The New Creation
Behold, I make all things new.
Rev. 21:5.
1. What a strange scene is here opened to our view! How remote
from all our natural apprehensions! Not a glimpse of what is here revealed was
ever seen in the heathen world. Not only the modern, barbarous, uncivilized
Heathens have not the least conception of it; but it was equally unknown to the
refined, polished Heathens of ancient Greece and Rome. And it is almost as
little thought of or understood by the generality of Christians: I mean, not
barely those that are nominally such, that have the form of godliness without
the power; but even those that in a measure fear God, and study to work
righteousness.
2. It must be allowed that after all the researches we can make,
still our knowledge of the great truth which is delivered to us in these words
is exceedingly short and imperfect. As this is a point of mere revelation,
beyond the reach of all our natural faculties, we cannot penetrate far into it,
nor form any adequate conception of it. But it may be an encouragement to those
who have in any degree tasted of the powers of the world to come to go as far as
we can go, interpreting Scripture by Scripture, according to the analogy of
faith.
3. The Apostle, caught up in the visions of God, tells us in the
first verse of the chapter, “I saw a new heaven and a new earth;” and adds,
(Rev. 21:5, ) “He that sat upon the throne said,”
(I believe the only words which he is said to utter throughout the whole book,)
“Behold, I make all things new.”
4. Very many commentators entertain a strange opinion that this
relates only to the present state of things, and gravely tell us that the words
are to be referred to the flourishing state of the Church, which commenced after
the heathen persecutions. Nay, some of them have discovered that all which the
Apostle speaks concerning the “new heaven and the new earth” was fulfilled when
Constantine the Great poured in riches and honours upon the Christians. What a
miserable way is this of making void the whole counsel of God, with regard to
all that grand chain of events, in reference to his Church, yea, and to all
mankind, from the time that John was in Patmos unto the end of the world! Nay,
the line of this prophecy reaches farther still: It does not end with the
present world, but shows us the things that will come to pass when this world is
no more. For,
5. Thus saith the Creator and Governor of the universe: “Behold,
I make all things new;” — all which are included in that expression of the
Apostle, “A new heaven and a new earth.” A new heaven: the original word
in Genesis (Gen. 1) is in the plural number. And indeed this is
the constant language of Scripture — not heaven, but
heavens.
Accordingly, the ancient Jewish writers are accustomed to reckon three heavens;
in conformity to which, the Apostle Paul speaks of his being “caught up into the
third heaven.” It is this, the third heaven, which is usually supposed to be the
more immediate residence of God; so far as any residence can be ascribed to his
omnipresent Spirit, who pervades and fills the whole universe. It is here (if we
speak after the manner of men) that the Lord sitteth upon his throne, surrounded
by angels and archangels, and by all his flaming ministers.
6. We cannot think that this heaven will undergo any change, any
more than its Great Inhabitant. Surely this palace of the Most High was the same
from eternity, and will be, world without end. Only the inferior heavens are
liable to change; the highest of which we usually call the starry heaven. This,
St. Peter informs us, “is reserved unto fire, against the day of judgment and
destruction of ungodly men.” In that day, “being on fire,” it shall, first,
shrivel as a parchment scroll;” then it shall “be dissolved, and shall pass away
with a great noise;” lastly, it shall “flee from the face of Him that sitteth on
the throne, and there shall be found no place for it.”
7. At the same time “the stars shall fall from heaven;” the
secret chain being broken which had retained them in their several orbits from
the foundation of the world. In the meanwhile the lower or sublunary heaven,
with the elements (or principles that compose it,) “shall melt with fervent
heat;” while “the earth with the works that are therein, shall be burned up.”
This is the introduction to a far nobler state of things, such as it has not yet
entered into the heart of men to conceive, — the universal restoration, which is
to succeed the universal destruction. For “we look,” says the Apostle, “for new
heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness.” (2 Pet. 3:7.)
8. One considerable difference there will undoubtedly be in the
starry heaven, when it is created anew: There will be no blazing stars, no
comets there. Whether those horrid, eccentric orbs are half-formed planets, in a
chaotic state (I speak on the supposition of a plurality of worlds;) or such as
have undergone their general conflagration, they will certainly have no place in
the new heaven, where all will be exact order and harmony. There may be many
other differences between the heaven that now is and that which will be after
the renovation: But they are above our apprehension: We must leave eternity to
explain them.
9. We may more easily conceive the changes which will be wrought
in the lower heaven, in the region of the air. It will be no more torn by
hurricanes, or agitated by furious storms, or destructive tempests. Pernicious
or terrifying meteors will have no more place therein. We shall have no more
occasion to say,
There like a trumpet, loud and strong, Thy thunder shakes
our coast; While the red lightnings wave along, The banners of thy
host!
No: All will be then light, fair, serene; a lively picture of
the eternal day.
