
Chapter 37: Deliverance of the
Saints
It was at midnight that God chose to
deliver his people. As the wicked were mocking around them, suddenly the sun
appeared, shining in his strength, and the moon stood still. The wicked beheld
the scene with amazement. Signs and wonders followed in quick succession.
Everything seemed turned out of its natural course. The saints beheld the tokens
of their deliverance with solemn joy.
The streams ceased to flow. Dark, heavy clouds came up,
and clashed against each other. But there was one clear place of settled glory,
from whence came the voice of God, like many waters, which shook the heavens and
the earth. There was a mighty earthquake. The graves were shaken open, and those
who had died in faith under the third angel's message, keeping the Sabbath, came
forth from their dusty beds, glorified, to hear the covenant of peace that God
was to make with those who had kept his law.
The sky opened and shut, and was in commotion. The
mountains shook like a reed in the wind, and cast out ragged rocks all around.
The sea boiled like a pot, and cast out stones upon the land. And as God spake
the day and hour of Jesus' coming, and delivered the everlasting covenant to his
people, he spake one sentence, and then paused, while the words were rolling
through the earth. The Israel of God stood with their eyes fixed upwards,
listening to the words as they came from the mouth of Jehovah, and rolled
through the earth like peals of loudest thunder. It was awfully solemn. At the
end of every sentence the saints shouted, Glory! Hallelujah! Their countenances
were lighted up with the glory of God; and they shone with the glory as did
Moses' face when he came down from Sinai. The wicked could not look on them for
the glory. And when the never-ending blessing was pronounced on those who had
honored God, in keeping his Sabbath holy, there was a mighty shout of victory
over the beast, and over his image.
Then commenced the jubilee, when the land should rest. I
saw the pious slave rise in triumph and victory, and shake off the chains that
bound him, while his wicked master was in confusion, and knew not what to do;
for the wicked could not understand the words of the voice of God. Soon appeared
the great white cloud. On it sat the Son of man.
This cloud when it first appeared in the distance, looked
very small. The angel said that it was the sign of the Son of man. And as the
cloud approached nearer to the earth, we could behold the excellent glory and
majesty of Jesus as he rode forth to conquer. A holy retinue of angels, with
their bright, glittering crowns upon their heads, escorted him on his way. No
language can describe the glory of the scene. The living cloud of majesty, and
unsurpassed glory, came still nearer, and we could clearly behold the lovely
person of Jesus. He did not wear a crown of thorns; but a crown of glory decked
his holy brow. Upon his vesture and thigh was a name written - KING OF KINGS
AND LORD OF LORDS. His eyes were as a flame of fire, his feet had the
appearance of fine brass, and his voice sounded like many musical instruments.
His countenance was as bright as the noon-day sun. The earth trembled before
him, and the heavens departed as a scroll when it is rolled together, and every
mountain and island were moved out of their places. And the kings of the earth,
and the great men, and the rich men, and the chief captains, and the mighty men,
and every bondman, and every freeman, hid themselves in the dens and in the
rocks of the mountains. And said to the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, and
hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of
the Lamb: for the great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to
stand?
Those who a little before would have destroyed God's
faithful children from the earth, had to witness the glory of God which rested
upon them. They had seen them glorified. And amid all the terrible scenes they
had heard the voices of the saints in joyful strains, saying, Lo, this is our
God, we have waited for him, and he will save us. The earth mightily shook as
the voice of the Son of God called forth the sleeping saints. They responded to
the call, and came forth clothed with glorious immortality, crying, Victory!
victory! over death and the grave. O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where
is thy victory? Then the living saints, and the resurrected ones, raised their
voices in a long, transporting shout of victory. Those sickly bodies that had
gone down into the grave came up in immortal health and vigor. The living saints
were changed in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, and caught up with the
resurrected ones, and together they meet their Lord in the air. O what a
glorious meeting. Friends whom death had separated, were united, never more to
part.
On either side of the cloudy chariot were wings, and
beneath it were living wheels; and as the cloudy chariot rolled upward, the
wheels cried, Holy, and the wings, as they moved, cried, Holy, and the retinue
of holy angels around the cloud cried, Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty. And
the saints in the cloud cried, Glory, Alleluia. And the chariot rolled upward to
the holy city. Before entering the holy city, the saints were arranged in a
perfect square, with Jesus in the midst. He was head and shoulders high above
the saints, and head and shoulders above the angels. His majestic form, and
lovely countenance, could be seen by all in the square.
See Revelation 15:1-4, 6:12-17.
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