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Overseers in Apocalyptic TimesThe Watchtower—1958 | January 15
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Overseers in Apocalyptic Times
“The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave unto him.”—Apocalypsis Re 1:1, Dy.
1. In what way are we living in apocalyptic times?
WE ARE in apocalyptic times. That is to say, we are living in times and under conditions that were pictured for us beforehand in the last of the sixty-six books of The Holy Bible called The Apocalypse or The Revelation.
2. According to this apocalyptic book, for what happiness is it now the time?
2 The opening of this apocalyptic book reads: “The revelation by Jesus Christ, which God gave him, to show his slaves the things that must shortly take place. And he sent forth his angel and presented it in signs through him to his slave John, who bore witness to the word God gave and to the witness Jesus Christ gave, even to all the things he saw. Happy is he who reads aloud and those who hear the words of this prophecy, and who observe the things written in it; for the appointed time is near.” (Rev. 1:1-3) Does anyone want to be happy in these apocalyptic times? Then let him read to himself or read aloud to others the words of this prophecy. Or, if not himself doing the reading, let him listen to the reading and then let him understandingly observe the things written down in this prophetic book. It is now the time for this happiness.
3. Who was the John here named, and to whom was he to write?
3 The John here named was a servant or slave of Jesus Christ. He does not parade around the fact that he was a Christian slave in the office of one of the “twelve apostles of the Lamb.” (Rev. 21:14) As a slave he was instructed to write to certain congregations in what is now Asiatic Turkey. So he introduces himself this way: “John to the seven congregations that are in the province of Asia.”—Rev. 1:4.
4. Where was John then, and to whom was he especially to write?
4 John was then on the prison island of Patmos, suffering at the hands of the Roman government of Caesar for being a faithful Christian. (Rev. 1:9) The island of Patmos was less than a hundred and fifty miles from the seaport of Ephesus, and hence not far from the six other cities where there were congregations to which John was told to write. At that time Timothy the son of Eunice may have been an aged overseer of the congregation at Ephesus. John was told to write especially to the overseers.
5. With which apostle was Timothy associated, and with which overseers did this apostle have a special farewell meeting?
5 In his young days Timothy was a close companion of Paul the apostle. Paul associated Timothy with himself in a number of his letters written to different congregations, for example, one written to the congregation in Philippi, Greece: “Paul and Timothy, slaves of Christ Jesus, to all the holy ones in union with Christ Jesus who are in Philippi, along with overseers and ministerial servants.” (Phil. 1:1) So those overseers and ministerial servants of the congregation were acquainted with Timothy. On Paul’s last voyage to Jerusalem in the Middle East his ship stopped at the seaport of Miletus, near Ephesus. From there Paul called for the overseers of Ephesus, not then including Timothy. They came, all of them older men of the congregation of Ephesus. Paul gave to them a solemn farewell address, just like one who was an overseer to them. To these overseers Paul said:
6. According to Acts 20:17-28, what did he say to those overseers?
6 “I did not hold back from telling you any of the things that were profitable nor from teaching you publicly and from house to house. But I thoroughly bore witness both to Jews and to Greeks about repentance toward God and faith in our Lord Jesus. And now, . . . I know that all of you among whom I went preaching the kingdom [of God] will see my face no more. Hence I call you to witness this very day that I am clean from the blood of all men, for I have not held back from telling you all the counsel of God. Pay attention to yourselves and to all the flock, among which the holy spirit has appointed you overseers, to shepherd the congregation of God, which he purchased with the blood of his own [Son].”—Acts 20:17-28; ED; Ro; Schonfield.
7. How long had Paul preached in Ephesus, and yet who did he say had appointed the overseers there?
7 For over two years Paul had preached God’s kingdom publicly and from house to house in Ephesus and had built up the Christian congregation there. However, Paul did not tell its overseers that he had made them such or that he had put them in this office of superintendent or supervisor of the affairs of the congregation. Paul disclaimed the power to put them over the flock of Christian sheep. He said that God’s holy spirit had made them overseers that they might shepherd God’s congregation or flock. How was that?
8. What is this holy spirit, and what did Peter say about this spirit on the day of Pentecost?
8 This did not mean that God’s holy spirit is a spirit person, the third person in a so-called Holy Trinity made up of The Father, The Son and The Holy Spirit, three persons in one God and all three equal in power and glory. None of such nonsense! The Bible plainly shows and illustrates that the holy spirit is an invisible active force. It issues forth from God and acts directly upon his Son Jesus Christ. Then through his heavenly Son it acts upon other persons or things in order to bring God’s will and purposes to reality. For instance, on the festival day of Pentecost, fifty days after Jesus was resurrected from the dead and ten days after he went back to heaven, the holy spirit was poured out upon the Christian congregation in Jerusalem. The apostle Peter explained the miracle that took place by saying to the crowd of wondering Jews: “This Jesus God resurrected, of which fact we are all witnesses. Therefore because he was exalted to the right hand of God and received the promised holy spirit from the Father, he has poured out this which you see and hear.” King David had not ascended to heaven to pour out that spirit, but Jesus, David’s descendant and Lord, had done so. (Acts 2:32-36) So, then, in making the older men of Ephesus overseers the holy spirit was not a spirit person acting on his own as the equal of God and his Son Jesus.
9. What kind of force is the holy spirit, and from what source does it go forth, and through whom, and with what results?
9 If the holy spirit is no heavenly person but is merely the unseen active force from God through Jesus Christ, how did it appoint those older men of Ephesus overseers of God’s flock? The holy spirit is not a wild force running blindly. It is a directed force. In the appointing of the Ephesian overseers it was sent forth from Jehovah God as its fountain. The first agent or intermediary through which it operated from heaven was the Lord Jesus at God’s right hand. On the day of Pentecost its operation was accompanied by a “noise just like that of a rushing stiff breeze” and by visible “tongues as if of fire” sitting on the heads of each of the 120 Christian disciples into whom it came, to fill them and make them talk with languages that they had never learned. (Acts 2:1-16) Like the wind or like radio beams, God’s active force was unseen, but what it produced was seeable and hearable.
10. Through the spirit’s operation at Pentecost, what were the apostles made, and how did Saul of Tarsus become an apostle with them?
10 By filling Peter and the other apostles of Jesus Christ and making them teach fundamental things of Christian belief the holy spirit was, in effect, making those apostles “foundation stones” of the New Jerusalem and main overseers of the Christian congregation. (Rev. 21:14) Later on Saul of Tarsus was converted to Christianity, was baptized and was “filled with holy spirit,” and he became the apostle Paul to take the place of unfaithful Judas Iscariot. As it is written, in Psalm 109:8, concerning this unfaithful apostolic overseer: “Let a different man take his office of overseer.” (Acts 1:20; 9:17, 18) Very properly, the twelfth apostle of the Lamb wrote of himself as “Paul, an apostle, neither from men nor through a man, but through Jesus Christ and God the Father, who raised him up from the dead.”—Gal. 1:1.
HUMAN INTERMEDIARIES
11. Was there a human intermediary for the spirit toward the apostles and Cornelius, and how about other overseers?
11 On the day of Pentecost and also at the conversion of the Italian centurion Cornelius over three years later there was no man as intermediary for the activity of the holy spirit. The Lord Jesus in heaven poured it out direct upon his apostles and upon Cornelius and his fellow believers. But in the case of other overseers human intermediaries have been used for the holy spirit.
