stempublishing.com : J. N. Darby : Synopsis : 2 Chronicles : Chapters 1 to 6 | Next chapter |
Introduction Chapters 1 to 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapters 10 to 12 Chapters 13 to 16 Chapters 17 to 18 Chapters 19 and 20 Chapter 21 Chapter 22 Chapter 23 Chapter 24 Chapter 25 Chapter 26 Chapter 27 Chapter 28 Chapters 29 and 30 Chapter 31 Chapter 32 Chapter 33 Chapters 34 and 35 Chapter 36 |
The temple built: kingly power and government on earth — the Millennium
This book presents us also with kingly power in connection with the
earth and the government of the people on the earth. Glory and riches
are added to that which Solomon requests. Neither enemies nor the
energy of faith is in question. The king's position is the result of
the victory which that faith had obtained. He reigns, and is
established in glory and in riches. He begins to build the
house. Hiram acknowledges Jehovah as the Creator of heaven and earth,
and the strangers who dwell in Israel are the king's servants to do
his work. In the temple the cherubim have their faces towards the
house, that is, outwards.* The attributes of God do not now look
only at the covenant to maintain it in spite of everything, but they
also look outwards in order to bless. It is the time of the
millennium; but the veil is here found again in the temple. Whatever
may be the blessing of the true Solomon's reign, Israel and the earth
have not immediate and direct access to Him who is hidden in the
heavens. That is our portion, even to enter boldly now through the
veil, and to find no veil in heaven: blessed be God! There is no
temple there. Jehovah God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of
it. The stability of a divine government is granted to the earth,**
and the blessing of a God whose face is turned towards it; but those
who are blessed do not behold that face, do not draw nigh unto
it. There is also an altar adapted for worship in a time of such
blessing. The altar and the veil are not mentioned in the Book of
Kings, where the structure of the temple is the figure of things not
seen, and where, as a whole, it is presented to us as the
dwelling-place and manifestation of God. We are told of a golden door,
opening with two leaves, before the oracle, and nothing is said about
the altar. The state of Christ's glorious kingdomIn Chronicles the order is arranged also according to the state of things which this book sets before us, that is to say, according to the state of Christ's glorious kingdom. There is a court for the priests, and the large outer court with doors. All was arranged (2 Chron. 4:9) for the relationship of which we speak. God's connection with Israel in the last days: mercy celebratedSo also, as to the manifestation of the glory, nothing is said in the Book of Kings of the public acceptance of the sacrifice; but it is simply stated that when the ark had been carried into the holy place, and the priests were gone out, and the staves of the ark had been drawn out, so that the dwelling of Jehovah was definitively established there, the glory of Jehovah filled the house. It is God's habitation, a figure of the heavenly dwelling-place which awaits us, our Father's house. On the other hand, that which is set before us in the Book of Chronicles is God's connection with His people Israel in the last days, prefigured by that which happened to Solomon. It was when the trumpeters and singers lifted up their voices with one accord to praise Jehovah, saying "His mercy endures for ever," that the house was filled with a cloud. As we have seen, when all shall be accomplished for Israel, these words will celebrate the untiring mercy of which Israel's blessing will be the proof in that day. It is the deliverance and blessing of that people which demonstrate the truth of those words. We have seen that there was a second part of grace, the acceptance of Israel as worshippers after their sin — not only the ark on Mount Zion, but the sacrifice and pardon and consequent worship of Mount Moriah, the threshing-floor of Araunah the Jebusite. Solomon's prayer at the dedication of the temple: God's public acceptance of the sacrificeThus Solomon having prayed, and entreated Jehovah that His eyes should be open, and His ears attent to the prayers that should be offered to Him in that place (quoting David's petition in Psalm 132, and using His mercies to David as a plea), the fire comes down and consumes the burnt-offering and the sacrifices; and the glory of Jehovah fills the house. And now, it is not only that the priests cannot enter, but the children of Israel behold the glory which rests upon the house; they fall upon their faces and worship. It is the public acceptance of the sacrifice which sets the people in public connection with God, and makes them confess that "Jehovah is good, and that his mercy endureth for ever" (compare Lev. 9:24). Only in this last passage the acknowledgment of God's unwearied mercy was not the point. |
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