Publication date
11/1/14
Volume
35
Number
21
The WatchTower
Making Ready for the Reign of Righteousness
/../literature/watchtower/1914/21/1914-21-1.html
 
 
 
 
 
ST. 
PETER 
SIFTED 
LIKE 
WHEAT 
NOVEMBER 
15.-Mark 
14:27·31,53, 
54, 
66-72. 
"Let 
him 
that 
thinketh 
he 
standeth, 
take 
St. 
Peter 
was 
admittedly 
man 
of 
strong 
character, 
very 
courageous, 
but 
rather 
too 
impetuous. 
He 
is 
one 
of 
the 
two 
diseipks 
of 
whom 
it 
is 
\Hitten 
that 
I' 
The 
people 
perceived 
that 
they 
werc 
ignorant 
and 
unlearned 
men." 
(Acts 
4: 
13) 
In 
some 
respects, 
therefore, 
St. 
Peter 
may 
be 
said 
to 
have 
had 
less 
advantage 
than 
Jndas. 
Both 
had 
equal 
opportunities 
in 
the 
sehool 
01 
Christ: 
yet 
how 
different 
the 
results 
with 
the 
two 
men! 
The 
one 
went 
down 
into 
the 
second 
death 
despised; 
the 
other, 
after 
ups 
and 
downs 
of 
trial 
and 
discipline, 
passed 
to 
reward 
of 
glory, 
honor 
and 
immortality 
"\'lith 
his 
Master, 
rank­ 
ing 
amongst 
the 
highest 
of 
the 
apostles. 
Our 
lesson 
for 
today 
deals 
with 
the 
special 
II 
sifting' 
which 
came 
to 
St. 
Peter 
at 
the 
time 
of 
our 
Lord's 
death, 
and 
of 
which 
he 
was 
forewarned 
by 
.J 
esus, 
saying, 
Simon, 
Simon, 
behold 
Satan 
hath 
desired 
to 
have 
you, 
that 
he 
may 
sift 
you 
as 
wheat; 
but 
have 
prayed 
for 
thee, 
that 
thy 
faith 
fail 
not." 
St. 
Peter's 
courage, 
manifested 
on 
so 
many 
occasions, 
was 
really 
his 
wcak 
point. 
Notwithstanding 
all 
that 
Jesus 
had 
said 
to 
forewarn 
him 
of 
the 
sifting 
experien(~es 
that 
were 
just 
before 
him, 
St. 
Peter 
realized 
no 
dread, 
no 
fear. 
Henee 
he 
did 
little 
watehing 
ana 
praying 
in 
comparison 
with 
what 
he 
should 
have 
,lolle, 
and 
self-collfidence 
lea 
to 
his 
unaoing 
for 
time. 
It 
was 
the 
same 
St. 
Peter 
who, 
when 
told 
that 
he 
would 
drny 
our 
Lord 
before 
the 
time 
for'the 
cock 
to 
crow 
the 
next 
III 
ol'lling, 
,1l'c1are<l 
that 
it 
surely 
was 
mistake, 
for 
he 
was 
l'e,lllv 
to 
die 
\,-ith 
his 
Master. 
It 
was 
the 
same 
St. 
Peter 
who 
dre,,: 
his 
sword 
and 
cut 
off 
the 
ear 
of 
the 
high 
priest's 
servant, 
nfknv:lnl 
hpalpa 
by 
Jesus. 
It 
was 
the 
same 
impulsive 
St. 
T','trr 
who 
was 
the 
first 
to 
acknowleage 
the 
Messiahship 
of 
.Tesus 
.Je~lls 
hall 
inquired 
what 
people 
were 
saying 
about 
him­ 
\\'ho 
tllPY 
said 
he 
was-and 
had 
finally 
asked, 
"Whom 
say 
ye 
that 
:WI?" 
Tlwn 
St. 
Peter 
answrred, 
"Thou 
art 
the 
Mes­ 
siah, 
the 
Son 
of 
the 
Living 
God." 
JpSI1S 
replird 
that 
this 
alls\wr 
inllicatell 
that 
St. 
Peter 
was 
in 
hlessed 
condition 
of 
relationship 
with 
Goa, 
or 
otherwise 
he 
would 
not 
have 
had 
the 
knowledge 
to 
make 
this 
statement. 