12. By what means were Paul and Barnabas sent out as missionaries from Antioch, and how?
12 Note the action of God’s holy spirit at the time of sending out Paul and Barnabas as missionaries from Antioch in Syria. Paul and Barnabas were among five prophets and teachers in the congregation there. Then by some undescribed means the holy spirit was made to transmit sound, human speech, just like the action of radio waves upon a radio receiving set. “As they were publicly ministering to Jehovah and fasting, the holy spirit said: ‘Of all persons set Barnabas and Saul apart for me for the work to which I have called them.’ Then they fasted and prayed and laid their hands upon them and let them go.” Since the representative men of the Antioch congregation laid their hands upon those two, is it necessarily said that they were made missionaries by the men who laid their hands upon them? No; the action of those men was only incidental and to show that they acted for God’s spirit in setting aside the two missionaries. The fact stands out that they were made missionaries by the holy spirit, for the Bible goes on to say about the two missionaries: “Accordingly these men, sent out by the holy spirit [not by men in Antioch], went down to Seleucia, and from there they sailed away to Cyprus. And when they got to be in Salamis they began publishing the word of God.”—Acts 13:1-5.
13. How was the appointment of overseers in Antioch in Pisidia made, and how was Timothy made an overseer with appointive power?
13 On that missionary journey Paul and Barnabas started a number of Christian congregations. Men spiritually older were made overseers over such congregations. How? By the holy spirit, but through Paul and Barnabas as intermediaries. In proof of this we read of their action at Antioch in Pisidia: “Moreover, they appointed older men to office for them in the congregation and, offering prayer with fastings, they committed them to Jehovah in whom they had become believers.” (Acts 14:23) Afterward Timothy became a traveling companion and co-worker with the apostle Paul. After he became full grown spiritually, Timothy was made an overseer with power to act in appointing other mature men as overseers and ministerial servants in the congregation at Ephesus and elsewhere. But what led up to Timothy’s becoming such a special overseer, superintendent or supervisor? The action of God’s spirit through Paul. In his two letters to Timothy Paul describes it in this way: “Do not be neglecting the gift in you which was given you through a prediction [which prediction would be by the spirit] and when the body of older men laid their hands upon you.” (1 Tim. 4:14) Showing that Paul himself was an outstanding one of those older men, he further wrote to Timothy: “I remind you to stir up like a fire the gift of God which is in you through the laying of my hands upon you. For God gave us not a spirit of cowardice, but that of power and of love and of soundness of mind.” (2 Tim. 1:6, 7) God’s spirit was necessary to all these actions.
14. After the special conference in Jerusalem, what were Paul and Barnabas sent out from there to do, and how did their appointment come about?
14 At a critical time Paul and Barnabas were chosen by a special conference of the governing body of the Christians at Jerusalem to read a special letter of instructions to congregations in Antioch, in Syria and in Cilicia, to advise them that circumcision was no part of Christianity. As good messengers and general overseers, Paul and Barnabas read this organizational letter to the congregations. Those appointed messengers took their assignment of service seriously, knowing they were appointed not merely by the men of the Christian governing body in Jerusalem but by the holy spirit. They had to view the matter this way because even in the letter that they read to the congregations the governing body wrote these noteworthy words: “The holy spirit and we ourselves have favored adding no further burden to you, except these necessary things.”
15. What effect did such exercise of oversight of the Christian congregations by the governing body at Jerusalem have on them?
15 Thus the governing body composed of men put the holy spirit ahead of themselves. This applied, too, with their appointment of Paul and Barnabas. What effect did this exercise of oversight of the congregations by the governing body at Jerusalem have? The record tells us of this in connection with Paul and his new companion Silas: “Now as they traveled on through the cities they would deliver to those there for observance the decrees that had been decided upon by the apostles and older men who were in Jerusalem. Therefore, indeed, the congregations continued to be made firm in the faith and to increase in number from day to day.” (Acts 15:28; 16:4, 5) The congregations were no longer shaky on the matter.
16. Though human go-betweens have been used in making appointments, what must be true of the body of men or the individual used in the appointing?
16 Thus it is Scripturally true that human go-betweens have been used in appointing many overseers of the flock of God. But in the face of this fact no group of men may of their own accord form themselves into a religious body and take upon themselves the power and authority to make overseers, or “bishops,” as they are called in many churches in Christendom. Without God’s holy spirit they can do nothing that really counts with God or that plays a real part in his organization. As in the case of the Christian congregation in apostolic times, in the first century, for any body of men to be used in the appointment of overseers and their assistants, ministerial servants, they must have the holy spirit in them, yes, be “filled with holy spirit.” (Acts 9:17; Eph. 5:18) This was true of the Christian governing body at Jerusalem in apostolic times. It was true also of such individuals as the apostle Paul and his companions Timothy and Titus, who were given instructions regarding men qualified to be overseers and their assistants. They were all filled with the spirit and were moved by it.
HOW ABOUT TODAY?
17. Since the miraculous manifestations of the spirit passed away with the apostles, what questions arise over appointment of overseers, and what makes the answer certain?
17 Today we are not living in apostolic times. Long before our time, when the apostolic days ended almost nineteen hundred years ago, the miraculous gifts and manifestations of the holy spirit passed away. Can it still be true that the holy spirit appoints overseers over the congregations of true Christians today? Since the spirit is God’s invisible active force and is silent and unfeelable, how could we be sure that the appointing of overseers is by it today? The Holy Bible, God’s Word, makes this certain.
18. In what times are we living since 1914, and particularly since 1919, and so what should we expect the spirit’s activity to include?
18 The facts show that in the year 1914 God’s kingdom in the hands of his Christ was brought to birth in the heavens. We are therefore in the “times of restoration of all things of which God spoke through the mouth of his holy prophets of old time.” (Acts 3:21) Since 1919 God’s organization has risen up to let the light of his glory shine amid the gross darkness of this world, and the time has come for the fulfillment of his promise: “I will also make thy officers peace, and thine exactors righteousness.” Or, as the oldest translation of the Hebrew Scriptures renders it: “I will make thy chiefs peaceful and thine overseers righteous.” (Isa. 60:1, 2, 17, AS; LXX; Thomson; Bagster) We are living also in the time of final fulfillment of the prophecy to which the apostle Peter referred on the day of Pentecost, namely: “It shall come to pass afterward, that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh; and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions: and also upon the servants and upon the handmaids in those days will I pour out my Spirit.” (Joel 2:28, 29, AS; Acts 2:16-18) We should therefore expect the spirit’s activity to include appointing overseers.
19. For whom does the Christian governing body act today, and how has such been made equal to the responsibilities in these last days?
19 As in the days of the apostles, the Christian flock of Jehovah God has over it a visible governing body. It acts for and in expression of the “faithful and discreet slave” whom Jesus Christ has appointed since coming into his kingdom in the heavens in 1914. When warning his apostles about his coming for the judgment of his followers at an unknown hour in the time of the end of this old world, Jesus said: “Who really is the faithful and discreet slave whom his master appointed over his domestics to give them their food at the proper time? Happy is that slave if his master on arriving finds him doing so. Truly I say to you, He will appoint him over all his belongings.” (Matt. 24:45-47) Since 1919 this “faithful and discreet slave,” who is a composite person made up of all anointed Christian joint heirs of Jesus Christ, has been taking care of “all his belongings” on earth. The slave has been faithfully giving out the spiritual, Biblical food at the proper time, so that there is no spiritual famine among the Christian witnesses of Jehovah. To make this “faithful and discreet slave” class equal to their heavy responsibilities in these last days, God through Christ has poured out his spirit upon them in these last days, in complete fulfillment of Joel’s prophecy.
20. From whom are the members of the governing body taken, and so what is true regarding appointment of overseers, especially since 1932?
20 The governing body of the “faithful and discreet slave” class is taken from the members of this same anointed, spirit-filled class. By God’s spirit it is functioning. So, then, when the appointment of overseers is made by this governing body in harmony with the requirements laid down for overseers, it is really by the spirit that such overseers are appointed, although through human intermediaries. As the modern history of Jehovah’s witnesses shows, this is specially true since 1932, when the system of elective elders and deacons was done away with in their congregations.
