The Great Controversy - Ellen G. White | Page 221

given that when the Son of man comes, the dead are raised incorruptible and the living are changed. By this great change they are prepared to receive the kingdom; for Paul says: " Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; neither doth corruption inherit incorruption." 1 Corinthians 15:50. Man in his present state is mortal, corruptible; but the kingdom of God will be incorruptible, enduring forever. Therefore man in his present state cannot enter into the kingdom of God. But when Jesus comes, He confers immortality upon His people; and then He calls them to inherit the kingdom of which they have hitherto been only heirs.
These and other scriptures clearly proved to Miller ' s mind that the events which were generally expected to take place before the coming of Christ, such as the universal reign of peace and the setting up of the kingdom of God upon the earth, were to be subsequent to the second advent. Furthermore, all the signs of the times and the condition of the world corresponded to the prophetic description of the last days. He was forced to the conclusion, from the study of Scripture alone, that the period allotted for the continuance of the earth in its present state was about to close.
" Another kind of evidence that vitally affected my mind," he says, " was the chronology of the Scriptures.... I found that predicted events, which had been fulfilled in the past, often occurred within a given time. The one hundred and twenty years to the flood( Genesis 6:3); the seven days that were to precede it, with forty days of predicted rain( Genesis 7:4); the four hundred years of the sojourn of Abraham ' s seed( Genesis 15:13); the three days of the butler ' s and baker ' s dreams( Genesis 40:12-20); the seven years of Pharaoh ' s( Genesis 41:28-54); the forty years in the wilderness( Numbers 14:34); the three and a half years of famine( 1 Kings 17:1) [ see Luke 4:25;]... the seventy years ' captivity( Jeremiah 25:11); Nebuchadnezzar ' s seven times( Daniel 4:13-16); and the seven weeks, threescore and two weeks, and the one week, making seventy weeks, determined upon the Jews( Daniel 9:24-27),--the events limited by these times were all once only a matter of prophecy, and were fulfilled in accordance with the predictions."--Bliss, pages 74, 75.
When, therefore, he found, in his study of the Bible, various chronological periods that, according to his understanding of them, extended to the second coming of Christ, he could not but regard them as the " times before appointed," which God had revealed unto His servants. " The secret things," says Moses, " belong unto the Lord our God: but those things which are revealed belong unto us and to our children forever;" and the Lord declares by the prophet Amos, that He " will do nothing, but He revealeth His secret unto His servants the prophets." Deuteronomy 29:29; Amos 3:7. The students of God ' s word may, then, confidently expect to
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