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December 9, 1897 AMS December 9, 1897, page 749

“Editorial” American Sentinel 12, 48, p. 753. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753

ATJ

CONSCIENCE is made to direct man, and not man to direct conscience. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.1

“IF the Son therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed.” You will be free seven days in the week. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.2

WHEN the church allies herself with an earthly power, she demonstrates that as a church she is fatally weak. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.3

HUMAN law cannot be “based upon” God’s law, unless it can be that human law rises higher than the divine law. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.4

THE principle thing that is learned by the children from the religion that is taught in the public schools, is irreverence. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.5

WHEN the church sets out to reform the world, the usual result is that the world reforms the church. Not the world, but individuals, are to be reformed. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.6

IF this be a Christian nation, why is not citizenship in this country synonymous with Christianity? and why may one not depend upon such citizenship for salvation? AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.7

TO say that a thing which is proper and right on one day of the week can be a crime because done on some other day, is to say that there is no distinction between crime and sin. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.8

HUMAN government and divine government are two vastly different things, both in nature and purpose: and it is a great mistake to look upon the former as supplying the place, in this world, of the latter. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.9

HUMAN government demands the prompt execution of legal penalties upon the transgressor of the law. God’s government names death as the penalty for every violation of law. God’s government provides mercy for every offender: human government demand’s only justice without mercy. Without mercy for all transgressors, God’s government would fail: and with mercy for all transgressors, human government would not survive a day. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.10

“The Letter Killeth” American Sentinel 12, 48, pp. 753, 754. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753

ATJ

“THE letter killeth, but the Spirit giveth life.” 2 Corinthians 3:6. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.1

This is a plain statement of the inspired Word, and ought to be believed by every Christian, at least. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.2

And that it is a fact, and one which is capable of practical illustration in human affairs, can, we think, be demonstrated to all candid people, whether Christians or not. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.3

It is just the danger that we shall have a practical illustration of it in this government, that now demands the attention of every American citizen. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.4

What letter is it that killeth? The verse in which the words occur says that it is the letter of the New Testament, and there is also a Spirit; and it is said that the “Spirit giveth life.” AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.5

The apostle in this chapter of his epistle to the Corinthians speaks of the ministration of the letter, and the ministration of the Spirit, and says (verse 6) that Christians had not been made ministers of the letter, but of the Spirit. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.6

In the following verse he speaks of the “ministration of death”—the ministration of the letter, which “killeth”—as being that which was “written and engraven in stones” in the days of the children of Israel. That was the law of God—the ten commandments. AMS December 9, 1897, page 753.7

In that law there is death, but no life, for the sinner; and this truth embraces every individual on the earth. AMS December 9, 1897, page 754.1

Yet that law is an essential part of God’s government. It is the standard of righteousness, and could not be altered, even to save the life of the Son of God. For it was the penalty of the violation of that law which the Son of God paid in man’s behalf, upon the cross. AMS December 9, 1897, page 754.2

The ten commandments are the letter of righteousness; but they only condemn the sinner to death. “It is the Spirit that quickeneth,” or giveth life. AMS December 9, 1897, page 754.3

Now it is proposed by a very large part of the religious population of this country, to “put God into the Constitution,” by inserting in that document—which is the fundamental law of the land—a clause recognizing God as the ruler of the nations, and making his Word the basis of national and State legislation. This change in the basis of our government has been attempt several times already, and is about to be attempted again. AMS December 9, 1897, page 754.4

This, then, if it succeeds, will be to put into the fundamental law of the land the letter of righteousness. But inseparable from this will be the terribly significant fact,—“the letter killeth.” AMS December 9, 1897, page 754.5

Let us see. The letter of righteousness—the decalogue—demands the death penalty for every violation of it. This is the penalty which God himself has fixed, and it can no more be separated from his law than God himself can be. AMS December 9, 1897, page 754.6

But this law, with its death penalty, all people, even the best, are prone to violate. Since this is so, therefore, how long will it be after the letter of righteousness has been put into the fundamental law of the land, before every man, woman, and child in the land will be under sentence of death? AMS December 9, 1897, page 754.7

God’s government provides a means by which this death sentence is suspended, and an opportunity given the transgressor to escape it altogether; but human governments cannot proceed upon this basis. Their laws must be executed; and the only delay that can intervene is that necessary to establish the guilt of the violator. Everybody knows that this is the plan upon which all human governments are, and must be conducted. AMS December 9, 1897, page 754.8

What, then, do these religious people want by their scheme to “put God in the Constitution”? Do they want to kill off all the people of the country, themselves included? This is the only logical result which the success of their scheme could have. AMS December 9, 1897, page 754.9

No; it cannot be that they want to put themselves under sentence of death; for no “reformer,” even of the most fanatical sort, ever wanted to reform himself in this way. It will be necessary to exempt themselves, and all who are willing to be reformed to their standard and scheme of righteousness. But they will have enough appreciation of the logic of the situation to bring the penalty upon such as stand out against it; and persecution, imprisonment,—yes, and even death, will assuredly be the lot of some. In this, the promoters of the like scheme have never failed in the past. AMS December 9, 1897, page 754.10

Civil governments can appropriate the forms of righteousness, and the forms only. And whenever this is done, it becomes literally and visibly true that “the letter killeth.” But life, not death, is the object of government; and only the government of God can provide the Spirit which “is life, because of righteousness.” AMS December 9, 1897, page 754.11