21. In appointing overseers, what does the governing body seek, and according to which requirements?
21 The governing body of mature members of the “faithful and discreet slave” class always seeks the guidance of God’s holy spirit in appointing responsible men in the congregations overseers, together with their assistants, the ministerial servants. They do not act according to any personal favoritism or any bias. The things that make an individual worthy of being made an overseer or one of the ministerial servants are stated in God’s Word, particularly in 1Ti chapter three of Paul’s first letter to Timothy and in Tit chapter one of Paul’s letter to Titus. All those requirements of overseers and ministerial servants were written down by inspiration of the holy spirit.
22. In view of this, how is the appointing of overseers really made, and especially so in view of what on the part of the candidate that influences the appointment?
22 When, now, the governing body designates overseers that meet those plainly stated requirements, it is really the holy spirit that leads to the appointing of such overseers; it is really the holy spirit that makes such overseers. This fact becomes more evident when we note that it is also the fullness of the indwelling of the holy spirit in the candidate for the office of overseer that influences his appointment. The candidate must show that he is filled with the spirit by the way he conducts himself and his family (if he has one). He must prove that he has holy spirit by bringing forth the “fruitage of the spirit,” which is “love, joy, peace, long-suffering, kindness, goodness, faith, mildness, self-control,” and by impaling the flesh together with its passions and desires. He must show that he is moved, impelled by God’s spirit to take oversight over his flock of sheep. In illustration of this, in apostolic times Stephen was selected for service because he was a “man full of faith and holy spirit.”—Acts 6:5, 6.
23. (a) Why, then, may it be said that the holy spirit appoints overseers also today? (b) If despite this an overseer turns out bad, what must be done, and what should overseers read time and again?
23 In consideration of the spirit’s fruitage produced by the candidate and in harmony with the written requirements set out in the Holy Scriptures written by men under the operation of the holy spirit, the governing body acts, being itself moved by the holy spirit for which it prays to God that it may guide the governing body. In every respect, then, the spirit of God comes to the fore in the matter of appointing overseers. So today as well as in Paul’s day it may be said that the holy spirit appoints overseers over the flock of God that he purchased “with the blood of his own Son.” (Acts 20:28, Schonfield) If in course of time any overseer turns out bad, we must remember that even Judas Iscariot, whom Jesus himself selected to be an apostolic overseer, turned out bad, betraying his own Overseer, the Chief Shepherd, to his enemies to be killed. This required Jesus, after his death and resurrection and after the outpouring of holy spirit on the day of Pentecost, to select a different man to “take his office of overseer.” (Acts 1:16-20; 9:10-16) So today another man that has for some time shown the desirable qualities and the necessary good points must be put in office to replace the overseer that turns out bad. It would therefore do a great deal of good to overseers and the ministerial servants if they would time and again read over and meditate upon the requirements of their office as set out in Paul’s first letter to Timothy, particularly chapter three, and Paul’s letter to Titus, particularly chapter one.
24. Because at every turn the overseer has to face the spirit that made him such, what warning words of Jesus should he bear close to his heart?
24 In view of all that is bound up with the matter of appointment no appointee should treat his office of overseer lightly. At every turn the overseer has to face the holy spirit, which made him what he is. For good reason, then, he should bear close to his heart the warning words of Jesus to his enemies. With their own eyes the enemies saw the operation of God’s holy spirit through Jesus when he cured a demon-possessed, blind and dumb man, so that the dumb man spoke and saw, free of demon possession. To counteract the effect that this miracle would have on all other observers, the enemies of Jesus maliciously said it was the spirit of the Devil that had worked through Jesus to perform this cure. Jesus forcibly argued that it was God’s spirit that had worked through him to expel the demon from the blind and dumb man. To his giving of the credit to God’s spirit instead of to himself Jesus then added these words: “On this account I say to you, Every kind of sin and blasphemy will be forgiven men, but the blasphemy against the spirit will not be forgiven. For example, whoever speaks a word against the Son of man, it will be forgiven him; but whoever speaks against the holy spirit, it will not be forgiven him, no, not in the present system of things nor in that to come.”—Matt. 12:22-32.
25. In view of his appointment by the spirit, what will the overseer be anxious not to do, lest he commit what kind of sin?
25 Even in heaven the exalted Jesus acts by God’s spirit, this too in the matter of appointment of overseers. Seeing that the overseer is appointed by this spirit, the appointee will be anxious not to abuse his overseership for selfish reasons. As the apostle Peter said to his fellow overseers: “Shepherd the flock of God in your care, not under compulsion, . . . neither for love of dishonest gain, . . . neither as lording it over those who are God’s inheritance.” (1 Pet. 5:1-3) That wrong course would mean to act like Judas, like Balaam, like the “false apostles.” (Acts 1:16-18, 25; 2 Pet. 2:15, 16; Jude 11; 2 Cor. 11:13-15) It is a betrayal of the sheep of the Right Shepherd, such as that committed by the greedy shepherds mentioned in Ezekiel 34:1-10, 17-22. That would be a sinning against the spirit that made the man an overseer. It would be a perversion of the purpose of the spirit in appointing him. This would be sin, a serious sin. If persisted in and committed to the point of hardening the overseer in that condition of heart and course of conduct, it would become a sin against the holy spirit by one whose maturity makes him more blamable and accountable. Hence it becomes a kind of sin that is neither forgivable in this world nor forgivable in the world to come.
26. Why may some overseers today be replaced without sin against the spirit, but what about an overseer that should persist in willful sin?
26 Because of the heightened responsibilities that are laid upon overseers today, because of the multiplicity of duties that are laid upon them, and because of the larger demands that are made of them, a man may because of age or sickness or other circumstances become unequal to the requirements of overseership. He may therefore be replaced through no willful sin of his own. Or a more capable person may present himself, and in the interest of greater growth and more effective effort it may be timely and advisable to transfer the duties and obligations from the less capable one to this better-qualified person. In such cases there is no sinning against the holy spirit involved, and there is no disgrace or reproach. But woe to the one who greedily, ambitiously, filthily and designedly sins because of the advantage he has as overseer! He is putting himself in a serious way toward the spirit that had to do with his appointment to overseership. Unless he strenuously recovers himself, he will not only lose his privileged office but be on the way to eternal death. His sin will become of an unforgivable type, over which he cannot repent. His disgrace will become great.
27. To what end will an overseer use his office?
27 In the spirit of Jehovah an overseer should use his office to gain life, for himself and for God’s flock over which the holy spirit has placed him, thus vindicating or justifying his appointment. He will see the wisdom and feel the joy of carrying out Peter’s words to overseers, at 1 Peter 5:1-4. “Do not be grieving God’s holy spirit, with which you have been sealed,” said Paul.—Eph. 4:30.
CONGREGATION STARS
28. (a) In what kind of times do we live, and why? (b) How was John carried forward in vision to our day, what did he see, hear and do?
28 Today we may not be living in apostolic times, but we do live in apocalyptic times, for the visions given in the apocalyptic book, The Revelation, are being fulfilled before our very eyes. God’s kingdom has been born in the heavens, the nations have become wrathful and God’s own wrath has come against them, and his appointed time has come for the dead to be judged. The “temple sanctuary of God that is in heaven” has been opened to our spiritual vision and we see in it the “ark of his covenant” or the symbol of his presence there. (Rev. 11:18 to 12:5) His reigning King, Jesus Christ, as God’s Messenger or Angel of the covenant, has come with Jehovah God to the spiritual temple for judgment proceedings. (Mal. 3:1) His invisible presence at the temple the apostle John on the island of Patmos saw in the visions of the “revelation by Jesus Christ.” Since the birth of God’s kingdom in the heavens in the year 1914 we are in the “Lord’s day.” What John saw carried him forward in vision to our own day, so that he wrote: “By inspiration I came to be in the Lord’s day, and I heard behind me a strong voice like that of a trumpet, saying: ‘What you see write in a scroll and send it to the seven congregations, in Ephesus and in Smyrna and in Pergamum and in Thyatira and in Sardis and in Philadelphia and in Laodicea.” When John turned to see who spoke he “saw seven golden lampstands, and in the midst of the lampstands someone like a son of man . . . And he had in his right hand seven stars.” At beholding him John became deathly afraid.—Rev. 1:10-17.
