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Nuzul-I-Isa: The Second Coming of Jesus Christ
Nuzul-I-Isa:
The Second Coming of Jesus Christ
by John Gilchrist
CONTENT
1. The Return of Jesus in the Bible
2. Islam and the Descension of Jesus
3. The Implications of the Second Coming
4. How Jesus Will be Identified on His Return
5. The Present Status of Jesus in Heaven
6. The Purpose of His First Coming to Earth
7. When the Lord Jesus is Revealed from Heaven
It is not every day that one sees a man being lifted from the earth
to heaven with the assurance that he will return centuries later
to stand on the earth again. Such an event must surely demand the
attention of those who profess to believe that it will occur, and
all the more so when the world's two greatest religions, whose
adherents jointly number half of those who dwell on the earth,
both make this very profession about the same man. Christianity
and Islam both hold to the firm conviction that Jesus Christ,
who lived in the land of Israel nearly twenty centuries ago, was
raised alive to heaven and will return to earth in the fulness
of time. No one can regard such a belief purely as a tenet of
each respective faith. The implications are so profound that the
subject must be studied further.
It is universally believed, in both the Christian and the Muslim
worlds, that Jesus will come again to this world at the end of the
age. Although the two religions differ in their estimate of how he
shall appear and what he is due to accomplish when he returns, they
both unanimously teach that he will return from the heavenly places
heralding the climax of human history. It is surely incumbent,
therefore, on every Christian and Muslim, to analyse this great
anticipated event and to discover the real meaning and purpose of
his advent and to simultaneously come to know the true identity
and character of the central figure in what will surely be one of
the greatest spectacles of history.
We propose to make a brief study of both the Christian and
Islamic teachings about the return of Jesus Christ from heaven
and will then press on to examine the implications of this
great event and the real identity of the one whose advent will
interrupt the course of human history and bring it to a speedy
conclusion.
1. THE RETURN OF JESUS IN THE BIBLE.
One of the great themes of the Christian Scriptures is the
return of Jesus to earth at the end of the age. The ultimate
glory of the Messiah, God's Supremely Anointed One, was
foretold by many of the prophets who went before him and the
Jewish Scriptures are replete with predictions about his eternal
reign. So likewise early Christian writers dwelt much on this
theme. It is our purpose, however, to begin by examining the
words of Jesus himself on this subject to see what he, the focal
point of this great drama which is yet to unfold, taught and
believed about his coming return to earth.
On the last night that he was alive before the end of his
natural life on earth, he sat with his disciples and, in a long
discourse in which he poured out many of the deepest truths he
could convey to them, he spoke much of his eventual return to
earth. He said to them:
"In my Father's house are many rooms; if it were not so,
would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And
when I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and
will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also."
John 14.2-3.
With these words Jesus introduced a theme that was to recur
again and again during his last message to his disciples.
"I will come again" was his ultimate promise, one
couched in terms calculated to bring comfort and hope to all
who truly believe in him. He encouraged those who sat with him
with the assurance that he was only going to heaven to make
ready a place for them also and that he would duly return so
that they could join him in his everlasting kingdom. As he
continued with his deep teachings that night he went on
to promise:
"I will not leave you desolate; I will come to you. Yet
a little while, and the world will see me no more, but you
will see me; because I live, you will live also."
John 14.18-19.
Again the reassuring words came, "I will come to you",
this time with the added promise that, just as he would be alive
for ever in the kingdom of heaven, so they too would be taken
to be with him and would also enjoy eternal life. As his discourse
continued he returned yet again to the day when he would return
to earth saying to them:
"A little while and you will see me no more; again a little
while, and you will see me." John 16.16
His disciples were perplexed, not understanding what he could
possibly mean. Jesus promptly warned them that, as soon as he
had gone, they would suffer much persecution and loss and that
their lot in this world would be at best uncertain and of no
abiding value. Yet to give them a thorough hope and assurance
that their trials would be but for a while and that their
ultimate destiny was eternal life and glory in the kingdom of
God upon his return, he said to them:
"So you have sorrow now, but I will see you again and
your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy from
you." John 16.22
Before his own disciples Jesus set his eventual return to
earth as their greatest hope and the ultimate objective of
their faith. A promise of eternal rejoicing was placed before
them as the great reward they would enjoy by keeping their
faith in him until he returned and they duly saw him again.
Jesus himself obviously regarded his ultimate return to earth
as the supreme hope of all his true followers. He told them
they would suffer much anguish and rejection, many tears and
trials, before that day, but exhorted them to endure them all
because of the glory that was to follow at his return. Not only
did he make such promises to his disciples, however, but he also
warned his enemies that his return would wipe away all their
gaiety and confidence and would spell their eternal doom and
disgrace. He boldly testified to the Jewish High Priest:
"But I tell you, hereafter you will see the Son of man
seated at the right hand of Power, and coming on the clouds
of heaven." Matthew 26.64
The predictions he constantly made of his return to earth,
therefore, were given as words of comfort to his disciples and
as a warning to his foes. The former would be raised to eternal
glory in heaven, the latter would be cast down to eternal
punishment in hell. He spoke not of returning at some time
before the end of the age but, rather, on the Day of Judgment
itself and summed up his teaching in these words:
"When the Son of man comes in his glory, and all the angels
with him, then he will sit on his glorious throne. Before him
will be gathered all the nations, and he will separate them one
from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats,
and he will place the sheep at his right hand, and the goats
at the left." Matthew 25.31-32.