He 
saill, 
Flesh 
and 
blood 
hath 
not 
rpvralccl 
this 
unto 
thep, 
but 
my 
Father 
which 
is 
in 
heavl'll. 
Who 
coul,l 
think 
that 
this 
same 
nohle 
character 
woul,l 
!>p 
so 
ovprwhdmc,l 
with 
fpar 
that 
he 
would 
deny 
his 
Mastpr, 
evpll 
with 
curses! 
One 
thing' 
whieh 
impresses 
itsplf 
quickly 
and 
foreihly 
upon 
our 
minds 
is 
the 
thought 
that 
the 
writers 
of 
the 
New 
Testament 
,,'pre 
eertainly 
vpry 
Ilifferent 
from 
the 
majority 
of 
writers 
in 
that 
they 
tol,l 
the 
ahsolute 
truth 
without 
ll1oaitieation 
or 
var­ 
u'sh. 
Rurdy 
no 
othpr 
book 
is 
like 
the 
Bible 
in 
this 
respect. 
The 
fonndprs 
of 
great 
religions 
world-systems 
ana 
of 
various 
spetarian 
systpms 
have 
manifested 
vf'ry 
ilifferent 
spirit. 
Their 
hprops 
are 
all 
grpat, 
noblp, 
educatpd, 
heroic. 
Nf'ver 
woulrl 
they 
think 
of 
pointing 
out 
sueh 
weaknesses 
as 
thosp 
manifested 
by 
Rt. 
Pd('l' 
on 
thp 
night 
in 
whieh 
our 
Lord 
was 
hetrayed, 
whpn 
hp 
denied 
his 
Mast,,!,. 
Surdy 
this 
gives 
us 
greater 
confidence 
in 
the 
Bihle--in 
its 
honesty, 
in 
its 
truthfulness. 
'Ve 
ean 
rely 
upon 
the 
fact 
that 
the 
men 
who 
thus 
frpply 
tpll 
of 
thpir 
failings, 
and 
\vho 
speak 
of 
thpir 
lack 
of 
learning, 
mnst 
have 
been 
men 
of 
great 
courage, 
01'pat 
sineerity. 
grept 
lovp 
for 
the 
truth. 
Surely 
their 
testimony 
is 
worthy 
of 
all 
acceptation. 
ST. 
PETER'S 
TRIAL 
UNEXPECTED 
Tpmptatiolls 
will 
r'ol11e 
in 
an 
insidious 
form. 
We 
cannot 
inl<lgine 
that 
at 
the 
time 
when 
he 
cut 
off 
the 
ear 
of 
the 
high 
priest's 
servant 
St. 
Pder 
hall 
any 
sympathy 
'with 
the 
thought 
of 
denying 
our 
Lonl. 
But 
circumstances 
and 
conditions 
heed 
lest 
he 
fall. 
"-1 
Corinthians 
10: 
12. 
changed. 
The 
::\laster 
was 
taken 
prisoner. 
\Vhatever 
l}()wpr 
he 
had 
previously 
exercised 
whereby 
he 
walked 
away 
from 
his 
enemies, 
and 
they 
could 
not 
take 
him 
because 
his 
II 
hour 
had 
not 
yet 
come," 
that 
power 
he 
evidently 
was 
not 
exercising 
now 
-his 
hour 
had 
come. 
To 
see 
his 
Master 
apparently 
without 
friends 
in 
heaven, 
delivered 
over 
to 
his 
enemies 
and 
led 
from 
one 
tribunal 
to 
the 
other, 
had 
paralyzing 
effect 
upon 
St. 
Peter. 
St. 
John 
had 
such 
an 
acquaintance 
with 
some 
one 
con­ 
nected 
with 
the 
palace 
that 
he 
was 
permitted 
to 
enter 
the 
court 
and 
bring 
St. 
Peter 
with 
him; 
but 
they 
had 
separated. 
St. 
Pder 
was 
in 
the 
courtyard. 
It 
was 
cold, 
and 
he 
approached 
an 
open 
brazier 
to 
warm 
himself. 