29. What did the Speaker tell John to do, and what today did the seven lampstands picture?
29 The speaker made himself known as the resurrected, glorified Jesus Christ, not by mentioning his own name but by telling known things about himself. Then he told John: “Write down the things you saw, and the things that are and the things that will take place after these. As for the sacred secret of the seven stars which you saw upon my right hand, and of the seven golden lampstands: The seven stars mean the angels of the seven congregations, and the seven lampstands mean seven congregations.” (Rev. 1:19, 20) These congregations picture the entire congregation on earth today of the spirit-begotten, anointed followers of Jesus Christ, all joint heirs with him of the kingdom of the heavens. In the Revelation the promises made to them are incorruptibility and freedom from the “second death,” a crown of rulership and authority over the nations to dash them to pieces at Armageddon, a position in the heavenly temple and in the New Jerusalem and a seat with Jesus Christ on his heavenly throne. (Rev. 2:7, 10, 11, 17, 26-28; 3:5, 6, 11, 12, 21) Each of the seven lampstands pictures a congregation of these members of the “little flock” to whom the heavenly Father has approved of giving the kingdom.—Luke 12:32.
30. What today would the Speaker’s walking in the midst of the seven lampstands picture, and who today have been associated with the seven symbolic lampstands since 1931?
30 As the number seven is used in the Bible to symbolize what is spiritually perfect, the seven lampstands would picture all the congregations of these Kingdom heirs, or all those Kingdom heirs yet on earth who are viewed as but one indivisible congregation, with Jesus Christ as their spiritual Head. So his walking in the midst of the seven candlesticks would signify how today he is invisibly present with his entire congregation on earth and walking among them, inspecting them and expressing his judgment. With this congregation of his Kingdom heirs yet remaining on earth there is now associated a “great crowd” of other sheep, whom the Right Shepherd, Jesus Christ, has been gathering since the summer of 1931. This “great crowd” was pictured at Revelation 7:9-17.
31. What does Jesus have in his right hand, what do these picture, and why could not spirit creatures be meant here?
31 But what is it that the glorified Jesus has in his right hand? Seven “stars.” These have a relationship to the seven lampstands. As the seven lampstands picture the seven congregations of the anointed remnant of Kingdom heirs, so the seven stars stand for the “angels of the seven congregations.” Who, then, are these angels of the seven congregations? Unseen spiritual angels in heaven, who accompany Jesus Christ when he, the glorified Son of man, comes in the glory of his heavenly kingdom? Not at all. We are not to understand that each earthly congregation of the anointed remnant has its own angel in heaven who shines down upon it. No; for were that the case, Jesus up in heaven could give his messages directly to them concerning the seven congregations. To the contrary of this, Jesus commands the apostle John to write to each angel of each congregation about its condition. John on earth could not write to unseen spirit angels in heaven. How would John know which one was the star of which congregation? How would he deliver or send the message from Jesus to each star and to the proper one?
32, 33. Whom, then, do the seven stars picture, and since what notice in The Watchtower have “other sheep” been made overseers?
32 It is reasonably clear, therefore, that all seven stars in Jesus’ right hand picture the entire body or complete number of overseers of the entire congregation yet on earth of the remnant of anointed Kingdom heirs. Each star pictures the overseer or group of overseers placed in charge of each congregation of the anointed remnant. No particular person of such and such a name is pictured in the case of any star, because the individual in the position of overseer may change in the course of time by reason of death or other circumstances. But the office of overseer, not vacant but actually filled by some individual who meets the requirements, is pictured by each star. The stars picture spirit-anointed overseers who, like their congregations, are joint heirs of the heavenly kingdom with Jesus. It was first some years after the Right Shepherd Jesus Christ began gathering his “other sheep” that some of these, according to the needs of the situation, were put in positions of overseer by the “faithful and discreet slave” class. It was first in the year 1937, in the May 1 issue of The Watchtower (page 130), that the following notice was published:
33 “COMPANY SERVANT – Proclamation of the kingdom message is all-important now. It is the duty of the anointed to vote as to who shall be company servant; but ‘hewers of wood and drawers of water’ (Josh. 9:21-27) may serve. (Deut. 16:12-15; 29:11) When there are none in the company capable of filling the places of company servants or service committees and there are Jonadabs who have the ability and zeal, let the Jonadabs be placed on the service committee and give them opportunity to serve. The work should not drag because some of the company have lack of zeal. The gospel must now be proclaimed.—Matt. 24:14.”
34. What was the purpose of a sacred lampstand, and what now is the purpose of a symbolic lampstand?
34 A lampstand is filled with oil and lit for the purpose of shedding light to those in the house or in the temple. The sacred tabernacle erected by the prophet Moses in the wilderness of Sinai had one lampstand stationed in the first compartment or in the Holy. But in the Holy of the temple built by King Solomon there were ten golden lampstands, five on the north side and five on the south. (Ex. 25:31-40; 26:35; 40:24, 25; 2 Chron. 4:7, 20; 1 Ki. 7:49) A symbolic lampstand or congregation of anointed joint heirs of the Kingdom must serve its purpose, namely, to let the light shine; and Jesus Christ who walks in the midst of the seven symbolic lampstands will, as High Priest without need of a pope on earth, see to it that these congregations do shine.
35. How should an overseer shine like a star compared with a lampstand, and with what light should all members of the congregation shine?
35 A star in the skies shines higher than does a lampstand on earth. In like manner, one who fills the office of overseer in charge of such a congregation should shine over and above those other members of the congregation. He should be outstanding like a star in letting the light of the good news of God’s kingdom shine to the members of the congregation and to the “other sheep,” those already gathered in or those yet to be gathered in to form “one flock” with the anointed remnant. (John 10:16) Of course, in a general sense, all members of the congregation must shine with spiritual light from heaven: “Be blameless and innocent, children of God without a blemish in among a crooked and twisted generation, among whom you are shining as illuminators in the world.” (Phil. 2:15) Specifically concerning this “time of the end” of the world God’s angel prophesied to Daniel: “They that are wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament; and they that turn many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever.” (Dan. 12:3, AS) True to that prophecy, all wise members of the congregation should shine like stars, but their overseer especially so, just as starlight compares with lamplight. Lamplight does not carry very far; starlight does. Overseers must be examples of light-bearing.
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Overseers in the Right Hand of ChristThe Watchtower—1958 | January 15
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Overseers in the Right Hand of Christ
1. To which congregation was John instructed to write first, and what farewell words of the apostle Paul may some of its overseers have heard directly?
“TO THE angel of the congregation in Ephesus write: These are the things that he says who holds the seven stars in his right hand, he who walks in the midst of the seven golden lampstands.” (Rev. 2:1) In obedience to this command from the glorified Christ, John doubtless did write to the overseer or group of overseers over the congregation in Ephesus. In John’s day some of these older men may have met the apostle Paul years before, when he said these words of farewell: “Pay attention to yourselves and to all the flock, among which the holy spirit has appointed you overseers, to shepherd the congregation of God, which he purchased with the blood of his own [Son]. I know that after my going away oppressive wolves will enter in among you and will not treat the flock with tenderness, and from among you yourselves men will rise and speak twisted things to draw away the disciples after themselves. Therefore keep awake.” (Acts 20:28-31) John was now on the penal island of Patmos, not so far from Ephesus, and he would see that the overseers in Ephesus, as well as the overseers of the other named congregations in Asia Minor, would get the entire Revelation with its specific message to each congregation.
2. By his opening words, what did Jesus remind the Ephesian overseers of, and what today did the conditions in the congregations back there picture?