Those at his right hand, he promised, would inherit the
kingdom prepared for them from before the foundation of the
world, while those at his left would be thrown into the fire
prepared for the devil and all his host. The return of Jesus,
therefore, in the teaching of Jesus himself as it is recorded
in the Bible, will be the great, climactic event of history
when he will return to judge the living and the dead, awarding
eternal life to those who love and obey him while casting the
rest into outer darkness where they will remain for ever and
ever as objects of God's wrath and anger.
Let us now examine the teaching of Islam, as it appears in
the Qur'an and the Hadith, regarding the return of Jesus to earth.
2. ISLAM AND THE DESCENSION OF JESUS.
It is universally accepted in the world of Islam that Jesus
Christ will eventually return to earth. It generally agreed that
he will descend in the Middle East where he will destroy the
Dajjal (Antichrist), that he will lead the whole world
to embrace Islam, that he will marry and have children, and
that he will die after forty years and be buried in Medina
alongside the tombs of Muhammad, Abu Bakr and Umar. The Qur'anic
text invariably referred to in support of the doctrine that
Jesus will return to earth towards the end of human history
this one:
And (Jesus) shall be a Sign (for the coming of) the Hour (of
Judgment): Therefore have no doubt about the (Hour) but follow
ye Me: this is a Straight Way. Surah 43.61
The context of this verse does indeed appear to support the
interpretation that the ilm (knowledge) of the Hour will
be determined by the return of Jesus to earth. The whole passage,
from verse 57 to verse 67, centres on Jesus and there can be
little doubt that he is the focal point of the sign of the coming
Hour of Judgment. Yusuf Ali has the following comment appended to
Surah 43.61:
This is understood to refer to the second coming Jesus in the
Last Days just before the Resurrection when he will destroy
the false doctrines that pass under his name, and prepare the
way for the universal acceptance of Islam, the Gospel of Unity
and Peace, the Straight way of the Qur'an. (Abdullah Yusuf Ali,
The Holy Qur'an, p.1337).
Maulana Abdul Majid Daryabadi also has a similar comment on
this verse in his translation, saying "The reference is to
the second advent of Jesus" (The Holy Qur'an, Vol.2,
p.493B). Indeed the vast majority of Muslin commentators take
Surah 43.61 to be a prophecy of the descension of Jesus to earth,
an interpretation sustained for centuries in Muslim writings.
The anticipated event has become known as the nuzul-i-Isa,
the "descension of Jesus".
The Hadith teach unambiguously that Jesus will return towards
the end of the world. There are no less than seventy accredited
traditions supporting this doctrine and they are regarded as
mutawatir, "universally-attested" traditions
of unquestioned reliability. One of these traditions reads:
Abu Huraira reported that the Messenger of Allah (may peace be
upon him) said: By Him in Whose hand is my life, the son of Mary
(may peace be upon him) will soon descend among you as a just
judge. He will break crosses, kill swine and abolish Jizya, and
the wealth will pour forth to such an extent that no one will
accept it. (Sahih Muslim, Vol.1, p.92).
Another tradition states that "spite, mutual hatred and
jealousy against one another will certainly disappear"
during his reign when returns (Sahih Muslim, Vol.1, p.93)
and in yet another tradition we read that Surah 4.159, which
teaches that "there is none of the People of the Scriptures
(Jews and Christians) but must believe in him before his death",
is also a proof that Jesus will return to earth to receive the
homage of all to whom the Scriptures have been given (Sahih
al-Bukhari, Vol.4, p.437). Such are the testimonies to the
return of Jesus to earth in Islam.
There are obviously key differences between Christian and
Muslim beliefs regarding the return of Jesus from heaven but
the fact of the event is universally agreed. Christians do
not accept that he will come to live again as an ordinary human
being on earth, least of all that he will die and be buried.
He has been alive in the glory of heaven for nearly two thousand
years and we find it very hard to seriously consider the suggestion
that he must return to complete a life that was interrupted on
earth at the age of thirty-three and live out a further forty years
before dying and being buried like any other man. It is our firm
belief that he is already alive for ever more in the glory of the
kingdom of God and that an earthly demise at a time yet to come
would be an unfortunate anti-climax and a strange anachronism.
Nevertheless there are principles in the Muslim beliefs about
his earthly reign that Christians can accept as symbolic of his
heavenly rule yet to be revealed.
Islam teaches that he will return from heaven, that he will
destroy the Antichrist and all his host, that he will lead all
true believers into an era of unprecedented bliss and prosperity,
that he will rule over all earth, and that he will establish
a universal faith in God during his reign. To the extent that these
beliefs can be transferred to a heavenly rule in an eternal kingdom,
Christians can agree with Muslims.
3. THE IMPLICATIONS OF THE SECOND COMING.
Islam and Christianity are agreed that Jesus will return from
heaven to earth. As said already, such an extraordinary event
cannot be catalogued as simply one of the tenets of each respective
faith. The implications of this persuasion are so profound that
it must be analysed further. The concept of a man returning to
earth from the realms of heaven itself, a man who once lived on
the earth many centuries ago, begs further scrutiny. The very
uniqueness of the whole event and its climactic character must
surely lead us to conclude that there must be something very
special about the one who is at the centre of it all - Jesus Christ.
The return of no other prophet is awaited by Christians and Muslims.
Indeed, even in their lifetimes, the influence of each prophet of
God rarely spread beyond the confines of the prophet's own community
and nation, yet it is agreed between Christians and Muslims that
Jesus will, on his return, assume control over the whole world.
There must be more to him than mere prophethood and his return
will surely usher in greater benefits than a boom period in the
economies of the nations.