10. All the elements (taking that word in the common sense, for
the principles of which all natural beings are compounded) will be new indeed;
entirely changed as to their qualities, although not as to their nature. Fire is
at present the general destroyer of all things under the sun; dissolving all
things that come within the sphere of its action, and reducing them to their
primitive atoms. But no sooner will it have performed its last great office of
destroying the heavens and the earth; (whether you mean thereby one system only,
or the whole fabric of the universe; the difference between one and millions of
worlds being nothing before the great Creator;) when, I say, it has done this,
the destructions wrought by fire will come to a perpetual end. It will destroy
no more: it will consume no more: it will forget its power to burn, — which it
possesses only during the present state of things, — and be as harmless in the
new heavens and earth as it is now in the bodies of men and other animals, and
the substance of trees and flowers; in all which (as late experiments show)
large quantities of ethereal fire are lodged; if it be not rather an essential
component part of every material being under the sun. But it will probably
retain its vivifying power, though divested of its power to destroy.
11. It has been already observed that the calm, placid air will
be no more disturbed by storms and tempests. There will be no more meteors, with
their horrid glare, affrighting the poor children of men. May we not add,
(though at first it may sound like a paradox,) that there will be no more rain?
It is observable that there was none in Paradise; a circumstance which Moses
particularly mentions: (Gen. 2:5, 6:) “The Lord God had not caused it to rain upon the
earth. — But there went up a mist from the earth,” which then covered up the
abyss of waters, “and watered the whole face of the ground,” with moisture
sufficient for all the purposes of vegetation. We have all reason to believe
that the case will be the same when paradise is restored. Consequently there
will be no more clouds or fogs; but one bright, refulgent day. Much less will
there be any poisonous damps, or pestilential blasts. There will be no Sirocco
in Italy; no parching or suffocating winds in Arabia; no keen north-east winds
in our own country,
Shattering the graceful locks of yon fair trees;
but only pleasing, healthful breezes,
Fanning the earth
with odoriferous wings.
12. But what change will the element of water undergo when all
things are made new! It will be, in every part of the world, clear and limpid;
pure from all unpleasing or unhealthful mixtures; rising here and there in
crystal fountains, to refresh and adorn the earth “with liquid lapse of
murmuring stream.” For, undoubtedly, as there were in Paradise, there will be
various rivers gently gliding along, for the use and pleasure of both man and
beast. But the inspired writer has expressly declared, “there will be no more
sea.” (Rev. 21:1.) We have every reason to believe, that
at the beginning of the world, when God said, “Let the waters under the heaven
be gathered together unto one place, and let the dry land appear,” (Gen. 1:9, ) the dry land spread over the face of the
water, and covered it on every side. And so it seems to have done, till, in
order to the general deluge which God had determined to bring upon the earth at
once, “the windows of heaven were opened, and the fountains of the great deep
broken up.” But the sea will then retire within its primitive bounds, and appear
on the surface of the earth no more. For either, indeed, will there be any more
need of the sea. For either as the ancient Poet supposes,
Omnis feret omnia
tellus,
— every part of the earth will naturally produce whatever its
inhabitants want, — or all mankind will procure what the whole earth affords by
a much easier and readier conveyance. For all the inhabitants of the earth, our
Lord informs us, will then be isaggeloi, — equal to angels; on a level with them
in swiftness, as well as strength; so that they can quick as thought, transport
themselves, or whatever they want, from one side of the globe to the other.
13. But it seems, a greater change will be wrought in the earth,
than even in the air and water. Not that I can believe that wonderful discovery
of Jacob Behmen, which many so eagerly contend for; that the earth itself with
all its furniture and inhabitants, will then be transparent as glass. There does
not seem to be the least foundation for this, either in Scripture or reason.
Surely not in Scripture: I know not one text in the Old or New Testament which
affirms any such thing. Certainly it cannot be inferred from that text in the
Revelation: (Rev. 4:6:), “And before the
throne there was a sea of glass, like unto crystal.” And yet, if I mistake not,
this is the chief, if not the only Scripture which has been urged in favour of
this opinion! Neither can I conceive that it has any foundation in reason. It
has indeed been warmly alleged, that all things would be far more beautiful if
they were quite transparent. But I cannot apprehend this: Yea, I apprehend quite
the contrary. Suppose every part of a human body were made transparent as
crystal, would it appear more beautiful than it does now? Nay, rather it would
shock us above measure. The surface of the body, and in particular “the human
face divine,” is undoubtedly one of the most beautiful objects that can be found
under heaven; but could you look through the rosy cheek, the smooth, fair
forehead, or the rising bosom, and distinctly see all that lies within, you
would turn away from it with loathing and horror!