2 By his opening words of address Jesus Christ reminded those Ephesian overseers, as well as those of all the other congregations, that they were in his right hand, within his power and control and within his favor and protection. “No one will snatch them out of my hand,” said he. (John 10:28) Likewise in these apocalyptic times the overseers, especially the spirit-anointed overseers, over the congregations of God’s flock are reminded that they are in Christ’s hand and they must be guided and used by his hand and not resist or fight against it. Today there is no congregation of Jehovah’s witnesses at Ephesus near the coast of the Aegean Sea. But the condition in the congregation back there foreshadowed the condition that may be true in a congregation or in congregations of the Christian witnesses of Jehovah today. The conditions in all the seven congregations named in Asia Minor were used to picture the different conditions obtaining here and there today among the congregations of God’s flock. It is therefore proper for the congregation “stars,” the anointed overseers of all the congregations, to be notified of the conditions that correspond with those foreshadowed in Christ’s messages to the seven congregations in Asia Minor. They must then follow Christ’s instructions, as his right-hand men, in working to correct the improper conditions and to help all the members to overcome or conquer this old world now in its last days.
3. Back there, what did the congregation “star” do with the message received through John, as an example of what action today?
3 Back there, if sent a specific message from Christ through John, the congregation “star” would read the message to the congregation for whose benefit it was written. In like manner today, overseers of congregations read off communications to their respective congregations as received from the governing body of the “faithful and discreet slave” class.
THE LAMPSTAND IN EPHESUS
4. Despite things to its credit, what did Jesus hold against the Ephesus congregation, and how may congregations today need help in this regard?
4 Like the congregation of ancient Ephesus, congregations today may have deeds and hard work and a record of endurance to their credit. They may not have put up with evil men. As for men who claim to be apostles or apostolic successors, they have tested such by the inspired Scriptures and found them to be liars in their claims. They have gone back to the apostolic teachings and ways of doing things by putting up a “hard fight for the faith that was once for all time delivered to the holy ones.” (Jude 3) For years they have borne up for the sake of Christ’s name and not grown tired. But the question is, Have they left the love they had at first? Because of the increasing of lawlessness in Christendom has their love grown cold? Has their love been alienated to some attraction of this materialistic old world? Have they tired of showing affection for Christ, which calls for feeding his sheep and having the mental attitude that was in him? Christ holds it against them if they have left that heat, zeal and undividedness of the love that they had at first. If so, they need help to get back to where they were and to recover what they lost.
5. (a) As regards those who have lost their first love, what should the overseer do? (b) How could his lampstand be removed?
5 It is the responsibility of the overseer, the congregation “star,” to light the way back for those against whom Christ holds this loss of their first love. They should take steps to stir up in these losers this original love. Their love of Christ’s sheep will move overseers to go out and try to bring back those staying away from meetings or becoming careless. They will try to counteract the danger that Jesus foretold: “Because of the increasing of lawlessness the love of the greater number will cool off.” (Matt. 24:12) They realize that no loser of one’s first love can be a final member of the congregation of God. It is time, therefore, to remember what one has fallen from, and then sorrowfully change one’s mind and get back to doing the former deeds. Otherwise one will not be acting as part of a lampstand, namely, letting one’s light shine. He will be having no part in the service of a lampstand. If an overseer should let all his sheep grow loveless and fall away and cease to shine, Christ would, in effect, remove his lampstand. He would be as a star without a lampstand or congregation. So he must see to it that the lampstand congregation shines and lights up its part of the field, which is the world.
6. Like the Ephesus congregation once warned by Paul, what should overseer and congregation keep up a hatred of today, and why?
6 In his farewell to the Ephesian overseers Paul warned that sects would be formed by apostate teachers who would try to draw away disciples after themselves. Like the Ephesian congregation, the overseer and the congregation should keep up their intense hatred of sectarianism, like the “deeds of the sect of Nicolaus,” because Jesus Christ, the Head of one indivisible body, also hates sectarianism, the following of this or that man on earth.
7. Why should we today keep our ears attuned to hear what the spirit says to the congregations?
7 We who are associated with a lampstand under an overseer “star” should keep our ears attuned to hear what the spirit of God says. We must listen to the utterance inspired by God. Said Jesus: “Let the one who has an ear hear what the spirit says to the congregations,” the seven congregations of Asia that pictured all similar congregations today. Even Jesus in heaven speaks by God’s spirit or active force, so that it is really God that is speaking by Jesus. Thus Jesus gives more value and authority to God’s spirit than to himself, so as to warn us against sinning the mortal sin against the spirit of God. On earth Jesus spoke under the operation of God’s spirit, and up in heaven he has not changed.—Isa. 61:1, AV; Luke 4:16-21; Heb. 13:8.
8. To what conquest does the spirit encourage the congregation members, and why is such conquest possible?
8 Those who have fallen away in certain respects and who need to make a recovery have much to overcome. (1 Pet. 4:17, 18) In fact, all members of the congregation have to do a great deal of overcoming. They must prove themselves conquerors; but for this there is a reward. The spirit of God encourages all onward to conquest over Satan’s world with this promise: “To him that conquers I will grant to eat of the tree of life, which is in the paradise of God.” (Rev. 2:7) For the spirit-begotten congregation it is a case of either gaining that heavenly life with God or not gaining eternal life anywhere else. The conquest is possible. About that fact we need not be disturbed. Said Jesus: “I have said these things to you that by means of me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation, but cheer up! I have conquered the world.”—John 16:33.
THE LAMPSTAND IN SMYRNA
9. What is spoken of in favor of the congregation at Smyrna, and what is spoken against the “synagogue of Satan”?
9 There are today those who are like the congregation of ancient Smyrna. For these an encouraging message is given through the overseer “star.” One thing that is spoken of in their favor is that they are not materialistic like this world; their manner of life is free of the love of money and they are content with the material things on hand. Christ knows they are poor materially. On earth he too was poor, but he was then rich spiritually and he likewise knows that they are spiritually rich also. They do not imitate those who falsely claim to be Jews, but who blaspheme when making such a claim, for they are not true to the name; they are no praisers of Jehovah, as Leah the mother of Judah was. (Gen. 29:35) In place of being God’s congregation, as the Jewish nation once was till it rejected and killed Christ the Messiah, they are a “synagogue of Satan.” They are materialistic and go after the unspiritual things of Satan’s world.
10. How do true Christians today imitate the Smyrna congregation in not copying those of the “synagogue of Satan,” and so what may a congregation overseer not be?
10 Christians like the Smyrna congregation do not copy those of the “synagogue of Satan” in their materialism, their sticking to traditions instead of to God’s Word, their political Zionism of modern times, and their rejection of the established kingdom of God. Men who now claim to be spiritual Jews, or Jews inwardly, but who are not the true, spiritual “Israel of God,” imitate those faithless natural Jews, and they also are the “synagogue of Satan.” True Christians today who imitate the Smyrna congregation are the congregation of Jehovah and they bear and uphold his holy name. To transmit these words from Christ against materialism a “star” or congregation overseer cannot himself be a materialist, so setting a bad example contrary to Christ’s words.
11. (a) In this connection, why was Jesus on earth not afraid to suffer and die for principle? (b) What does he tell us not to be afraid of, and what reward does the spirit hold out for his conquering followers?
11 Unable to take along everything with him into the grave, a materialist is afraid to die for principle. He cannot take joyfully the plundering of his goods for faithfully following in the footsteps of Christ. Christ was not afraid to die for holding firm and fast to Jehovah’s universal sovereignty; he was no materialist. If he was not afraid to empty himself and lay aside his heavenly glory he would not be averse to parting with lesser things, the material earthly things. He tells us to do as he did, not be afraid of the sufferings that his followers are bound to suffer in this world’s “time of the end,” especially now that Satan the Devil has been cast out of heaven and makes war upon the faithful remnant of the seed of God’s woman. We are facing the total attack of Gog of Magog upon the remnant and their companions shortly. The words of Jesus to the Smyrna congregation are therefore timely and good: not to be afraid of that furious attack, nor of the things we have to suffer before then—imprisonment, “tribulation ten days,” or violent death. He himself once died but came to life again by God’s almighty power and can die no more, being beyond harm by the “second death.” He now has all power in heaven and in earth and can hold out the crown of life to his faithful followers. Like him, the only Potentate, “the one alone having immortality,” his followers who conquer this doomed world will in the resurrection be put beyond harm by the second death. (Rev. 2:8-11) A “star” or congregation overseer should be a world conqueror as a right example.