A key to the real meaning of the return of Jesus is found in
the expression used by both Yusuf Ali and Maulana Daryabadi in
their comments on Surah 43.61. Yusuf Ali speaks of the "second
coming of Jesus" and Maulana Daryabadi likewise refers to the
"second advent of Jesus". Some years ago, in South Africa,
Adam Peerbhai published a booklet entitled Hadis Text on the
Second Coming of Jesus which canvassed the various traditions
referring to the descension of Jesus. The key is in just one word
used by all three Muslim authors - the word second. Each one
speaks of the second coming of Jesus, a typical Christian
definition of his return and one adopted by Muslim writers without
much reflection on its immediate implications.
Christians speak of the second coming of Jesus from heaven
because they believe that he came from heaven the first time.
If there is to be a second coming, there must have been a
first coming. This is, to us, the great key behind the return
of Jesus to earth. He will come from heaven a second time
because he came from heaven the first time. We believe that
he pre-existed and that he was in the beginning with God before
anything was ever created (John 1.1). He came as a spirit into
the world directly from heaven and was thus conceived in the womb
of a woman without any normal human agency. This belief is to some
extent supported by the Qur'an which says of Jesus that he was a
ruhun minhu, a "spirit from him (i.e. God)",
a title applied to no other human in the book (Surah 4.171). This
is just what Christians believe - that Jesus came into the world
the first time as a spirit directly from God and this explains why
his mother underwent such a unique experience in conceiving him
without the agency of a human father.
It is in this expression "second coming" that
we see the first real implication of the outstanding event to come
at the end of time. Jesus will come from heaven to earth simply
because he came in precisely this manner the first time. We need
to peruse some of the statements of Jesus himself which relate
to this very subject to see what he said about his first
coming into the world.
On numerous occasions Jesus declared that he had come down from
heaven and in such plain language that it could not be interpreted
in any other way than literally. He declared to the Jews:
"For I have come down from heaven, not to do my will,
but the will of him who sent me." John 6.38
In response to this the Jews murmured against him, saying
"Is not this Jesus, the son of Joseph, whose father and
mother we know? How does he now say, 'I have come down from
heaven'?" (John 6.42). In reply Jesus simply commanded them
not to murmur among themselves about matters they did not understand,
once again declaring that he had, in fact, come originally from
heaven (John 6.51). When even some of his own followers began
to murmur at his teaching, he said to them:
"Do you take offence at this? Then what if you were to
see the Son of man ascending where he was before?"
John 6.61-62.
Jesus spoke often about the fact that he had originally
descended from heaven (John 3.13) and that he would ascend again
(John 20.7), "ascending where he was before". It was
his plain teaching that he had come down from heaven and that he
would return there. Indeed it should not be too hard for Muslims
to consider that Jesus had come down from heaven at the beginning.
If it is possible for them to believe that he will come from
heaven towards the end of the world, it should be equally possible
and indeed logical to believe that he came from heaven in the
first place.
On another occasion, while Jesus was debating with the Jews,
he said to them:
"You are from below, I am from above; you are of this world,
I am not of this world." John 8.23.
This was an outstanding statement - "I am from above ...
I am not of this world". It is a true maxim that man returns
whence he came. We all return to the earth because we come from
the earth. "You are dust, and to dust you shall return"
(Genesis 3.19). We are all from below and we therefore go back to
the dust. Jesus was from above and he therefore ascended where he,
too, was before. This is why he is in heaven now and why he will
return from heaven - because he came from heaven in the first place.
He could not have put it more plainly or simply than he did when
he said:
"I came from the Father and have come into the world; again,
I am leaving the world and going to the Father."
John 16.28
We do well to ask why Jesus has been kept alive in heaven for
nearly two thousand years when all other men, both small and great,
have returned to the dust. David lies buried in Jerusalem and
Muhammad likewise lies dead and buried in Medina. Neither lived
beyond a normal lifespan. "No one has ascended into heaven",
Jesus said while he was still on earth (John 3.13). Why then should
this one man be taken up above the clouds, indeed right out of this
universe, into the presence of the eternal Father where he has
been for nearly two thousand years?
There can only be one rational, logical conclusion. He must
likewise have been in heaven for thousands of years before he came
into the world. If he has been there for nearly twenty centuries
since his ascension it is logical to assume that he had been there
for at least a similar period before his first nuzul, his
first descension into the world. Fortunately, however, we do not
have to rely on logical presumptions or speculation for Jesus
himself, on a number of occasions, made it plain that he had, in
fact, been in the presence of God even before the world was made.
When his disciples one day exclaimed to him that even the demons
were subject to them in his name, he replied:
"I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven. Behold I have
given you authority to tread upon serpent and scorpions, and over
all the power of the enemy; and nothing shall hurt you. Nevertheless,
do not rejoice in this, that the spirits are subject to you; but
rejoice that your names are written in heaven." Luke 10.18-20.
The statement that concerns us is the first one: "I saw
Satan fall like lightning from heaven". According to the Bible
the fall of Satan took place when he attempted to usurp the throne
of God in heaven and make himself like the Most High (Isaiah 14.14).
We do not know exactly when this happened but it must have been
either before or at the time of creation for he was cast down to
become the devil and thus tempted our first parents, Adam and Eve.
