The Desire of Ages
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 79: "It is Finished"
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Not until the death of Christ was the
character of Satan clearly revealed to
the angels or to the unfallen worlds.
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Pacific Press Publ. Assoc. |
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Christ did not yield up His life till He had accomplished
the work which He came to do, and with His parting breath He exclaimed,
"It is finished." John 19:30. The battle had been won. His right hand
and His holy arm had gotten Him the victory. As a Conqueror He planted His
banner on the eternal heights. Was there not joy among the angels? All heaven
triumphed in the Saviour's victory. Satan was defeated, and knew that his
kingdom was lost. {DA
758.1}
To the angels and the unfallen worlds the cry, "It is
finished," had a deep significance. It was for them as well as for us that
the great work of redemption had been accomplished. They with us share the fruits
of Christ's victory. {DA
758.2}
Not until the death of Christ was the character of Satan
clearly revealed to the angels or to the unfallen worlds. The archapostate had
so clothed himself with deception that even holy beings had not understood his
principles. They had not clearly seen the nature of his rebellion. {DA 758.3}
It was a being of wonderful power and glory that had set
himself against God. Of Lucifer the Lord says, "Thou sealest up the sum,
full of wisdom, and perfect in beauty." Ezekiel 28:12. Lucifer had been
the covering cherub. He had stood in the light of God's presence. He had been
the highest of all created beings, and had been foremost in revealing God's
purposes to the universe. After he had sinned, his power to deceive [759]
was the more deceptive, and the unveiling of his character was the more
difficult, because of the exalted position he had held with the Father. {DA 758.4}
God could have destroyed Satan and his sympathizers as
easily as one can cast a pebble to the earth; but He did not do this. Rebellion
was not to be overcome by force. Compelling power is found only under Satan's
government. The Lord's principles are not of this order. His authority rests
upon goodness, mercy, and love; and the presentation of these principles is the
means to be used. God's government is moral, and truth and love are to be the
prevailing power. {DA
759.1}
It was God's purpose to place things on an eternal basis of
security, and in the councils of heaven it was decided that time must be given
for Satan to develop the principles which were the foundation of his system of
government. He had claimed that these were superior to God's principles. Time
was given for the working of Satan's principles, that they might be seen by the
heavenly universe. {DA 759.2}
Satan led men into sin, and the plan of redemption was put
in operation. For four thousand years, Christ was working for man's uplifting,
and Satan for his ruin and degradation. And the heavenly universe beheld it
all. {DA 759.3}
When Jesus came into the world, Satan's power was turned
against Him. From the time when He appeared as a babe in Bethlehem, the usurper
worked to bring about His destruction. In every possible way he sought to
prevent Jesus from developing a perfect childhood, a faultless manhood, a holy
ministry, and an unblemished sacrifice. But he was defeated. He could not lead
Jesus into sin. He could not discourage Him, or drive Him from a work He had
come on earth to do. From the desert to Calvary, the storm of Satan's wrath
beat upon Him, but the more mercilessly it fell, the more firmly did the Son of
God cling to the hand of His Father, and press on in the bloodstained path. All
the efforts of Satan to oppress and overcome Him only brought out in a purer
light His spotless character. {DA 759.4}
All heaven and the unfallen worlds had been witnesses to the
controversy. With what intense interest did they follow the closing scenes of
the conflict. They beheld the Saviour enter the garden of Gethsemane, His soul
bowed down with the horror of a great darkness. They heard His bitter cry,
"Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from Me." Matthew
26:39. As the Father's presence was withdrawn, they saw Him sorrowful with a
bitterness of sorrow exceeding that of the last great struggle with death. The
bloody sweat was forced from His pores, and [760] fell
in drops upon the ground. Thrice the prayer for deliverance was wrung from His
lips. Heaven could no longer endure the sight, and a messenger of comfort was
sent to the Son of God. {DA
759.5}
Heaven beheld the Victim betrayed into the hands of the
murderous mob, and with mockery and violence hurried from one tribunal to
another. It heard the sneers of His persecutors because of His lowly birth. It
heard the denial with cursing and swearing by one of His best-loved disciples.
It saw the frenzied work of Satan, and his power over the hearts of men. Oh,
fearful scene! the Saviour seized at midnight in Gethsemane, dragged to and fro
from palace to judgment hall, arraigned twice before the priests, twice before
the Sanhedrin, twice before Pilate, and once before Herod, mocked, scourged,
condemned, and led out to be crucified, bearing the heavy burden of the cross,
amid the wailing of the daughters of Jerusalem and the jeering of the rabble. {DA 760.1}
Heaven viewed with grief and amazement Christ hanging upon
the cross, blood flowing from His wounded temples, and sweat tinged with blood
standing upon His brow. From His hands and feet the blood fell, drop by drop,
upon the rock drilled for the foot of the cross. The wounds made by the nails
gaped as the weight of His body dragged upon His hands. His labored breath grew
quick and deep, as His soul panted under the burden of the sins of the world.
