SIR ROBERT ANDERSON 
Secret Service
		Theologian
 
HUMAN
		DESTINY
 THE QUESTION
		DISCUSSED.
 THE record of the Augustinian doctrine of the damnation of
		infants is one of the darkest chapters in theology. If we distinguish between
		what is doubtful and what is doubted, the question is not open to discussion.
		No language can be plainer than that in which the Epistle to the Romans teaches
		that Christ's redemption is as far-reaching in its effects as Adam's sin.
		
(Footnote - The more one studies the Fathers the wider appears to be the
		gulf which separates their writings from the inspired Scriptures. This remark
		applies with full force to Origen, whose writings are appealed to so
		confidently in this controversy.)
It is not that all shall be saved through
		the death of Christ, but that, in virtue of that death, no one shall be lost
		save by reason of personal guilt. It is certain, therefore, that the infant
		dead, whether of heathen or of Christian lands, shall be reckoned among the
		number of the redeemed.
 And where does Scripture teach that those who live
		and die in heathen darkness shall not hear of Christ after they pass away from
		earth? Either to assert or to deny that such shall find a "place of repentance"
		in the underworld is the arrogance which springs from ignorance; and in this
		sphere all arrogance is profane. It may be urged that if the sinners of the
		days of Noah have since received a gospel message from the Lord Himself, all
		others who have been denied a revelation upon earth shall have mercy offered
		them beyond. On the other hand, it may be argued that as "the exception proves
		the rule," so the special mention of the sinners who perished in the Flood
		implies that their case was peculiar, if not unique. The fact is, the Bible was
		not written to gratify curiosity in matters which in no way concern us. As
		regards the destiny of those it fails to reach, it is absolutely silent. The
		fate of the heathen is with God.
 There is one passage, indeed, which
		unfolds with definiteness the principles of judgment applicable to all mankind.
		The reference, of course, is to the second chapter of the Epistle to the
		Romans, and the apostle's statements are of such importance here that it may be
		well to quote them fully. He speaks of "the righteous judgment of God, Who will
		render to every one according to his deeds : to them who by patient continuance
		in well-doing, seek for glory and honour and immortality, eternal life; but to
		them that are contentious, and do not obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness,
		indignation and wrath, tribulation and anguish upon every soul of man that
		doeth evil, of the Jew first and also of the Gentile; but glory, honour, and
		peace to every one that worketh good, to the Jew first and also to the Gentile.
		For there is no respect of persons with God. For as many as have sinned without
		law shall also perish without law, and as many as have sinned under law shall
		be judged by law, in the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus
		Christ." Here are principles of universal application : who will deny their
		equity? Many seem to think that salvation by faith sets all this aside ; but
		such thoughts are wholly false. When appealed to by the people to give some
		clear light to guide them in the life of well-doing, the Lord's answer was
		explicit, " This is the work of God, that ye believe on Him Whom He hath sent."
		The standard of well-doing was changed by His advent, but the principle was the
		same. Allegiance to a banished prince may show itself in many ways; but once he
		appears within the realm, personal homage becomes the test and touchstone of
		loyalty. So is it as between God and men. Some live in nature's darkness: some
		in the blaze of gospel light. But whether it be merely "the candle set up
		within them," or the full revelation of the Son of God, "to obey the truth" is
		to tread the path of blessing. The heathen will not be damned for ignorance of
		Christ; while, on the other hand, in Christendom no amount of seeming
		"well-doing" will avail, if personal loyalty to Christ be wanting. The word
		spoken retrospectively of His life on earth shall still hold good when He
		returns to judgment: "To as many as received Him, to them gave He the right to
		become children of God." 
 But, it will be answered, this is evading the
		real issue, which is as to the equity, not of the judgment, but of the
		sentence. If everlasting torment be the penalty of sin, such must be in fact
		the doom of the vast majority of the heathen. It is idle to theorise upon the
		supposed statistics of the Day of Judgment, though the popular belief is
		largely based upon wilful and deliberate rejection of Scripture testimony about
		coming ages of blessing upon earth. But where does Scripture teach that
		everlasting torment is the penalty of sin? DEATH is the penalty of sin. Instead
		of absolute equality, Scripture indicates an infinite inequality in
		punishment.
 The Bible is full of promises and prophecies of a time to come
		when God shall be known and feared from pole to pole. For aught we know, the
		population of the world will then be ten, or perchance a hundred times greater
		than at present. If we take this into account, together with the facts and
		possibilities of redemption noticed in the last few pages, is it so clear on
		which side the majority of mankind shall ultimately be found? It may be said
		that this is an appeal to our ignorance. True, but the prejudice I seek thus to
		break down is based entirely on our ignorance. The one is a set-off against the
		other: faith will ignore both, and leave the issue with God.