The Qur'an places the fall of the great Shaytan, whom it names
Iblis, at the beginning of creation, saying that he refused
to bow to Adam at God's command (Surah 34), complaining that Adam
had only been made of dust whereas he had been made of fire
(Surah 7.12). As a result God cast him down and expelled him in
disgrace (Surah 7.18). Both the Bible and the Qur'an therefore agree
that the fall of Satan took place as far back at least as the very
beginning of creation, yet Jesus declared "I saw Satan fall
like lightning from heaven". It was his way of saying "I
was there in heaven, I saw it happen." This could only have
been possible if he had in fact been alive in heaven before the
creation of the world. Furthermore, in his last great prayer on
earth he said:
"And now, Father, glorify thou me in thy own presence with
the glory which I had with thee before the world was made."
John 17.5
In these words we have a very clear statement by Jesus himself
that he had, in fact, shared the glory of the eternal Father in
his own presence in heaven before the world was ever made. We thus
have clear testimonies by Jesus himself that he was alive in heaven
at the very beginning of the world - is it surprising, therefore,
that he will return from heaven at the end of the world?
We are now beginning to get a clearer picture of the meaning of
the nuzul-i-Isa, the descension of Jesus to earth from heaven
at the climax of history. He stands uniquely above all the prophets
of God and men on earth as one who was alive in heaven at the
beginning of time and as the only person today who has ascended to
heaven where he has been for almost two thousand years. We will
obtain further insight into his real identity and the purpose of
his return to earth if we spend a little time considering how he
will be recognised when he comes.
4. HOW JESUS WILL BE IDENTIFIED ON HIS RETURN.
If we were to turn on a television set one night to find
satellite coverage from Damascus showing a large crowd gathered
excitedly around a man claiming to be Jesus returned to earth,
how would we know whether it was really him or not? If, upon
being interviewed, he said "I am Isa. I returned from
heaven yesterday. No one saw me, but here I am", how could
you be sure it was him?
Islam has not been unaware of the possible difficulties in
identifying Jesus when he returns if he is to come purely as
an ordinary man of flesh and blood. A superstition has arisen
that a bone will be missing in one of his fingers. This is
a typical myth, but it does show the consciousness of a required
means to positively identify Jesus. Even in the Hadith there is
a saying attributed to Muhammad which tells how to identify him.
Muhammad is recorded as saying:
There is no prophet between me and him, that is Jesus (peace be
upon him). He will descend (to earth). When you see him, recognise
him: a man medium height, reddish hair, wearing two light low
garments, looking as if drops were falling from his head though
it will not be wet. (Sunan Abu Dawud, Vol.3, p.1203).
The need to identify him positively has also led to speculation
as to where he will descend on earth. Some say he will land on
the Ka'aba in Mecca, others that he will land on the eastern
minaret of the great Umayya mosque in Damascus which is accordingly
known as the Isaya Minarah. Maulana Syed M.B. Alam, on the
cover his book Nusul-e-Esa: Descension of Jesus Christ,
has a drawing of the Dome of the Rock with ladders alongside it.
We take the picture to mean that Jesus will return by landing
on top of the Dome of the Rock and that others will help him to
the ground on a ladder. It seems absurd to consider that, after
crossing the vast expanse of the universe on his way from heaven
to earth, he will need a ladder to help him down the last thirty
feet of his descent!
It is perhaps in this seeming absurdity that we see the weakness
of all Muslim theories about his descent all of which are based
on the assumption that he will return as nothing more than an
ordinary man of flesh and blood to rule the earth. On the other
hand, a Muslim friend once said to me, "I believe Jesus will
return from heaven shining like a light". I said, "What
makes you say that? This is Christian belief." He replied,
"Look where he is coming from. You cannot come from heaven
looking like this" he said, pointing to himself. It takes an
enlightened mind to draw what should be such an obvious conclusion.
He hit the nail on the head. The issue is not whether Jesus
will return to Damascus, Jerusalem or Mecca, the issue is where
he is coming from. He is coming from heaven. When
he came the first time he assumed flesh and blood on earth and
became a man but, having ascended to heaven, it is grossly unlikely
that he will return as a man of nothing more than flesh and blood.
His human nature must have undergone a transformation to enter
the realm of the kingdom of heaven - is it not far more likely
that he will return in heavenly splendour?
Jesus himself described how he will return to earth at the end
of time. He told his disciples:
"Immediately after the tribulation of those days the sun will
be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars
will fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens will be shaken;
then will appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven, and then all
the tribes of the earth will mourn, and they will see the Son of man
coming on the clouds of heaven with power and great glory; and he
will send out his angels with a loud trumpet call, and they will
gather his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to
the other." Matthew 24.29-31.
In these words we have a far clearer picture of how Jesus will
return. The sun will be darkened, the moon will lose its light,
the stars of the sky will fall, and the powers of the heavens will
be shaken, and then, in their place, a new brightness will
appear. The whole earth will see Jesus appear in a cloud with
heavenly power and glory as he calls out all those who are his own.
The contrast between the present order and the new order he will
bring in is finely described in this passage. The glory, brightness
and power of the present order will recede before the revelation
of his majesty and power when he returns from heaven.
On a dark night a car with bright headlights can almost blind
another driver's vision but, if that same car should drive down
the road in the middle of a sunny day, the same driver will hardly
be troubled if its bright lights are on. A candle in a dark room
is very conspicuous, but on a sunny day it may not even be noticed.
The greater light makes the lesser fade and, as it were, be darkened.
The sun is the one supreme source of light in the sky - before it
all other lights fade into insignificance. No one can look directly
into it without his eyes being blinded.
The point Jesus was making was this: when he appears
in heaven even the sun will cast a shadow and be darkened. Before
his glory not only the sun but all the stars will fade and recede.