All heaven was filled with wonder when the prayer of Christ was offered in the
midst of His terrible suffering,—"Father, forgive them; for they
know not what they do." Luke 23:34. Yet there stood men, formed in the
image of God, joining to crush out the life of His only-begotten Son. What a
sight for the heavenly universe! {DA 760.2}
The principalities and powers of darkness were assembled
around the cross, casting the hellish shadow of unbelief into the hearts of
men. When the Lord created these beings to stand before His throne, they were
beautiful and glorious. Their loveliness and holiness were in accordance with
their exalted station. They were enriched with the wisdom of God, and girded
with the panoply of heaven. They were Jehovah's ministers. But who could
recognize in the fallen angels the glorious seraphim that once ministered in
the heavenly courts? {DA
760.3}
Satanic agencies confederated with evil men in leading the
people to believe Christ the chief of sinners, and to make Him the object of
detestation. Those who mocked Christ as He hung upon the cross were imbued with
the spirit of the first great rebel. He filled them with vile [761]
and loathsome speeches. He inspired their taunts. But by all this he gained
nothing. {DA 760.4}
Could one sin have been found in Christ, had He in one
particular yielded to Satan to escape the terrible torture, the enemy of God
and man would have triumphed. Christ bowed His head and died, but He held fast
His faith and His submission to God. "And I heard a loud voice saying in
heaven, Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and
the power of His Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which
accused them before our God day and night." Revelation 12:10. {DA 761.1}
Satan saw that his disguise was torn away. His
administration was laid open before the unfallen angels and before the heavenly
universe. He had revealed himself as a murderer. By shedding the blood of the
Son of God, he had uprooted himself from the sympathies of the heavenly beings.
Henceforth his work was restricted. Whatever attitude he might assume, he could
no longer await the angels as they came from the heavenly courts, and before
them accuse Christ's brethren of being clothed with the garments of blackness
and the defilement of sin. The last link of sympathy between Satan and the
heavenly world was broken. {DA
761.2}
Yet Satan was not then destroyed. The angels did not even
then understand all that was involved in the great controversy. The principles
at stake were to be more fully revealed. And for the sake of man, Satan's
existence must be continued. Man as well as angels must see the contrast
between the Prince of light and the prince of darkness. He must choose whom he
will serve. {DA 761.3}
In the opening of the great controversy, Satan had declared
that the law of God could not be obeyed, that justice was inconsistent with
mercy, and that, should the law be broken, it would be impossible for the
sinner to be pardoned. Every sin must meet its punishment, urged Satan; and if
God should remit the punishment of sin, He would not be a God of truth and
justice. When men broke the law of God, and defied His will, Satan exulted. It
was proved, he declared, that the law could not be obeyed; man could not be
forgiven. Because he, after his rebellion, had been banished from heaven, Satan
claimed that the human race must be forever shut out from God's favor. God
could not be just, he urged, and yet show mercy to the sinner. {DA 761.4}
But even as a sinner, man was in a different position from
that of Satan. Lucifer in heaven had sinned in the light of God's glory. To him
as to no other created being was given a revelation of God's love. [762]
Understanding the character of God, knowing His goodness, Satan chose to follow
his own selfish, independent will. This choice was final. There was no more
that God could do to save him. But man was deceived; his mind was darkened by
Satan's sophistry. The height and depth of the love of God he did not know. For
him there was hope in a knowledge of God's love. By beholding His character he might
be drawn back to God. {DA
761.5}
Through Jesus, God's mercy was manifested to men; but mercy
does not set aside justice. The law reveals the attributes of God's character,
and not a jot or tittle of it could be changed to meet man in his fallen condition.
God did not change His law, but He sacrificed Himself, in Christ, for man's
redemption. "God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto Himself."
2 Corinthians 5:19. {DA
762.1}
The law requires righteousness,—a righteous life,
a perfect character; and this man has not to give. He cannot meet the claims of
God's holy law. But Christ, coming to the earth as man, lived a holy life, and
developed a perfect character. These He offers as a free gift to all who will
receive them. His life stands for the life of men. Thus they have remission of
sins that are past, through the forbearance of God. More than this, Christ
imbues men with the attributes of God. He builds up the human character after
the similitude of the divine character, a goodly fabric of spiritual strength
and beauty. Thus the very righteousness of the law is fulfilled in the believer
in Christ. God can "be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in
Jesus." Romans 3:26. {DA
762.2}
God's love has been expressed in His justice no less than in
His mercy. Justice is the foundation of His throne, and the fruit of His love.