THE LAMPSTAND IN PERGAMUM
12. Why was the congregation in Pergamum said to be dwelling “where the throne of Satan is”?
12 Ancient Pergamum was a city sacred to heathen, a religious city of paganism. To the chief of its gods, named Zeus or Jupiter, it had a temple with an altar fifty feet high. This ancient capital of the Roman province of Asia became a noted center for worship of the Roman emperor and for other pagan cults. In the Roman period of its existence a temple was built on Pergamum’s acropolis to Emperor Caesar Augustus, the “divine Augustus.” The city was celebrated for its fidelity to Rome, the capital of the Caesars. A refusal to join in the pagan worship of Caesar the emperor might lead to one’s death as a martyr to the universal sovereignty of Jehovah God. With such practice of Devil worship here in Pergamum, with the Devil-rule over men being intensified here, with the deifying of men and the worshiping of imperial power of men, it was not without good reason that the congregation in that city was said to be dwelling “where the throne of Satan is.”
13. How are we Christians today likewise dwelling where Satan’s throne is, and how can we, in spite of this fact, be like the Pergamum congregation?
13 Today with nationalism being so rampant, with the images and symbols of nationalism being treated as sacred and idolized, with the image of the United Nations being adored by over eighty nations of this world, and with the expelled Satan the Devil now come down to earth’s residents and having great anger, the remnant of Jehovah’s congregation and their companions are like Pergamum in dwelling where Satan’s throne is. Can Christ praise us too through the angel of the congregation for our holding fast his name and not denying our faith in him as Savior and King, even though thousands of our Christian brothers have been martyred, like Antipas, whom Christ calls “my witness, the faithful one, who was killed by your side, where Satan is dwelling”? If he can do so, then we are like the congregation in Pergamum in this respect.
14. Who was the Balaam whose teaching some in the Pergamum congregation were holding fast, and whom did Jehovah curse on Balaam’s account?
14 However, we must never forget there are those who are eager to do us spiritual harm, hence eternal harm. Who are these? Religious persons like Balaam and like the teachers of the sect of Nicolaus. Materialistically, Balaam tried to turn his office of prophet into a business for making material gain, even at the cost of cursing Jehovah’s holy nation, Israel. When Jehovah God turned his intended curse into a blessing for Israel, then Balaam tried to work with the political power of this world as symbolized by King Balak. He tried luring Israel into idol worship, demon worship, by means of pagan girls whose bodies were dedicated to unclean handling by worshipers of the false god, Baal of Peor. This obliged Jehovah to curse, not the whole nation of Israel, but those who yielded to the machinations of the gain-greedy prophet Balaam.
15. How must the congregation overseer act like priest Phinehas, and so why must he examine himself, and against what must he guard?
15 Today the “star” overseer of a congregation should prove himself like Phinehas the son of Eleazar the son of Aaron the high priest. On that ancient occasion Phinehas rooted out such sly workings of religious leaders like Balaam. (Num. 22:1 to 25:15; 2 Pet. 2:15, 16; Jude 11) The overseer of today should lead the congregation in the march to the New World. He should not try to obstruct or permit any obstruction of our march successfully to our destination beyond the battle of Armageddon. He must examine himself constantly that he does not commercialize his prophetic position, his responsible and impressive office. He must guard against the infiltrating of sex worship from this world and the creeping in of religious sects.
16. What does one guilty of the above things need to do, and to avoid second death and gain eternal life what must we do?
16 Anyone guilty of such things needs to repent, yes, repent without delay, for quickly Christ is coming to execute divine judgment. In his mouth he has the power of the second death for any who let themselves be overcome by this world. We must be careful not to cause the executional sword of Christ’s mouth to fight against us. It would mean our certain death, “second death,” pictured by Gehenna. As stars under him, the overseers of congregations should keep in full agreement with Jehovah’s Angel of the covenant, the Chief Overseer, who is now at the temple for judgment proceedings. This is no time to be conquered by a world that Christ himself has conquered. It is the time to conquer the world as he did and with his help. God’s spirit speaking by him promises a grand reward, incorruptibility in the heavenly kingdom and a new relationship with Jehovah God, pictured by the incorruptible hidden manna and a white name-stone with a new name written on it, which only the conqueror will fully understand in due time. Overseers should be faithful to deliver this message.—Rev. 2:12-17.
THE LAMPSTAND IN THYATIRA
17. What did the Thyatira congregation have to its credit, but what wrong thought must be pointed out to it?
17 Conditions like those that existed with the ancient Thyatira congregation must receive attention by the “star” overseer, whose concern these come to be. Christ, who sees as with eyes like a fiery flame and who walks as with uncorruptible, enduring feet like fine copper, saw that the Thyatira congregation had an increase of works to its credit. But we must not think that just so a person makes a fine, showy record in the physical work of God’s organization and time spent in it he can be careless about his morals. The fact that he cannot do so needed to be pointed out to the Thyatira congregation; it needs to be pointed out today.
18. How had a Jezebel got into the Thyatira congregation, how had Christ given her time, and what action did he threaten to take?
18 Jezebel, the daughter of the pagan king of Sidon, was given in political marriage to King Ahab. She used her position to do great religious damage to the kingdom of Israel. A Jezebel, a woman or a group of women with characteristics like queen Jezebel’s, had got into the Thyatira congregation. But the congregation under its “star” overseer had not acted to overpower and uproot this woman influence to false teaching, false worship and religious and physical immorality. Christ gave the congregation time to act regarding the matter and thus gave the “woman Jezebel” class time to repent. But since the Thyatira congregation carelessly tolerated the operations of this unclean, unchristian class in among it, Christ himself warned of the action that he was going to take toward this unrepentant class. What? Kill it with great tribulation, for a spectacle to all the congregations that they might know that the Chief Overseer tolerates no such unrepentant class.
19. Why does a congregation overseer not dare to yield to the Jezebel teaching and influence, and how may the congregation hold fast what it has until Christ comes to execute judgment?
19 An overseer of a congregation dares not yield to the Jezebel teaching and influence today. Those who commit spiritual and physical fornication with her cannot escape the fiery eyes of the Chief Overseer but are in for execution if they do not repent. It is not needful for us to enter into such fornication to get to know what it is like by experience and thus “know the ‘deep things of Satan.’” The Judge who knows by principle what it is warns us against it. His warning is sufficient. We should take it. Then Christ will not put upon us a burden of responsibility and we will keep free from congregational responsibility for bad conditions inside it. The leaven of sin must not be left among us, to corrupt at last what good we have left. Christ advises: “Hold fast what you have until I come.” That will require conquering the world.
20. What power over the nations will be given the world conquerors, and instead of congregation stars, what will they be given?
20 He who on earth conquers this world by resisting its lusts, its ungodly aims, its methods and its practices will be given heavenly authority over the nations. Those who finish their earthly career faithfully as world conquerors in imitation of Jesus will be resurrected to power with him in heaven and will join him when he smashes the enemy nations to pieces in the coming “war of the great day of God the Almighty.” That will be a conquest over this world in another way. It will be a victory for God’s new world. Now the Christian congregation is given the symbolic stars, the faithful overseers. But then in the resurrection to life in heaven the congregation will be given “the morning star,” which is Jesus Christ the Bridegroom.—Rev. 2:18-29; 22:16.
21. What course, therefore, should women in the congregation follow, and what that it has should the congregation hold fast?