In 
the 
light 
of 
the 
court, 
sur­ 
rounded 
by 
the 
gossiping 
servants 
of 
the 
palace, 
he 
was 
keenly 
serutinized 
by 
one 
of 
the 
maids, 
who 
said, 
"Thou 
art 
also 
d:sciple 
of 
the 
Nazarene." 
Stunned 
by 
the 
identification 
and. 
wondering 
to 
what 
it 
might 
lead, 
St. 
Ppter 
promptly 
denied 
that 
he 
had 
any 
knowl­ 
ellge 
of 
Jesus. 
Then 
he 
moved 
way 
to 
another 
part 
of 
thp 
court, 
where 
the 
shadows 
were 
deeper 
anll 
the 
people 
fewer. 
But 
again 
he 
was 
recognized 
as 
Galilean 
and 
accusell 
of 
be­ 
ing 
one 
of 
.Tesus' 
disciples. 
Again 
he 
d.enied 
the 
charge. 
The 
third 
timp 
he 
was 
approached 
with 
the 
same 
charge 
that 
he 
was 
one 
of 
.Tesus' 
disciples 
and 
Galilean, 
and 
that 
his 
speech 
betrayed 
him. 
Again, 
with 
eursing, 
he 
denied 
that 
he 
knew 
his 
Master. 
Terrible! 
we 
say. 
And 
smely 
St. 
Peter 
felt 
afterward 
that 
it 
was 
terrible; 
for 
just 
at 
that 
time, 
the 
early 
morning, 
came 
the 
heginning 
of 
eock-crowing, 
and 
he 
rememberpd 
the 
Master's 
worlls 
that 
Satan 
had 
df'sirerl 
to 
sift 
him 
as 
wheat, 
and 
that 
]'efore 
the 
eoek 
erew 
he 
would 
have 
denied 
his 
Master 
three 
tinH'~. 
The 
wholp 
matter 
e>llll!' 
upon 
him 
witll 
"1'I1slling 
forep: 
and. 
wrapping 
his 
(·loak 
about 
his 
lH'a'!, 
he 
hastelle,1 
a,yay 
into 
the 
darkness, 
",epping 
bitterly: 
for 
just 
about 
the 
time 
that 
th!' 
coek 
crl'\\- 
.. 
Tesus 
"'as 
11'11 
furtli 
1I0t 
far 
from 
him. 
allll 
as 
11(' 
looked 
at 
.Jesus, 
the 
::\faster 
lift(·,! 
up 
hi~ 
P\'1'5 
allll 
looked 
at 
Rt. 
Peter. 
It 
was 
s~'mpathetic 
glanpe. 
not 
an 
llllgel"l'r! 
mil'; 
but 
it 
",ellt 
straig'ht 
to 
the 
heart. 
Rt.. 
Peter's 
crime 
was 
nothing 
like 
that 
of 
.Tnrlas: 
lie 
lia,l 
merely 
sought. 
to 
]lro\,,(·t 
liimsplf. 
He 
liad 
not 
songht 
to 
injll1'e 
()]. 
e\'('n 
to 
risk 
the 
in 
iun' 
of 
his 
:Mast 
.. 
]', 
The 
thorou!.dllless 
of 
Rt. 
Peter's 
repentane~ 
is 
ahulll!antl,v 
testifiell 
by 
lli~ 
snh:;<" 
,[uent 
loyalty 
evpn 
unto 
,lr>ath. 
Tradition 
has 
it 
that 
hI' 
W;,h 
"0!1l1emned 
to 
be 
crucilh'd: 
Iln(! 
that, 
J'I~m",mb 
.. 
rin~' 
how 
on,·(' 
h" 
lia,! 
rlpnier! 
his 
Maskr. 
li 
.. 
fplt 
Unt! 
it 
would 
1)(' 
too 
g1'l'at 
an 
honor 
for 
him 
to 
sharp 
I'xad,ly 
tIl<' 
same 
df'ath 
as 
his 
Lord: 
lllll! 
that, 
at 
his 
own 
rpquest. 
Ill' 
was 
el'lH'itipu 
hp"d 
uownwilrd, 
THE 
LESSON 
TO 
ALL 
CHRISTIANS 
Our 
(~old 
.. 