It had been Satan's purpose to divorce mercy from truth and justice. He sought
to prove that the righteousness of God's law is an enemy to peace. But Christ
shows that in God's plan they are indissolubly joined together; the one cannot
exist without the other. "Mercy and truth are met together; righteousness
and peace have kissed each other." Psalm 85:10. {DA 762.3}
By His life and His death, Christ proved that God's justice
did not destroy His mercy, but that sin could be forgiven, and that the law is
righteous, and can be perfectly obeyed. Satan's charges were refuted. God had
given man unmistakable evidence of His love. {DA 762.4}
Another deception was now to be brought forward. Satan
declared that mercy destroyed justice, that the death of Christ abrogated the
Father's law. Had it been possible for the law to be changed or abrogated, then
Christ need not have died. But to abrogate the law would [763] be to
immortalize transgression, and place the world under Satan's control. It was
because the law was changeless, because man could be saved only through
obedience to its precepts, that Jesus was lifted up on the cross. Yet the very
means by which Christ established the law Satan represented as destroying it.
Here will come the last conflict of the great controversy between Christ and
Satan. {DA 762.5}
That the law which was spoken by God's own voice is faulty,
that some specification has been set aside, is the claim which Satan now puts
forward. It is the last great deception that he will bring upon the world. He
needs not to assail the whole law; if he can lead men to disregard one precept,
his purpose is gained. For "whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet
offend in one point, he is guilty of all." James 2:10. By consenting to
break one precept, men are brought under Satan's power. By substituting human
law for God's law, Satan will seek to control the world. This work is foretold
in prophecy. Of the great apostate power which is the representative of Satan,
it is declared, "He shall speak great words against the Most High, and
shall wear out the saints of the Most High, and think to change times and laws:
and they shall be given into his hand." Daniel 7:25. {DA 763.1}
Men will surely set up their laws to counterwork the laws of
God. They will seek to compel the consciences of others, and in their zeal to
enforce these laws they will oppress their fellow men. {DA 763.2}
The warfare against God's law, which was begun in heaven,
will be continued until the end of time. Every man will be tested. Obedience or
disobedience is the question to be decided by the whole world. All will be
called to choose between the law of God and the laws of men. Here the dividing
line will be drawn. There will be but two classes. Every character will be
fully developed; and all will show whether they have chosen the side of loyalty
or that of rebellion. {DA
763.3}
Then the end will come. God will vindicate His law and
deliver His people. Satan and all who have joined him in rebellion will be cut
off. Sin and sinners will perish, root and branch, (Malachi 4:1),—Satan
the root, and his followers the branches. The word will be fulfilled to the
prince of evil, "Because thou hast set thine heart as the heart of God;
. . . I will destroy thee, O covering cherub, from the midst of the
stones of fire. . . . Thou shalt be a terror, and never shalt thou be
any more." Then "the wicked shall not be: yea, thou shalt diligently
consider his place, and it shall not be;" "they shall be as though
they had not been." Ezekiel 28:6-19; Psalm 37:10; Obadiah 16. [764]
{DA 763.4}
This is not an act of arbitrary power on the part of God.
The rejecters of His mercy reap that which they have sown. God is the fountain
of life; and when one chooses the service of sin, he separates from God, and
thus cuts himself off from life. He is "alienated from the life of
God." Christ says, "All they that hate Me love death." Ephesians
4:18; Proverbs 8:36. God gives them existence for a time that they may develop
their character and reveal their principles. This accomplished, they receive
the results of their own choice. By a life of rebellion, Satan and all who
unite with him place themselves so out of harmony with God that His very presence
is to them a consuming fire. The glory of Him who is love will destroy them. {DA 764.1}
At the beginning of the great controversy, the angels did
not understand this. Had Satan and his host then been left to reap the full
result of their sin, they would have perished; but it would not have been
apparent to heavenly beings that this was the inevitable result of sin. A doubt
of God's goodness would have remained in their minds as evil seed, to produce
its deadly fruit of sin and woe. {DA 764.2}
But not so when the great controversy shall be ended. Then,
the plan of redemption having been completed, the character of God is revealed
to all created intelligences. The precepts of His law are seen to be perfect
and immutable. Then sin has made manifest its nature, Satan his character. Then
the extermination of sin will vindicate God's love and establish His honor
before a universe of beings who delight to do His will, and in whose heart is
His law. {DA 764.3}
Well, then, might the angels rejoice as they looked upon the
Saviour's cross; for though they did not then understand all, they knew that
the destruction of sin and Satan was forever made certain, that the redemption
of man was assured, and that the universe was made eternally secure. Christ
Himself fully comprehended the results of the sacrifice made upon Calvary. To
all these He looked forward when upon the cross He cried out, "It is
finished." {DA 764.4}
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"In Joseph's Tomb"
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