21 Therefore let women see their proper position in the congregation. On proper occasions let them wear a head covering as a sign of submission, as a sign of not trying to usurp the position of the man, whether as a “star” overseer or as a ministerial servant. Let them not induce any brother to fornication spiritually or bodily. Let all the congregation jealously guard what it has, the Christian purity of doctrine and of conduct and the treasure of Kingdom witnessing. Then Christ’s coming as Executioner of judgment will be, not with mortal punishment, but with New World rewards.
THE LAMPSTAND IN SARDIS
22. (a) As he addresses the Sardis-type congregation, what does Christ have in his possession? (b) What spiritually moribund condition does the congregation angel have to point out and not let go on?
22 Like a circuit servant or general overseer Christ inspects all sorts of conditions within the congregations under his charge, including such a spiritual condition as the ancient Sardis congregation had. Seeing such, he is certain to call notice to it: “These are the things that he says who has the seven spirits of God and the seven stars.” He has the full illuminating power of God’s spirit, and he has the congregation servant of Sardis as well as the angels or stars of the six other congregations within his power and under his direction. The angel of the Sardis-type congregation does not have a very pleasant message from the great Archangel through the “faithful and discreet slave” class, the modern-day John of the Revelation. What is there to one’s having a form of godly devotion when one denies its power? One may have the name of being alive religiously, but Jehovah’s Judge knows that one is dead like the Sardis congregation. One is asleep to one’s privileges and to the call of the hour for diligent, lively service. One fails to perform all the features of God’s service. What features of worship and of service still remain are in danger of dying out. An alert overseer, and the Great Overseer above him, cannot let a spiritually moribund condition like that continue.
23. What should the drawing near of the final judgment of the congregation cause us to remember and to do?
23 The final judgment of persons who have been put in trust with the interests of the kingdom of God is getting closer. This drawing near of the final accounting ought to stir us to remember that we have received and heard the Kingdom message and hence should make us appreciate our responsibility. Then, with deepened appreciation, we should wake up and keep on the watch, reactivate our service efforts that were about to die, and keep our knowledge of the truth and our opportunity to preach, which knowledge affords.
24. (a) How is the congregation’s knowledge to be increased and its aliveness to be manifested? (b) What hour of accounting will the congregation overseer yet have to face?
24 The thing to do is to increase our knowledge. This means our doing private Bible study. It means attending the meetings of the congregation and helping to make these meetings alive; it means keeping up with the progressive truth; it means using that truth by telling it to others inside and outside the congregation. To aid each one to this end the congregation overseer together with his ministerial assistants will arrange to keep each member awake spiritually and not let the local organization die, having no good works to show that it has spiritual life. They will work to increase the attendance of members at meetings. They will bring the message up to date by incorporating fresh, live doctrines as these are revealed. They will strive to enlarge the activity of the congregation in all the needed forms of service. They will widen out the witness and drive it home more. They will not let the congregation become pleasure-alive but service-dead. One of these days each overseer will have to give a final account to someone higher than the governing body associated with the Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society. That hour will come as a thief. What need there is, then, for a refresher course and keeping all alive to witness works!
25. (a) Who will walk with Christ in white and not be cast out of his company? (b) Whose name will not be blotted out of the book of life, but what acknowledgment will be made of such one?
25 Even in a situation like that in Sardis a few may be named who have undefiled garments, who are faultless in their Christian appearance. They are keeping clean, undefiled religion, which calls for keeping oneself without moral and religious spot from this world. Continuing to walk thus, they will be pronounced worthy to walk with Christ in white and not be cast out from his company. His bride class will be arrayed as in fine linen clean and bright, for such fine linen symbolizes the righteous acts of God’s holy ones. What wondrous acts of service there will be to perform in his new world! How the thought of this spurs one to conquer this world! It makes one want to live in the new world. One has to keep alive spiritually now. If one dies spiritually, one gets one’s name blotted out of the book of life. One will not live to get his name acknowledged before the heavenly Father nor before the angels who have faithfully ministered to the congregation.—Rev. 3:1-6.
THE LAMPSTAND IN PHILADELPHIA
26. In what sense does Christ have the “key of David,” and what door has he opened since 1919 unable to be shut by opposers?
26 As the one having all the Kingdom interests, the Chief Overseer addresses himself to the Philadelphia congregation, for he has the “key of David.” He did not give this key to Peter, but he himself now has it. As with the keeper of the key during David’s kingship in Jerusalem, so Jesus Christ has had committed to his hand the government of the household of faith and he is as a spiritual father to the inhabitants of spiritual Israel. (Isa. 22:22; Luke 1:32) When he accompanied Jehovah God to the spiritual temple in 1918 he began judgment at God’s household. He found the “faithful and discreet slave” class. Before it he has set an opened door since 1919, by putting this class in charge of all his spiritual belongings on earth. (Matt. 24:45-47) He opened before them the opportunity and the responsibility to fulfill Matthew 24:14 concerning giving the Kingdom witness earth-wide to all nations before the world ends at Armageddon. No man has been able to shut that door since then, neither the participants in World War II, nor Nazi Hitlerism, nor Mussolini Fascism, nor Catholic Action, nor Russian Communism with its cult of Stalin and other cults.
27. To whom has this door been kept shut, and how are they obliged to confess that Christ has loved us?
27 This is not to our credit. It is to the credit of Christ, who has kept the door open and will keep it open till the witness work is done. (1 Cor. 16:9; Col. 4:3, 4) The door to those Kingdom-time privileges has been shut to Christendom and Jewry, to all those of the “synagogue of Satan.” They have no works of Kingdom witnessing to show that they enjoyed this expression of love from Christ. Now they have to humble themselves before us and acknowledge that we have the works, we have the record and we are continuing the works. We are inviting all the “other sheep” yet to be found to come in through the opened door and join us in the work.
28, 29. (a) What is the message about endurance that must be kept? (b) For keeping it, how are we kept from the hour of test now on the whole inhabited earth?
28 God’s kingdom message tells us that endurance in his worship and service is vital. Preaching that message calls for endurance, the kind that Christ displayed. In our endurance we must be Christlike. He did not quit, he did not give in to the enemy, he did not give up the service and the spiritual war. He kept on doing his Father’s will. He held out to the bitter end. So he was resurrected to an hour triumphant, to an eternity of triumph. There is a benefit in conforming ourselves to the message about his endurance. We are kept from the hour of test now on the whole world. How?
29 Just as in Jesus’ case. When faced with a choice of all the kingdoms of this world he rejected the kingdom of Satan. He chose the kingdom of God by choosing to worship Jehovah God and not the “god of this world” to whom those man-made kingdoms belonged. By holding to that initial decision Jesus was upheld all through the test of his integrity and he was kept from collapsing under the test the way the Jewish world collapsed. We likewise have made our decision for God’s kingdom. As long as we hold fast to our decision by preaching the Kingdom good news, we too will be kept from falling during this test. We shall never be attracted into Devil worship by choosing and serving the kingdoms of this world. Let Christendom go down under the test of this hour, stumble over God’s chosen Stone and fall to her destruction. (1 Pet. 2:7, 8) We have chosen Theocracy under Christ. We are kept standing!
30. What, therefore, must the congregation overseers do, and why must we hold fast what we have, and how?
30 The “seven stars,” the anointed overseers, as well as the “other sheep” associated with them in overseership must help all of Christ’s sheep through this hour of temptation by setting a proper example themselves and by giving them all aid. The time for assigning crowns permanently comes on quickly. The Holder of the “key of David” says: “Keep on holding fast what you have, that no one may take your crown.” Yes, we will hold fast what we have from him, by striving to increase those Kingdom interests, by using our all as a precious instrument in Kingdom service. For the anointed ones to lose the Kingdom interests now before Armageddon means to lose the heavenly crown. For the “other sheep” to lose what they have means to lose New World life under the Kingdom.
31. How must anointed overseers prove to be pillars and stay in line for the New Jerusalem, and accordingly what should all overseers do?