Tpxt 
yoiees 
to 
all 
Christians 
tlil' 
lp'sson 
of 
:-;t. 
1'eter's 
explc'rienees-"Let 
him 
that 
thinketh 
hI' 
staulleth. 
tal'd' 
heed 
le~t 
lIP 
fall." 
Wlwn 
"'e 
are 
wf'ilk 
in 
our 
OWII 
pstimation 
and. 
full 
of 
faitli. 
din!!' 
t"IJaeiously 
to 
the 
.\1'111 
of 
thl' 
lAm!, 
then 
we 
are 
really 
~trong' 
ill 
the 
might. 
whieh 
Cod 
supplips 
throu!dl 
his 
ptprnal 
:-;011 
• 
.-\nothcr 
ll'sson 
is 
that 
hom'ver 
di/Ter­ 
I'llt 
the 
Cx!)(,,'ielH'PS 
of 
(~od's 
pl'oph', 
all 
",ho 
fall 
into 
line 
for 
he 
great 
prollJotiou 
to 
the 
first. 
resuITPction 
must 
I'xpeet 
to 
en­ 
dnre 
sevcre 
siftings, 
p!'oyillgs~of 
their 
lov(~ 
for 
th 
.. 
Lord. 
t.hl' 
trnth. 
the 
brl'thrl'n. 
and 
tllPir 
lovaltv 
to 
all 
thes('. 
"et 
us 
neY",!' 
forget 
that 
siftiug~ 
'are 
ppl'llIitted, 
1I0t 
b('eausl' 
the 
Lord 
has 
no 
interest. 
iu 
ns, 
but 
heeans(' 
only 
those' 
,,110 
cau 
stand 
siftings, 
trials 
and 
tests, 
are 
fit 
for 
places 
in 
the 
kingdom. 
VOL. 
XXXV 
BROOKINN, 
N. 
Y.. 
NOVEMBER 
1, 
1914 
No. 
21 
---_._-----~_ 
..• 
_----- 
---_._------------------ 
MAKING 
READY 
FOR 
THE 
REIGN 
OF 
RIGHTEOUSNESS 
"The 
nations 
'l\pre 
angry, 
and 
thy 
wrath 
is 
come, 
ana 
the 
time 
of 
the 
dead. 
that 
they 
should 
be 
judged, 
ana 
that 
thou 
shouldest 
give 
rpwarcl 
unt.o 
thy 
servantR 
the 
prophet.R, 
and 
to 
the 
s:lints, 
and 
them 
that 
fear 
thy 
name, 
small 
and 
great; 
ana 
shouldest 
aestl'OY 
thrm 
that 
destroy 
the 
earth.' 
'-Revelation 
11: 
18. 
may 
he 
that 
many 
of 
the 
Lora's 
people 
were 
exprrting 
or 
at 
mrst 
few 
werks. 
But 
as 
w,' 
eOllle 
to 
unrlrrstand 
thp 
more 
than 
they 
should 
haw 
lookea 
for 
to 
occur 
with 
the 
open- 
Rniptlll'es. 
we 
Ill'rceive 
that 
it 
covers 
the 
thousand 
years 
of 
ing- 
of 
the 
.I 
ewish 
ypar 
1915, 
which 
hegan 
with 
Septem 
her 
21. 
Ch 
ri:<t 
's 
rrign. 
The 
hnman 
mind 
seems 
to 
have 
natural 
tenrlency, 
and 
one 
"Thp 
nations 
\"ere 
angry, 
thy 
wrath 
is 
come, 
and 
the 
time 
with 
whieh 
we 
shoulll 
have 
sympathy, 
to 
expect 
matters 
to 
of 
tllP 
,lead 
that 
thl'y 
should 
he 
;iudgea." 
The 
chmch 
are 
the 
eulminate 
more 
rapi,lly, 
fultilments 
to 
come 
more 
su<1aenly, 
first 
to 
rpceive 
their 
jll,lgment, 
the 
deeision 
in 
thl'ir 
ease; 
for 
than 
they 
ever 
rIo 
come. 
For 
instancp. 
the 
Seriptmes 
tell 
liS 
thp 
,,"01'1,1 
(iorl 
has 
appointerl 
thousand-year 
aay. 