 There will be
		the "few stripes" and the "many stripes." God "will render to each according to
		his deeds." Surely the distinction is obvious and simple between the general
		penalty of sin, which depends on the essential character of a God Who cannot
		tolerate evil in His presence, and the special kind and measure of punishment
		which the Righteous Judge will impose on each, according to the degree and
		nature of his guilt. It is of the Antichrist and his adherents - the enemies of
		Christ in the awful days to come - that the Word declares they "shall be
		tormented day and night for ever and ever."
 And this disposes of a
		difficulty which has been used with such success in the interests of error.
		Sin's penalty has indeed been borne by Christ. His resurrection was the public
		proof that every claim of righteousness was satisfied and all who by faith
		become identified with Him are justified from sin. But the sufferings of the
		Sin-bearer did not include the consequences of rejecting the atonement. When,
		therefore, it is demanded whether Christ endured "everlasting torment," the
		best reply is to expose the latent error in the question. To speak even of His
		bearing the punishment of sin is to use unscriptural language; and the
		statement is untrue, if punishment be intended to embrace all the consequences,
		both providential and penal, which follow upon transgression.
 The attempt
		to eliminate all element of mystery from the atonement is impious and vain.
		Redemption is, in fact, the crowning mystery of revelation. But it is mainly in
		the imputation of sin that the mystery consists. It is not, as so often stated,
		"the innocent dying for the guilty," for that would be immoral, and impossible
		with God; but the innocent passing into the place of the guilty, and, as
		guilty, dying to expiate the guilt imputed to Him. If any one still insists
		upon the inquiry, How could sin be so imputed to the sinless as to make a
		vicarious death justifiable? he may seek to reason out the answer; but, as
		Bishop Butler says, "All conjectures about it must be, if not evidently absurd,
		yet at least uncertain." "Nor," he adds, "has any one reason to complain for
		want of further information, unless he can show his claim to it." The fact is
		plain - and this alone concerns us - that "He Who knew no sin was made sin for
		us.
 "During all His ministry on earth, albeit it was spent in humiliation
		and reproach, no hand was ever laid upon the Blessed One, save in importunate
		supplication or in devout and loving service. But when at times His enemies
		would fain have seized Him, a mysterious hour to come was spoken of, in which
		their hate should be unhindered. 'This is your hour, and the power of
		darkness,' He exclaimed, as Judas and the impious companions in his guilt drew
		round Him in the garden. His hour He called it when He thought of His mission
		upon earth; their hour, when, in the fulfilment of that mission, He found
		Himself within their grasp. "The agonies inflicted on Him by men have taken
		hold on the mind of Christendom; but beyond and above all these the mystery of
		the Passion is that He was forsaken and accursed of God. In some sense, indeed,
		His sufferings from men were but a consequence of this; therefore His reply to
		Pilate, 'Thou couldest have no power at all against Me, except it were given
		thee from above.' If men seized and slew Him it was because God had delivered
		Him up. When that destined hour had struck, the mighty hand drew back which
		till then had shielded Him from outrage. His death was not the beginning, but
		the close of His sufferings; in truth, it was the hour of His triumph."
		To be "forsaken and accursed of God" - this is death in its deeper spiritual
		significance. And the fact is clear, however it be explained, that once the
		Lord had passed into that condition, the only way of escape from it was by
		laying down His life. If the penalty of sin be "natural death" merely, the
		agony of Gethsemane and "Immanuel's orphan cry" upon the cross can in no way be
		accounted for. If it be annihilation, then the death of Christ was a defeat and
		not a triumph, and, as already shown, His resurrection was a fraud. Faith
		grasps the fact that the death of the Sin-bearer, in all which it implies, is
		an equivalent to the sinner's doom, but how it is so is a mystery which reason
		seeks in vain to solve.
 Experience teaches us that even in this world the
		consequences of sin are disastrous and abiding. And Scripture leaves no doubt
		that in the world to come sin's punishment shall be real and searching. We know
		that it will entail banishment from God; and further we know that infinite love
		and perfect justice shall measure the cup which each must drink. But beyond
		this we know absolutely nothing. The pride of intellect which lured our first
		parents to their ruin is abnormally developed in their posterity; but man's
		vain boast of knowledge beyond what is revealed serves only to awaken echoes
		which proclaim his folly.
 What concerns us is not to theorise about the
		penalty of sin, but to take heed that we escape the "sorer punishment" of
		despising grace. It were otherwise if Christianity gave those who reject it the
		alternative of falling back on the position held by all whom the revelation has
		never reached. But no such choice is ours. The Gospel shuts men up either to
		accept the blessings it bestows, or else to await the doom of which those shall
		be "thought worthy" who have "trodden under foot the Son of God." To cease to
		exist is to become as though one had not been; but a fate worse than this
		awaits the Christ-rejector and the apostate -" Good were it for that man, if he
		had never been born." 
Chapter Twelve 
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