14. Let us next take a view of those changes which we may
reasonably suppose will then take place in the earth. It will no more be bound
up with intense cold, nor parched up with extreme heat; but will have such a
temperature as will be most conducive to its fruitfulness. If, in order to
punish its inhabitants, God did of old
Bid his angels turn askance This oblique
lobe,
thereby occasioning violent cold on one part, and violent heat
on the other; he will, undoubtedly, then order them to restore it to its
original position: So that there will be a final end, on the one hand, of the
burning heat which makes some parts of it scarce habitable; and, on the other
of
The
rage of Arctos and eternal frost.
15. And it will then contain no jarring or destructive
principles within its own bosom. It will no more have any of those violent
convulsions in its own bowels. It will no more be shaken or torn asunder by the
impetuous force of earthquakes; and will, therefore need neither Vesuvius nor
Etna, nor any burning mountains to prevent them. There will be no more horrid
rocks or frightful precipices; no wild deserts, or barren sands; no impassable
morasses, or unfruitful bogs, to swallow up the unwary traveller. There will,
doubtless, be inequalities on the surface of the earth, which are not blemishes,
but beauties. For though I will not affirm, that
Earth hath this
variety from heaven, Of pleasure situate in hill and dale;
yet I cannot think gently-rising hills will be any defect, but
an ornament, of the new-made earth. And doubtless we shall then likewise have
occasion to say, —
Lo, there his wondrous skill arrays The fields in
cheerful green! A thousand herbs his hand displays, A thousand flower
between!
16. And what will the general produce of the earth be? Not
thorns, briers, or thistles; not any useless or fetid weed; not any poisonous,
hurtful, or unpleasant plant; but every one that can be conducive, in anywise,
either to our use or pleasure. How far beyond all that the most lively
imagination is now able to conceive! We shall no more regret the loss of the
terrestrial Paradise, or sigh at that well-devised description of our great
Poet: —
Then shall this mount
Of Paradise, by might of waves, be moved Out of his place,
push’d by the horned flood, With all its verdure spoil’d and trees adrift, Down the great river
to the opening gulf, And there take root, an island salt and bare!
For all the earth shall then be a more beautiful Paradise than
Adam ever saw.
17. Such will be the state of the new earth with regard to the
meaner, the inanimate, parts of it. But great as this change will be, it is
little, it is nothing, in comparison of that which will then take place
throughout all animated nature. In the living part of the creation were seen the
most deplorable effects of Adam’s apostasy. The whole animated creation,
whatever has life, from leviathan to the smallest mite, was thereby made subject
to such vanity, as the inanimate creatures could not be. They were subject to
that fell monster, DEATH, the conqueror of all that breathe. They were made
subject to its fore-runner, pain, in its ten thousand forms; although “God made
not death, neither hath he pleasure in the death of any living.” How many
millions of creatures in the sea, in the air, and on every part of the earth,
can now no otherwise preserve their own lives, than by taking away the lives of
others; by tearing in pieces and devouring their poor, innocent, unresisting
fellow-creatures! Miserable lot of such innumerable multitudes, who,
insignificant as they seem, are the offspring of one common Father; the
creatures of the same God of love! It is probable not only two-thirds of the
animal creation, but ninety-nine parts of a hundred, are under a necessity of
destroying others in order to preserve their own life! But it shall not always
be so. He that sitteth upon the throne will soon change the face of all things,
and give a demonstrative proof to all his creatures that “his mercy is over all
his works.” The horrid state of things which at present obtains, will soon be at
an end. On the new earth, no creature will kill, or hurt, or give pain to any
other. The scorpion will have no poisonous sting; the adder, no venomous teeth.
The lion will have no claws to tear the lamb; no teeth to grind his flesh and
bones. Nay, no creature, no beast, bird, or fish, will have any inclination to
hurt any other; for cruelty will be far away, and savageness and fierceness be
forgotten. So that violence shall be heard no more, neither wasting or
destruction seen on the face of the earth. “The wolf shall dwell with the lamb,”
(the words may be literally as well as figuratively understood,) “and the
leopard shall lie down with the kid: They shall not hurt or destroy,” from the
rising up of the sun, to the going down of the same.
18. But the most glorious of all will be the change which then
will take place on the poor, sinful, miserable children of men. These had fallen
in many respects, as from a greater height, so into a lower depth, than any
other part of the creation. But they shall “hear a great voice out of heaven,
saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men: And he will dwell with them,
and they shall be his people, and God himself shall be their God.” (Rev. 21:3, 4.) Hence will arise an unmixed state
of holiness and happiness far superior to that which Adam enjoyed in Paradise.
In how beautiful a manner is this described by the Apostle: “God shall wipe away
all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor
crying, neither shall there be any more pain: For the former things are done
away!” As there will be no more death, and no more pain or sickness preparatory
thereto; as there will be no more grieving for, or parting with, friends; so
there will be no more sorrow or crying. Nay, but there will be a greater
deliverance than all this; for there will be no more sin. And, to crown all,
there will be a deep, an intimate, an uninterrupted union with God; a constant
communion with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ, through the Spirit; a
continual enjoyment of the Three-One God, and of all the creatures in him!