31 Anointed overseers must prove to be pillars in God’s temple organization, upholding the temple worship in which the other sheep now engage. They must stay in line for the New Jerusalem by preaching God’s kingdom and keeping clean as the prospective bride of God’s Lamb. This is obligatory, if they want to be pillars in the glorified heavenly temple and bear the name of God’s city as heavenly citizens of it and share the name of the highly exalted Christ by being his loving bride. The temple, the New Jerusalem, Christ’s new name in his heavenly office—these also are things the other sheep must reckon with. Let them now work in harmony with these vital realities. Anyone not keeping holy, anyone who is spiritually disgusting, anyone carrying on a lie, will be barred from the New Jerusalem and from its realm on earth. So let all overseers, especially those in line for positions in the heavenly temple, lead the way in temple worship night and day. Then they will realize the benefit of Christ’s promise at Revelation 3:12.
THE LAMPSTAND IN LAODICEA
32. How did Jesus address the congregation in Laodicea, and why should this address have stung the congregation?
32 In the apostle Paul’s day there was a congregation at Laodicea. (Col. 4:15) By the time of the revelation to John it had gone bad. In addressing himself to it through the congregation angel Jesus speaks of himself as “the Amen,” “the faithful and true witness, the beginning of the creation by God.” This reference should have stung the Laodicean congregation, for it no longer wholeheartedly affirmed the truth like an amen. No longer was it a faithful and true witness. It gave no evidence of being part of the “new creation” of which Jesus Christ was and is the first and chief member. How does Jesus, as an exemplary Chief Overseer, handle the case of the congregation in Laodicea, then and now?
33. Why did Jesus threaten to vomit them out of his mouth, and how were they like Ephraim?
33 Those of the Laodicean kind are neither stimulatingly hot nor refreshingly cold. They are lukewarm, ugh! So, like lukewarm water, out of the mouth they must go. Christ wants them as no mouthpiece of his, no “ambassadors substituting for Christ,” no message-bearers or witnesses belonging to and used by him. Their share in the fulfillment of Matthew 24:14 he will withdraw unless they repent. They are like the dominant tribe of ancient Israel, Ephraim. How so? In being like a flat cake half cooked, a griddle cake not turned onto its other side, hence half-baked, half and half, hence half-hearted, double-minded: “Ephraim is like a silly dove, without understanding: they call unto Egypt [not to Jehovah], they go to Assyria [not to God].”—Hos. 7:8, 11, AS.
34. Why were the Laodiceans in such a lukewarm condition, and what did they need to take away their spiritual wretchedness?
34 Why was that so then? Because the Laodiceans did not keep on seeking first God’s kingdom and the righteousness that comes from him through Christ. (Matt. 6:33) Their talk shows they supposed that their having earthly material riches meant having God’s prospering approval; they put a higher value on material wealth than upon spiritual, Kingdom values, particularly the “treasure” of ministering the Kingdom truth to others. What do Laodiceans now need to take away their spiritual poverty, blindness and nudeness? A good, honest effort to buy from Christ the gold of faith of a tested quality, the garments of righteousness such as will endure into the new world, and the spiritual seeing power, the faculty of spiritual sight, so as to see the all-importance of the Kingdom concerning which the witness must now be given world-wide.
35. So what must the overseers do in behalf of the Laodiceans for their spiritual recovery?
35 Here, then, is a work for overseers: To reawaken the Laodicean kind to feel their spiritual need and then help them become “rich in faith.” (Jas. 2:5) Such faith is rich in Kingdom fruitage and alive to witnessing work. It takes away confidence in one’s own righteousness. It leads us to seek to be righteous in God’s sight, with all worldliness and sinful nakedness put away. Overseers must also help the Laodiceans to apply the spiritual eyesalve; that is, to take Jesus’ teaching on matters, his advice, his example and his mental attitude, and to act in harmony with such. This is a healing remedy against the “desire of the flesh and the desire of the eyes and the showy display of one’s means of life.” (1 John 2:15-17) Recovering spiritual sight, they can become eyes to others, and not be blind leaders of the blind.
36. What does Christ do to those for whom he has affection, and so what must overseers do and how should Laodiceans respond?
36 Christ as Chief Overseer reproves and disciplines, but does so out of affection for those who have undertaken to follow him. Overseers under him must do likewise. Laodiceans should appreciate this courageous, open display of affection and be zealous to repent or change their mind and then change their way of life.
37. (a) What is it now time for, and what invitation is now directed to the Laodiceans? (b) How will modern Laodiceans show they were not vomited out of Christ’s mouth?
37 The hour is late. It is the time for the best meal of the day, that is, supper, the evening meal. Many an evening meal Jesus shared on earth, giving out spiritual instruction as he enjoyed the householder’s hospitality. Now he invites us to have such a spiritually upbuilding meal with him. He stands at the door of the Laodicean kind of congregation now and knocks. You Laodiceans, will you listen to his knock, revive your affection for Christ, let him into your midst and let him teach you in a precious communion with him? If so, then you will receive his overseer over your congregation. Your overseer, the angel of the congregation, the “star” in Christ’s right hand, is willing and eager to open the door. He has opened it for Christ to enter to feast with those who repent. All you Laodiceans, show that you were not vomited out of his mouth but are still members of his congregation by coming to all meetings of the congregation for study and for service, for Jesus has promised to be present at a spiritual meal where as few as two or three are appreciatively met together in his name. The “other sheep” are letting Christ in, so that at the coming judgment he will say to them: “I was a stranger and you received me hospitably.” (Matt. 25:35) This hospitable action means life!
38. What must we now overcome, and what reward will be given to conquerors?
38 Let us all be warned by the reproof given to the Laodiceans. We must overcome the materialism of this world in this “time of the end.” To each conquering one Christ, speaking by the spirit of God, promises a high reward, to his anointed followers a throne, not of any kingdom of this world, but with him at his Father’s right hand in heaven. To the conquering “other sheep” he promises a position before his throne, a position of loving favor in the “new earth” of God’s new world of righteousness.
39. What, then, should congregations and their “stars” do, and what do we pray Christ to give them?
39 Shine on, then, you overseers, as “stars” in Christ’s right hand, acting as his angels to the congregations. Shine on, too, you congregations, as lampstands that he retains in their place. May he give you his careful attention and protection that you may ever shed forth light to enlighten all who will be saved forever.
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How Dictators Regard the BibleThe Watchtower—1958 | January 15
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How Dictators Regard the Bible
In a statement quoted in Treasury of the Christian World Harold T. Barrow speaks of the many people who regard the Bible as old-fashioned. “They imagine it is finished, out-of-date, superseded,” he writes. “The remarkable thing is that the Dictators of the world, whether in Germany, Italy or Japan, have not shared this view. Indeed they have dreaded all Bible teaching because they came to realize that the message and influence and precepts of the Word of God were in direct opposition to their program! Even the atheist and agnostic have to admit the ethical value of the Bible while they may deny the God it proclaims. A company of infidels, including Voltaire, were discussing their theories around the table one day when Voltaire said suddenly, ‘Hush, gentlemen—till the servants are gone. If they believed as we do, none of our lives would be safe!’” And in the camp of Bible-discarding dictators, whose life has ever been safe?
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Aliens Please NoticeThe Watchtower—1958 | January 15
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Aliens Please Notice
The Department of Justice has once again announced that January is Alien Address Report month. We would like to remind our many readers who are not citizens that the law requires them to report their addresses during the month of January. The Immigration and Naturalization Service has provided a very simple method for all aliens to comply with the law. All an alien has to do is go to any post office or immigration office where he will obtain an address report card. The form number is I-53. You fill this card out, sign your name and the date and leave it with the clerk. That’s really all there is to it and by so doing you will have complied with the law. Our readers who are citizens can help their government by reminding their friends and relatives who are aliens to report their addresses. Remember, January is the time, your local immigration or post office the place.
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