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Steps to
Life
WEEKLY
# 20
The Thousand
Year Reign of the Saved
Dear Friend,
In our lesson
today we will be looking at some interesting verses in Jeremiah.
There we find a very strange picture of this earth. In vision Jeremiah
sees an empty, dark earth. The cities are broken down, the people
are gone, and even the birds have fled.
What does this
strange dirge mean? Is it a prophecy of what will happen to this
earth at the end of time? It reminds me of the following account
of a visit to an abandoned mining town.
***
Ghost Town
"One day
I paid a visit to an abandoned mining town in Nevada near the California
line. Around the town were great heaps of ore and refuse at the
forsaken shafts. Through the town ran one broad street, flanked
by the stores with their typical high board fronts. It was weird
and almost uncanny to walk through the silent place and try to picture
it as it must have been when it was a thriving, prosperous, mining
town. Grass was now growing on the street and between the planks
of the boardwalks in front of the shops and stores. The signs which
told of boardinghouse, meat shop, drug store, saloon, and bank were
still there; but what they had advertised had long since vanished.
"On each
side of the town stood a church, as empty and silent as the saloons
and gambling dens whose evil influence they had sought to counteract.
Only the cemetery was inhabited, and its inhabitants were unable
to speak of the life they had once known in that now silent place.
I thought of
the ambitions, the joys and sorrows, the hatreds and the affections,
which once had surged in the hearts of those who dwelt there. What
now had become of that population? Not all of them were dead, for
the town had been abandoned only a few years. But all of them were
gone elsewhere. What once in this town had engrossed their interests
and desires meant nothing to them now. Their life and their interests
were elsewhere.
"To one
familiar with the sayings of Christ about His second advent, this
silent, empty, and deserted town spoke of the abandonments and evacuation
and separations of the last great Day. It seemed to be a perfect
picture of how in that great Day all the values of this world will
lose their significance, as meaningless as the empty shops and untenanted
shanties of the mining town, and how all that which now engages
our thought and our energy, and is the object of our desire, will
become as nothing."
What will it
be like after Jesus comes? What is the millennium, and when does
it begin? Where will the righteous be during that time? What is
the "bottomless pit" of Revelation 20 where Satan will
be bound to during this time?
These questions
and others are answered in the Bible. Today's lesson helps us to
see the sequence of events that will take place as the history of
this sinful earth comes to a close.
How will Satan
spend his time during the thousand years when he is bound? There
won't be much to do in a bottomless pit. There will be no one to
tempt, no human beings to harass. He will have no effective way
of fighting God's kingdom. What will occupy his time? The only thing
he will be able to do is think. With time weighing heavily upon
him and nothing to do, the memory of his cruelty and the misery
he has created will certainly overwhelm his thinking. It will be
too late for him to repent and undo the atrocities that he has instigated.
The following
story is about a man who, after living a life of crime, was suddenly
given time, lots of time, to think. Fortunately, for him, it was
not too late to change.
***
Harry Orchard
Adapted from
"Harry Orchard The Man God Made Again" An Autobiography.
A loud, official
knock sounded at the door of the hotel room. The sheriff stood outside.
"Orchard, you're under arrest," he stated.
Shortly, Harry
Orchard found himself in the county jail. That day marked the end
of a long career in organized crime.
Life began for
him in 1866 on a farm near Toronto, Canada. Every Sunday he was
sent to church. By the age of 22 he married a sweet Scottish lassie
and together they worked to establish their home. It was a happy
home and all seemed to be going well. Life was off to a good start.
After four or
five years of marriage, however, plagued by debt, Harry began taking
steps that led him down the wrong path. First it was an occasional
drink and a game of cards. Next came frequent gambling and many
nights away from home. Little dishonesties crept into his business
practices.
One winter day
Harry and his wife went to visit an uncle who was a minister. They
intended to stay a day or two, but an unexpected blizzard snowed
them in for two weeks. During this time God spoke to his heart,
and Harry gave his heart to Jesus. He vowed to turn his back on
the world and live for God. Peace returned to their home.
Unfortunately,
Satan was there to destroy that decision. Back home, Harry had a
court case pending where he had to face a previous dishonest transaction
in his business. He was determined to confess the whole thing and
make it right, but at the moment of truth he weakened and covered
the whole affair with lies.
His vow to God
was broken, his new Christian experience was gone. From then on
Harry plunged deeper and deeper into sin. Desperate for money, Harry
set fire to his business, collected the insurance, then skipped
the country with a friend's wife.
Alone before
long, he eventually moved to Idaho and began working in the mines
in 1899. Those were the days of the "wild, woolly west."
Crime was prevalent, and labor unions ruled the country with a reign
of terror. At first, Orchard despised the ruthless tactics used
by the unions. Later, however, he became convinced that their cause
was justified. The cruelty used by officials who were sent in to
correct the situation enraged him. He didn't understand that two
wrongs do not make a right.
He gave himself
over to getting revenge. For years he was a skillful and willing
tool for the leaders of the labor unions who were anxious to remove
any man who stood in their way. For a price, he became guilty of
the blood of scores of innocent people.
The day of reckoning
finally came. After taking the life of former Governor Frank Steunenberg
of Idaho, he found himself for the first time behind bars. It was
a jarring experience. He felt like a caged animal. Deprived of his
freedom he had time to do something that he hadn't done for years.