All the energies and powers in the universe will be shaken. His
light will be so splendid that even the sun's light will not
compare with it. When the Apostle Paul had his great vision of
the glory of Jesus on the way to Damascus he said that he saw
"a light from heaven, brighter than the sun, shining
round me and those who journeyed with me" (Acts 26.13). The
Apostle John likewise had a vision of Jesus in heaven after his
ascension and testified that "his face was like the sun
shining in full strength" (Revelation 1.16).
In Jesus' own words, therefore, we get a very clear picture
of how he will be recognised when he returns to earth. No one
will fail to recognise him. He will not descend on to
a mountain or minaret in a body of ordinary flesh and blood.
He will be revealed from heaven in all his glory and power and
his splendour will be the one dominating spectacle in that moment
over all the earth, just as the sun to a lesser extent is the sole,
supreme light of our present skies. All the nations of earth will
see Jesus as he returns from heaven in the glory of his Father,
and all those who have not followed him will be in great torment
when he appears.
Behold, he is coming with the clouds, and every eye will see him,
every one who pierced him; and all tribes of the earth will wail
on account of him. Even so, Amen. Revelation 1.7
5. THE PRESENT STATUS OF JESUS IN HEAVEN.
It is not every day that men are raptured to heaven. Jesus
was only taken up to heaven because he had come from there in
the first place. We have also seen that he will return, not as
an ordinary man of flesh and blood, but as a glorious, heavenly
man shining with glory and power. We must therefore ask, what
is his present status in heaven?
According to the Bible the angels of heaven number "myriads
of myriads and thousands of thousands" (Revelation 5.11) and
the glory of any one of these angels is such that, if he was to
appear to any man in all his splendour, he would blind the man's
eyes (Genesis 19.11). Their power is also beyond human comprehension.
Just one angel has the power to destroy a whole city (2 Samuel 24.16)
or a whole human army of up to two hundred thousand soldiers
(2 Kings 19.35). Yet even the angels bow before the throne of God
in awe and great reverence. The glory of all God's holy angels
does not even begin to compare with his surpassing splendour.
The great prophet Daniel one day had a vision of God's glory
and the angels of God before his throne and described what he
saw in these words:
"As I looked, "thrones were set in place, and the Ancient
of Days took his seat. His clothing was as white as snow; the
hair of his head was white like wool. His throne was flaming
with fire, and its wheels were all ablaze. A river of fire was
flowing, coming out from before him. Thousands upon thousands
attended him; ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him.
The court was seated, and the books were opened."
Daniel 7.9-10.
When Isaiah the prophet had a similar vision of the glory of
God and his angels before his throne he trembled in fear and
bemoaned his human weakness and uncleanness before the sight
(Isaiah 6.1-5). Daniel likewise must have felt right out of
place as he beheld his glory and considered himself unworthy
to be there. Yet, as he gazed at the courts of heaven he saw
an amazing thing happen:
"Behold, with the clouds of heaven there came one like a
son of man, and he came to the Ancient of Days and was presented
before him. And to him was given dominion and glory and kingdom,
that all peoples, nations, and languages should serve him;
his dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass
away, and his kingdom one which shall not be destroyed."
Daniel 7.13-14.
He went on to say, "my spirit within me was anxious
and the visions of my head alarmed me" (Daniel 7.15).
Well might he have been perplexed and bewildered. "One
like a son of man" means one just like himself, a man
ordinary flesh and blood. He seemed to be so out of place,
and yet, instead of trying to hide from the glory of heaven,
he was brought on a cloud and set before the throne of God,
and to him was given all the authority of heaven and earth
that all the nations of earth and the angels of heaven should
bow down before him.
Daniel saw a vision of Jesus Christ in heaven. He lived
before the first coming of Jesus into the world when he came
as an ordinary man of flesh and blood and in that form Daniel
saw him. Yet, as he beheld him, he realised that, notwithstanding
his human nature, he was to become the eventual ruler of the
whole universe.
When Jesus was on earth his disciples saw him as an ordinary
man like themselves. He was so obviously human that to this day
hundreds of millions of men cannot believe that he was anything
more than a man. One day, however, he took three of his disciples
up a mountain and suddenly he was transfigured before them.
His face shone like the sun, and his garment became white as
light. Matthew 17.2
For a brief moment his disciples saw something of his real glory
which, during the rest of his earthly life, was veiled within his
body of flesh and blood. When he ascended to heaven he returned
to the realm where he had always enjoyed that splendour and glory.
Is it logical to believe that he is there today as just an ordinary
man, the only one to ascend to heaven, feeling somewhat lost and
out of place among millions of angels clothed in heavenly glory
before the splendour of God's throne? In Daniel's vision we saw
this man brought before the throne itself and the authority of all
the universe bestowed on him. What Daniel saw was a vision of the
ascent of Jesus to heaven after his first coming when he returned
in an ordinary human body.
Some time after the ascent of Jesus to heaven his disciple John
had a similar vision of Jesus in heaven, only this time it was
different. Daniel saw Jesus as he was to be on his return to heaven
after his first coming to earth in flesh and blood - John saw him
as he will be at his second coming when he will return in all his
heavenly glory. He described his vision thus:
"I saw seven golden lampstands, and in the midst of the
lampstands one like a son of man, clothed with a long robe and
with a golden girdle around his breast; his head and his hair
were white as white wool, white as snow; his eyes were like
a flame of fire, his feet were like burnished bronze, refined
as in a furnace, and his voice was like the sound of many waters;
in his right hand he held seven stars, from his mouth issued
a sharp two-edged sword, and his face was like the sun shining
in full strength." Revelation 1.12-16.
