins; hence baptism is not necessary in
order to the remission of sins. This fountain was opened to, and for the
benefit of, all spiritual Israel, the chosen of God; and He
predestinated their salvation; He predestinated that all their sins and
iniquities should be taken away by the efficacy of this fountain, and
that they should all finally be brought home to glory, to live with Him
in that glory world. He predestinated that they should be glorified.
There is a fountain filled with blood Drawn from Immanuel's veins. And
sinners plunged into that flood. Lose all their guilty stains. The dying
thief rejoiced to see That fountain in his day; I hope that blood was
shed for me, And washed my
sins away. Dear dying Lamb! Thy precious blood Shall never lose its
power, Till all the ransomed church of God Are saved to sin no more.
E'er since by faith I saw the stream Thy flowing wounds supply,
Redeeming love has been my theme, And shall be till I die. When this
poor, lisping, stammering tongue Lies silent in the grave, Then in a
nobler, sweeter song I'll sing thy power to save. We will try to write
some more for next issue on this subject, the Lord willing. May His rich
blessings rest upon you, and may these articles be blessed to the good
of the readers. Please remember us in prayer. C. H. C.
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