He had time to think. In fact, he had nothing to do but think. As
he lay in his cell, the dreadful deeds of the past forced their
way into his consciousness. Beginning with his boyhood, each scene
marched through his mind. As he reflected, conviction and remorse
began to take hold of him. Desperately he tried to fight these feelings
but to no avail. For weeks the struggle continued. Nights passed
where he was unable to close his eyes all night due to the thoughts
that chased each other wildly through his mind.
After three
long weeks in the local county jail, he was moved to the penitentiary
at Boise for "safekeeping." The struggle in his mind intensified.
He was placed in solitary confinement. His meals were handed to
him in silence. For ten days he was not permitted to communicate
with anyone in any way. This angered him, but here again there was
nothing to do but think without interruption.
Try as he would
he could not get away from those terrible scenes that seemed to
haunt him. He was not deeply concerned with the charges that were
being brought against him, for though he was guilty, he knew it
would not be difficult for the labor union leaders to build an alibi
to acquit him. He also knew that any money needed to buy his freedom
would be used.
It was the eternal
side of life that troubled him now. He often had boasted that he
did not believe in God, but deep in his secret heart he believed
there was a God and that he must face Him. Alone and imprisoned,
he finally wondered it he could ever make his peace with God.
As he realized
how terrible his life had been, the guilt pressed him down with
a weight that seemed to be more than he could bear. The devil harassed
him with the thought that he had gone too far and that God would
not listen to his cry. Suicide was an appealing thought until he
would realize that he was not ready to die.
The thought
came forcibly to his mind that if he would frankly confess his terrible
deeds, God might still forgive him. Then the seriousness of his
crimes would plague him again and banish the possibility of forgiveness
from his mind.
Days and weeks
passed with this towering question ever on his mind. At times he
thought he would fight it out in court until acquitted and then
change his life and seek God's mercy and forgiveness, but this plan
brought nothing but darkness. Only one course of action brought
him the tiniest ray of hope to make a full confession regardless
of the consequences.
After months
of deliberating, he virtually came to this decision. Then he would
think that he could never go through with it. The thought of the
shock it would be to the world and the monster that he would be
pictured as, were appalling to him. He felt that he could make public
his confession only if he could receive God's forgiveness and then
die. He wanted the earth to swallow him up so that he would never
have to look upon the face of man again.
The mental agony
was terrible. The one thing that overshadowed all others and made
the rest sink into insignificance was the desire first of all to
make his peace with God. When he surrendered, his cold, hard heart
began to melt, and the first real tears in years came to his eyes.
What a relief they were! That night he made a solemn vow to confess
to all men the terrible sins of his evil life. The following morning
he began to write out his awful confession which he later gave to
the world from the witness stand.
When the trial
came, the labor union leaders were there to prove his testimony
false since it laid bare their own criminal plans and actions. Lawyers
were hired to confuse him and prove his story false. Throughout
the grueling days of cross examination, he clung to God to help
him to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth,
though he knew that his plea of guilty carried with it nothing but
the death sentence. When the lawyers finished cross-examining him,
they were constrained to express their amazement at the consistency
of his long sordid story. When he was finished, he was sentenced
to be hanged. But in his heart there was peace, for now he knew
he was forgiven and had become a new creature in Christ Jesus.
Not long after
being returned to the penitentiary, he heard that his sentence was
being commuted from a death sentence to a sentence of life imprisonment.
As he faced the thought of life imprisonment, he felt overwhelmed.
Dying seemed easier than living. Again he struggled as he learned
to submit to the will of God for him.
Life was not
easy in the prison, but he determined by the grace of God to make
the best of it. Day by day he went to his Saviour for the help that
he needed in struggling with the nature and habits that had controlled
him for so long.
God worked miraculously
to change him. A chaplain proved to be a valuable spiritual counselor
to him and he eventually had the joyous privilege of following Christ's
example of being baptized. He saw a touching revelation of the love
of God when Julian Steunenberg, the son of the former governor whom
Orchard had murdered, came to see him to tell him that he and his
mother had forgiven him and wanted only for him to turn to God for
forgiveness and the salvation of his soul.
For nearly fifty
years Orchard walked the grounds and halls of prison. He made himself
as useful as he could and became a financial asset instead of a
burden to the state. At his death his one expressed wish to be buried
outside of the penitentiary was granted to him.
In his personal
testimony he states, "Were I to live a thousand years, and
had to spend every one of them in prison, I would still say that
I am glad in my heart that I burned all the bridges behind me when
I turned my back upon the old life of sin that dragged me down to
the committing of such terrible crimes."
By the time
of his death at the age of eighty-eight, the hardened expression
and shifty eyes of the criminal that had first entered the prison
had been changed. The lines of his face seemed to be etched with
kindness and love. A gentleness seemed to radiate from his presence.
God had re-made him.
***
It is helpful
to know the answers to questions about the millennium, but the most
important questions are, "Am I ready for Jesus' coming? Is
my heart right before God?" The answer to these questions will
determine where each of us will be, not only during the millennium,
but also throughout eternity. May God be with you as you seek daily
to know that there is nothing between your soul and the Saviour.
With Love,
From your friends
at Steps to Life
Taken from
Macartney's Illustrations pg. 322.
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