Like Daniel John also saw "one like a son of man",
one just like himself, but whereas Daniel saw him presented to him
who sits upon the throne of heaven, John saw him as the one seated
upon the throne! Daniel saw the Son of man presented to the
"Ancient of Days", God himself, whose "raiment was
white as snow, and the hair of his head like pure wool"
(Daniel 7.9), but John saw the Son of man himself upon the throne
of God and he was "clothed with a long robe and with
a golden girdle around his breast" (Revelation 1.13) and
"his head and his hair were white as white wool,
white as snow" (Revelation 1.14). John did not see the Son
of man as a lone human figure out of place among myriads of angels,
he saw Daniel's vision fulfilled and the Son of man seated on the
throne of God ruling over the whole universe. Another early disciple
of Jesus named Stephen had a similar vision as he was about to
become the first Christian martyr. He cried out:
"Behold, I see the heavens opened, and the Son of man
standing at the right hand of God." Acts 7.56
Jesus himself went on to testify to John as he fell before his
glory, saying "Fear not, I am the first and the last, and the
living one; I died, and behold I am alive for evermore, and I have
the keys of Death and Hades" (Revelation 1.17-18), and, after
giving him many instructions for his followers in the form of seven
letters to the seven churches throughout Asia Minor, he concluded
by saying:
"He who conquers, I will grant him to sit with me on my throne,
as I myself conquered and sat down with my Father on his throne."
Revelation 3.21
We have already seen that the Qur'an teaches that, at the creation
of Adam, all the angels of God were commanded to bow down before him
(Surah 20.116). It is hard to understand why such heavenly creatures
should be required to bow to a man of flesh and blood who came from
the dust for a season, only to return to it. Yet it is not hard to
understand why the angels of God should bow before the Son of man
who sits on the throne of God in all heavenly splendour, ruling over
the whole universe, angels and nations put together. It is also no
wonder that the Bible says of Jesus, "Let all God's angels
worship him" (Hebrews 1.6), he who has become "as
much superior to angels" (Hebrews 1.4) because he has been
crowned the King of kings and Lord of lords (Revelation 19.16).
There are nearly five billion people today alive on earth and
billions of others have been buried in the earth, prophets, saints
and all who have lived on the earth, small and great alike. But
right now one man is alive in heaven where he ascended and from
whence he will return. He has been there nearly two thousand years,
whereas few other men live much beyond a hundred years. It is surely
absurd to believe that he is, to this day, nothing more than an
ordinary human being. No, he sits on the throne of heaven in all
his glory "with angels, authorities and powers subject to him"
(1 Peter 3.22) and he will return in that same splendour to take
control of all the earth until all things are subjected to his
universal authority. "For God has put all things under his
feet" (1 Corinthians 15.27).
We must conclude by recognising that Jesus is alive in heaven
today because he came from heaven the first time, that he is not
just an ordinary man but the Ruler of all the universe who will
return at the end of time in all his splendour. This makes it
essential that we enquire why he ever came into the world the
first time and why he ever assumed human flesh. He lived in heaven
for centuries before coming to earth for thirty-three years and has
been alive in heaven for centuries ever since. The real question is
not why Jesus ascended to heaven, the real question is why he ever
came into the world in the first place.
6. THE PURPOSE OF HIS FIRST COMING TO EARTH.
There must have been a very special purpose for the coming of
Jesus into the world if he came from heaven and returned there when
his earthly course was over. He could not have been just a prophet
for God had called many ordinary men out to be prophets and they had
died at the end of their ministries and returned to the dust whence
they had come. If Jesus came from heaven and returned there he must
have come for a greater purpose.
There are, in the context of all that we have that far considered,
two basic reasons for the coming of Jesus into the world. The first
is that he came to bridge the gap between heaven and earth,
between the God of holiness and sinful men. There is a very common
phrase in the Qur'an - "To Allah is all that is in the heavens
and in the earth" (Surah 2.284). Constantly the Qur'an
distinguishes between the samaawaat, the "heavens",
and the ardth, the "earth", and in the Bible too
we find, in the very first verse of the book, the same distinction:
"In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth"
(Genesis 1.1).
No matter how long men live on earth none ultimately ascend to
heaven. Of no man can it be said "he lived happily ever after".
On the contrary, if we are honest with ourselves, we must admit that
disaster comes to one and all. We all return to the dust when we die
and come to nothing. As Jesus said, "No one has ascended into
heaven" (John 3.13). There is an unbridgeable gap between heaven
and earth, between God and men, and no man from the earth is able to
bridge it. "God is in heaven and you upon earth; therefore let
your words be few" (Ecclesiastes 5.2), is an exhortation that
likewise bears out the distinction between the realms of God and men.
The reason for this chasm between heaven and earth is plainly set out
in this passage:
Behold, the Lord's hand is not shortened, that it cannot save, or his
ear dull, that it cannot hear; but your iniquities have made a separation
between you and your God, and your sins have hid his face from you so
that he does not hear. Isaiah 59.1-2.
There is a great gulf between sinful men on earth and the holy God
of heaven who dwells in unapproachable light with his holy angels.
Sin has destroyed the capacity in man to rise by nature above the
realm of the world in which he was made. He is, by nature, nothing
more than mortal flesh and blood and "flesh and blood cannot
inherit the kingdom of God, nor does the perishable inherit the
imperishable" (1 Corinthians 15.50). Jesus Christ, who from all
eternity was in the presence of his holy Father and his angels in
the kingdom of heaven, descended to the earth and was born in human
form to bridge the gap between heaven and earth. He did this by
bringing something of heaven into the world - he brought his
very own self. He became a human being in every way and lived on earth
as a normal man, but the spirit within him was a divine spirit which
had come down from heaven.