(Acts 
17 
:31 
that 
ahout 
th,' 
time 
of 
the 
sounding 
of 
the 
Sevpnth 
Trumpet, 
Pdn 
:1:R) 
"'\n,l 
that 
tholl 
sholllrlest 
give 
rewara 
unto 
thy 
certain 
great 
events. 
rnumerate,l 
in 
Ollr 
text, 
will 
hegin 
to 
sel"\":Jnts 
the 
propllets 
fthp 
aneient 
worthiesl 
and 
to 
the 
saints 
take 
plaee. 
Many 
Christian 
ppople, 
looking 
at 
the 
statement, 
fa]] 
thr 
holy 
on(>s 
I, 
anrl 
them 
that 
fpar 
thy 
name, 
small 
and 
expeet 
all 
this 
to 
he 
fulfillea 
in 
fpw 
minutes, 
or 
few 
hams, 
great." 
All 
this 
latter 
elass-the 
world 
of 
mankina-will 
[5563] 
ST. PETER SIFTED LIKE WHEAT NOVEMBER 15.—Mark 14:27-31, 53, 54, 66-72. ‘‘Let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall.’’—1 Corinthians 10:12. St. Peter was admittedly a man of strong character, very courageous, but rather too impetuous. He is one of the two disciples of whom it is written that ‘‘The people perceived that they were ignorant and unlearned men.’’ (Aets 4:13) In some respects, therefore, St. Peter may be said to have had less advantage than Judas. Both had equal opportunities in the school of Christ: yet how different the results with the two men! The one went down into the second death despised; the other, after ups and downs of trial and discipline, passed to a reward of glory, honor and immortality with his Master, ranking amongst the highest of the apostles. Our lesson for today deals with the special ‘‘sifting’’ which came to St. Peter at the time of our Lord’s death, and of which he was forewarned by Jesus, saying, ‘‘Simon, Simon, behold Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat; but I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not.’’ St. Peter’s courage, manifested on so many occasions, was really his weak point. Notwithstanding all that Jesus had said to forewarn him of the sifting experiences that were just before him, St. Peter realized no dread, no fear. Hence he did little watehing and praying in comparison with what he should have done, and self-confidence Jed to his undoing for a time. Tt was the same St. Peter who, when told that he would deny our Lord before the time for the cock to crow the next morning, declared that it surely was a mistake, for he was ready to die with his Master. It was the same St. Peter who drew his sword and cut off the ear of the high priest’s servant, afterward healed by Jesus. It was the same impulsive St. Peter who was the first to acknowledge the Messiahship of Jesus, Jesus had inquired what people were saying about him— who they said he was—and had finally asked, ‘‘Whom say ye that Tam???’ Then St. Peter answered, ‘‘Thou art the Messiah, the Son of the Living God.’’ Jesus replied that this answer indicated that St. Peter was in a blessed condition of relationship with God, or otherwise he would not have had the knowledge to make this statement. He said, ‘‘Flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven.’’? Who could think that this same noble character would be so overwhelmed with fear that he would deny his Master, even with curses! One thing which impresses itself quickly and forcibly upon our minds is the thought that the writers of the New Testament were certainly very different from the majority of writers in that they told the absolute truth without modification or varnish. Surely no other book is like the Bible in this respect. The founders of great religious world-systems and of various sectarian systems have manifested a very different spirit. Their heroes are all great, noble, edueated, heroic. Never would they think of pointing out such weaknesses as those manifested by St. Peter on the night in whieh our Lord was betrayed, when he denied his Master. Surely this gives us greater confidence in the Bible—in its honesty, in its truthfulness. We ean rely upon the fact that the men who thus freely tell of their failings, and who speak of their lack of learning, must have been men of great courage, ereat sinecrity. great love for the truth. Surely their testimony is worthy of all aecceptation. ST. PETER’S TRIAL UNEXPECTED Temptations will come in an insidious form. We eannot imagine that at the time when he cut off the ear of the high priest ’s servant St. Peter had any sympathy with the thought of denying our Lord. But cireumstances and conditions Von. XXXV ; BROOKLYN, N. Y., NOVEMBER 1, 1914 : MAKING READY FOR THE REIGN OF RIGHTEOUSNESS changed. The Master was taken a prisoner. Whatever power he had previously exercised whereby he walked away from his enemies, and they could not take him because his ‘‘hour had not yet come,’’ that power he evidently was not exercising now —his hour had come. To see his Master apparently without friends in heaven, delivered over to his enemies and led from one tribunal to the other, had a paralyzing effect upon St. Peter. St. John had such an acquaintance with some one connected with the palace that he was permitted to enter the court and bring St. Peter with him; but they had separated. St. Peter was in the courtyard. It was cold, and he approached an open brazier to warm himself. In the light of the court, surrounded by the gossiping servants of the palace, he was keenly serutinized by one of the maids, who said, ‘‘Thou art also a disciple of the Nazarene.’’ Stunned by the identification and wondering to what it might lead, St. Peter promptly denied that he had any knowledge of Jesus. Then he moved away to another part of the court, where the shadows were deeper and the people fewer. But again he was recognized as a Galilean and aecused of being one of Jesus’ disciples. Again he denied the charge. The third time he was approached with the same charge that he was one of Jesus’ disciples and a Galilean, and that his speech hetrayed him. Again, with cursing, he denicd that he knew his Master. Terrible! we say. And surely St. Peter felt afterward that it was terrible; for just at that time, the carly morning, came the beginning of cock-crowing, and he remembered the Master ’s words that Satan had desired to sift him as wheat, and that hefore the cock crew he would have denied his Master three times. The whole matter came upon him with crushing force: and, wrapping his cloak about his head, he hastened away into the darkness, weeping bitterly: for just about the time that the eock crew, Jesus was Jed forth not far from him, and as he looked at Jesus, the Master Jifted up his eves and looked at St. Peter. It was a sympathetic glance, not an angered one; but it went straight to the heart. St. Peter’s crime was nothing like that of Judas: he had merely sought to protect himself. He had not sought to injure or even to risk the injury of his Master, The thoroughness of St. Peter’s repentance is abundantly testified by his subsequent loyalty even unto death. Tradition has it that he was condemned to be crucified: and that, remembering how once he had denied his Master, he felt that it} would be too great an honor for him to share exactly the same death ag his Lord: and that, at his own request, he was erucified head downward. THE LESSON TO ALL CHRISTIANS Our Golden Text voices to all Christians the lesson of St. Peter’s experiences—"Let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall.” When we are weak in our own estimation and, full of faith, cling tenaciously to the Arm of the Lord, then we are really strong in the might which God supplies through his eternal Son, Another lesson is that however different the experiences of God’s people, all who fall into line for the great promotion to the first resurreetion must expect to endure severe siftings, provings—of their love for the Lord, the truth, the brethren, and their loyalty to all these. wet us never forget that siftings are permitted, not because the Lord has no interest in us, but because only those who ean stand siftings, trials and tests, are fit for places in the kingdom. ‘*The nations were angry, and thy wrath is come, and the time of the dead, that they should be judged, and that thou shouldest give reward unto thy servants the prophets, and to the saints, and them that fear thy name, small and great; and shouldest destroy them that destroy the earth.’’—Revelation 11:18. It may be that many of the Lord’s people were expecting more than they should have looked for to oceur with the opening of the Jewish year 1915, which began with Septemher 21. The human mind seems to have a natural tendeney, and one with which we should have sympathy, to expect matters to culminate more rapidly, fulfilments to come more suddenly, than they ever do come. For instance, the Scriptures tell us that about the time of the sounding of the Seventh Trumpet, certain great events, enumerated in our text, will hegin to take place. Many Christian people, looking at the statement, expect all this to be fulfilled in a few minutes, or a few hours, [6563] or at mest a few wecks. But as we come to understand the Scriptures. we perceive that it covers the thousand years of Christ’s reign, “The nations were angry, thy wrath is come, and the time of the dead that they should be judged.’’ The church are the first to receive their judgment, the decision in their ease; for the world God has appointed a thousand-year day. (Acts 17:31; 2 Peter 2:8) ‘And that thou shouldest give reward unto thy servants the prophets [the ancient worthies] and to the saints fall the holy ones|, and them that fear thy name, small and great.’’ All this latter class—the world of mankind—will (319-323)

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