Difference between revisions of "Pent-Up Judgment"
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Latest revision as of 19:30, 13 August 2012
After these things, I saw four  angels standing at the four corners of the earth, holding back the four winds  of the earth to prevent any wind from blowing on the land or on the sea or on  any tree. Then I saw another angel coming up from the east, having the seal of  the living God. He called out in a loud voice to the four angels who had been  given power to harm the land and the sea: "Do not harm the land or the sea  or the trees until we put a seal on the foreheads of the servants of our God."—Revelation  7:1-3.
  The scenes in the sixth chapter  are scenes of judgment, ending with the great day of the wrath of the Lamb—no  interval of blessedness between—no millennium before the great and dreadful  day. The seventh chapter is in vision after the sixth, but not necessarily in fulfilment;  for both in the Old Testament and New we find a vision running on to the  Advent, and then the next coming back and going over the same period for  another purpose—so that 'after these things' refers generally to the sequence  of the vision, not of the fulfilment.
  The seventh chapter, then, does  not take up the events at the close of the sixth. 'After these things' refers  simply to the order of vision, not of execution; that execution or fulfilment  may go back over the whole events of the previous chapter. Without, however,  attempting to determine this more minutely, we take the seventh chapter as  describing a time (1) of pent-up judgment; (2) of sealing; (3) of ingathering.
  I. Pent-up judgment. Righteousness produces judgment, and grace restrains it. Grace does not nullify or cancel judgment—it simply  suspends it. The history of our earth is one of suspended judgment. In the case  of every sin, righteousness calls for a sentence against it, and for the  execution of that sentence. The sinner who accepts the Substitute obtains  complete and immediate remission, by the transference of his guilt and sentence  to the Sin-bearer. He who refuses the Substitute braves the sentence, and takes  his risk of the vengeance. In his case the sentence is not immediately  executed; the wrath is treasured up; the judgment is pent up; the cup is  allowed to overflow. But sooner or later the vengeance comes. It may be long  pent up, but it comes at last. Of this judgment, we may say that it is—
  (1) SLOW. When it comes, it comes swiftly. But meanwhile it is slow  of foot—not rash, nor precipitate. This slowness often deludes the sinner.
  (2) SILENT. It makes no sign. The fermenting elements are noiseless.  There are often no thunderclouds, but a calm, blue sky.
  (3) SURE. It will not miss its mark, nor mistake its victim, nor  forget its time. Its slowness and silence contribute to its certainty.
  (4) TERRIBLE. The blow, when it comes, is overwhelming. The pent-up  torrent, when it breaks its barrier, carries all before it. The lightning comes  noiselessly—and irresistibly. So God's vengeance is infinitely dreadful. Who  can stand before it?
  The pent-up judgment for the  earth, or for a kingdom, is like the above. The storm gathers, but the four  angels hold it in, until it can be restrained no longer. Frequently it tries to  break out, but is restrained by the 'four angels standing on the four corners  of the earth, holding the four winds of the earth.' We hear of wars and rumours  of wars, and earthquakes in different places. These are the judgments breaking  through their barriers, and then forced back again. The storm is pent up. It  gets a little vent, as if one of the four angels had for a moment lost his  hold; and then it is restrained, for the time is not yet come. We are living in  a day of pent-up judgment—the fire ready to descend, the storm ready to burst  forth. How solemn to all! How startling to the sinner! How rousing to the  saint! The end of all things is at hand—be therefore sober, and watch unto prayer.
  II. The sealing. In the chapter before us it is a Jewish multitude that is  specially named as sealed; but as in verse third it is the 'servants of God'  that are said to be sealed, we may infer that by that expression both Gentile  and Jew are meant. The sealing seems (as in Ezekiel 4) to intimate exemption  from the earthly judgments of a particular time. I do not dwell on this further  than to point out God's care  for His own in days of trouble—as in Noah's  days, in Lot's days, in Ezekiel's days, in the time of Jerusalem's great siege. I would remind you  of the 91st Psalm also, which is specially written for evil days. It is true  that in general the good as well as the evil suffer in times of pestilence, or  war, or trial; but still it will be found that there is oftentimes alleviation  (sometimes an exemption) of the believers from the evils of the evil day.
  In all cases and times, God's  care for His own is abundantly manifest. He covers them with His feathers, and  under His wings He bids them hide. He is their shield and shield. As He  protected Israel in the day  of the slaughter of Egypt's  first-born, so does He still. In that day the blood was His seal set on Israel; and  other such seals He has for every evil day. He sends His angels to seal His  servants, that the evil may not come near them. Why are you so fearful, O you  of little faith? Trust in the Lord forever. Sealed and safe! Is not this  blessedness—whatever may be coming on the earth?
  III. The ingathering. It is not simply for temporal protection that God stays His  judgments—but for salvation. A time of pent-up judgment is a time of  'ingathering'. A time of judgment may also be so—but a time of 'suspended  judgment' still more so. For at such a time God is in earnest—in earnest in His  grace, in earnest in His righteousness. He is not slumbering nor sleeping. He  is urging us to repent, saying, O that they would hearken to my commandments!  Turn! Turn! Why will you die? He is yearning over us with his 'How shall I give  you up?' He is weeping over us with His 'O that you had known!' His patience is  salvation—and His patience is eternal life. He pities to the last. Fury is not in Him. Judgment is his 'strange' work.
  As such a time the gospel comes  with peculiar power. When we tell men that they are living under a fiery cloud  of 'suspended wrath'; when we cry aloud to them of coming doom and 'stored-up  vengeance'—we are approaching them with the strongest motive of fear. And when  we tell them of infinite love, of divine long-suffering, of the patience and  forbearance of that God who wills not that any should perish, but that all  should come to repentance, we approach them with the strongest argument that  can win a human heart. We entreat them to flee from the wrath to come. We point  them to the cross, and ask them to look and be healed. We beseech them, in Christ's stead, to be reconciled to God; for now is the  accepted time—the day of vengeance is at hand!