He not only closed the gap between heaven and earth but bridged
the gap the other way as well. When he came into the earth he came,
as the Qur'an rightly puts it, as a ruhun minhu - a spirit
from him (i.e. God). But when he returned to heaven he returned as
an insaan, a human being. His divine spirit returned to its
heavenly abode but he took something of earth to heaven with him
- he took the human nature he had assumed when he first came into the
world. He came then purely as a spirit, but he returned as a man,
as a human being. He thus fully bridged the gap between heaven and
earth. His living presence in the kingdom of heaven as a human being
is our pledge and assurance that we too, though mortal men of flesh
and blood, can one day be in heaven with him in eternal glory and
bliss.
The second, and the greatest reason for the first coming of Jesus
into the world, was to become like us in every respect so that
he might save us from our sins. Because we are only flesh and
blood, "he himself likewise partook of the same nature"
(Hebrews 2.14) so that he might deliver us from the power of Satan
and redeem us to God. From his heavenly throne he saw all men under
the power of the evil one, enslaved to sin, and unable to overcome
death. He saw the need of a mediator between men and God so that
they might be saved from their sins and, to compensate for our guilt
and sinfulness, he became a human being just like us so that, through
the cross, he might endure the consequences of our sins in our place
and make it possible for us to rise from earth to heaven and become
partakers of the divine nature by receiving the Spirit of God
(2 Peter 1.4), just as he had, in turn, descended from heaven to earth
to become partaker of our human nature by assuming a body of flesh
and blood.
Therefore he had to be made like his brethren in every respect,
so that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in the
service of God, to make expiation for the sins of the people.
Hebrews 2.17
The crucifixion of Jesus Christ, so complacently overlooked in
Islam as an unsuccessful plot of the Jews, alone explains why
Jesus came from heaven the first time and why he will return again.
He came not to be a mere prophet, he came as God's chosen Deliverer
and Redeemer to save millions of men and women by dying for them
on the cross of Calvary, where he endured what was due to all of
them for their sins, so that they might receive the hope of eternal
life by following him as their Lord and Saviour.
He did not come like the Superman of the American comics, a man
who can fly through the skies at his own discretion and from whose
body bullets simply bounce off. He came like us in every respect
and at no time did he use his divine powers to give himself any
advantage over us. He came as a normal human being and he suffered,
died and was buried so that he might bridge the gap between heaven
and earth completely not only between God and men but to the very
extreme of sinful man's separation from the Lord of heaven - between
God and sinful men who lie hopelessly dead and buried in the dust
of the earth.
Islam teaches that Jesus will return to earth because he did not
finish his ministry as it likewise teaches that Jesus was raised to
heaven without being crucified. It is no wonder that it teaches that
Jesus did not accomplish his mission. It makes the life of Jesus on
earth end just six hours before Christianity does, yet in those six
hours that Jesus spent on the cross the whole purpose of his coming
to earth was indeed fulfilled. In his last great prayer the night
before he died he said:
"I glorified thee on earth, having accomplished the work
which thou gavest me to do." John 17.4
In triumph he could boldly claim that he had indeed accomplished
the work he had been given to do. As he began to breath his last on
the cross, knowing that he had fully satisfied God's wrath against
sin and that he had just accomplished the greatest work ever to be
done by a man on earth, he cried out in triumph, "It is finished"
(John 19.30). The original Greek text has only one word to describe
this exclamation and it can, perhaps, more accurately be translated
simply thus: "Accomplished!". He had descended from
heaven to earth, had become an ordinary man and was now at the point
of death and about be placed in a tomb. But this was no moment of
defeat for him. It was all victory, the fulfilment and accomplishment
of all that he had been sent to achieve to bring men back to God.
It is against this background alone that we can conclude our study
and discover why Jesus will return at the end of time and what he
is destined to do for those who love him as their supreme Lord and
Master.
7. WHEN THE LORD JESUS IS REVEALED FROM HEAVEN.
Jesus rose from the dead and ascended to heaven whence he is to
return. We have already seen that he came into the world to make
himself like us in every way so that he might save us from our sins.
What, then, is the supreme purpose of his second coming? It is just
this - that he might make those who believe in him just like
himself. The first time he was manifested in human flesh, the
second time he will be revealed in all his heavenly glory and the
whole earth will see him as he really is. Then those who have
followed him will likewise be transformed into his image to be
made just like himself. One of his disciples could confidently
write to his Christian brethren:
"Beloved, we are God's children now; it does not yet appear
what we shall be, but we know that when he appears we shall be
like him, for we shall see him as he is. I John 3.2
He will return shining with all the brightness of his heavenly
glory, and then those who are his will be transformed into the
same image and share his glory. After declaring that all sinners
and evildoers will be cast into the fire on the Day of Judgment
Jesus said "Then the righteous will shine like the sun in
the kingdom of their Father" (Matthew 13.43). Those who have
died in ordinary human bodies, who nevertheless followed him as
their Lord and Saviour will, on that glorious Day, be raised
from the dead and taken up to be with him in heavenly glory for
all eternity. Their present bodies are perishable, but they will
be raised imperishable. They are mortal now, but then they will
be raised immortal. They share now the ordinary human body of
flesh that Adam, their first father, shared, but on that Day
they will inherit the same resplendent, heavenly body of spirit
and life that Jesus Christ, their eternal Saviour and Lord,
already shares.
As was the man of dust, so are those who are of the dust;
and as is the man of heaven, so are those who are of heaven.
Just as we have borne the image of the man of dust, we shall
also bear the image of the man of heaven. 1 Corinthians 15.48-49.
The great Christian hope is to be raised from the dead to
eternal life on that Day just as Jesus himself was raised from
the dead. This was the supreme purpose of his coming into the
world, not just to teach, preach and heal as if he were an
ordinary prophet, but to give effect to the ultimate hope of
all mankind - the resurrection of the dead at the end of time.
No earthly prophet could bring such a thing about - only the
Lord of Glory from heaven could do so.
When Jesus heard one day that his friend Lazarus was ill
in Bethany, instead of going down to heal him, he stayed two
days longer in the place where he was (about a hundred
kilometres away) and deliberately let him die (John 11.6).
As soon as he suggested to his disciples that they should go
down to Judea again, where Lazarus had been buried, they were
appalled at the suggestion, exclaiming "Rabbi, the Jews
were but now seeking to stone you, and are you going there
again?" (John 11.8). Their immediate fear was that
he was going there only to die. But when Jesus insisted,
Thomas said to his fellow disciples, "Let us also go,
that we may die with him" (John 11.16). The spectre
of death hung over the whole scene. Even when Jesus got to
Bethany and found that Lazarus had been dead four days already,
the two sisters of the dead man both said to him "Lord,
if you had been here, my brother would not have died"
(John 11.21, 32), and some of the Jews, weeping in consolation
with them, said, "Could not he who opened the eyes of the
blind man have kept this man from dying?" (John 11 37).
The pall of death hung like a cloud over the scene.
The attitude of all of them was the same - if only Jesus
had been there, in the right place at the right time, he could
have healed Lazarus while he was still alive. But now that
he was dead, what could Jesus do? The seemingly irreversible
shadow of death hung over the whole place and Jesus appeared
to have arrived too late to do anything.
The recent Superman film which did the rounds showed an
incident where a huge truck was leaning over a bridge. Superman
was called for and he flew through the sky in his fancy costume
to lift it up with his great power. Before he arrived, however,
the truck toppled into the river below. When Superman finally
got there he was told "It is too late now" and, despite
his powers, there was nothing he could do.
Jesus wore no fancy costume. He did not come with power to
fly through the skies, nor did he have superhuman powers to lift
heavy objects. He was made just like us, but he had come for one
supreme purpose and, as he arrived at the tomb of Lazarus, he
did not stand by impotently as Superman was obliged to do. He
challenge Martha, one of the dead man's sisters, saying,
"Your brother will rise again" (John 11.23). When she
replied that she knew her brother would be raised on the Last Day,
that he would be raised by a God who was far off on a day that
seemed extremely remote, Jesus made a declaration that sounded
forth with all the authority of heaven and breathed newness of
life into an apparently hopeless situation. He said to her:
"I am the resurrection and the life; he who believes in me,
though he die, yet shall he live, and whoever lives and believes
in me shall never die. Do you believe this?" John 11.25-26.
In the midst of the deathly atmosphere that prevailed over
the scene came a glorious exclamation from one who in their
very presence was not just a healing prophet but the very source
of the resurrection and eternal life that will be given to all
that believe in him and follow him. As a sign of the supreme
purpose for which he had come to earth, he thereupon raised
Lazarus from the dead and gave him back to his sisters. In that
environment of death and despair - the destiny of all men sooner
or later - Jesus Christ, there and then the Resurrection and the
Life himself, demonstrated the real purpose of his first coming.
Shortly after this great miracle he himself rose from the dead
and ascended to heaven. Those who believe in him are now reaching
out to one who has already conquered death, and who is even now
alive in heaven for evermore. He alone is the world's hope of the
resurrection and eternal life in the age to come.
The Qur'an often speaks of God as he who "bringeth the dead
to life" (Surah 2.73). There are more than twenty passages
which speak of God's power to raise the dead to life, to give
haya to the mayyitun (e.g. Surah 10.31). Yet in one
verse we read that Jesus said: "I give life to the
dead by God's permission" (Surah 3.49) and in another verse
God himself speaks of Jesus' power to raise the dead by his leave
(Surah 5.113). Apart from these verses which attribute to Jesus
the power to give life to the dead there is no other passage
attributing to any other prophet or man the same power. In the
Qur'an itself, therefore, we find that God's power to raise the
dead has been given to Jesus alone. Here is a clear confirmation
of the fact that Jesus did not come into the world purely as
a prophet to preach and teach.
Jesus came the first time to conquer sin and rise from the dead
in triumph, thus securing for his followers the assured hope of
the resurrection at the Last Day. Jesus will return on that Day
to raise all his own from the dead, to give them the fulness of
eternal life and to make them just like himself in the Kingdom of
Heaven. This is the supreme meaning and purpose of the nuzul-i-Isa,
the second coming of Jesus.
Instead of limiting him to the status of ordinary prophethood
along with other mortal men, will you not put your faith in him
as the appointed Lord of heaven and earth and be raised to eternal
life on that Day "when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven"
(2 Thessalonians 1.7) to be glorified in all his saints? Or will
you rather "shrink from him in shame at his coming"
(John 2.28)? Will you not commit your life to the only man who
has conquered death, who alone dwells in heavenly glory above
billions of men on earth, both dead and living, and who alone will
return to earth shining in all his heavenly majesty to award the
crown of life to all who love him and remain faithful to him even
unto death itself? Will you not bow to him as your Lord and Saviour
and be saved by his grace?
Books by John Gilchrist
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