The Investigative
Judgment
I beheld,
says the prophet Daniel, till
thrones were placed, and One that was
Ancient of Days did sit: His raiment
was white as snow, and the hair of
His head like pure wool; His throne
was fiery flames, and the wheels
thereof burning fire. A fiery stream
issued and came forth from before
Him: thousand thousands ministered
unto Him. And ten thousand times ten
thousand stood before Him: the
judgment was set, and the books were
opened. Daniel 7: 9,10, R.V.
Thus was presented to
the prophets vision the great
and solemn day when the characters
and the lives of men should pass in
review before the Judge of all the
earth, and every man should be
rendered according to his
works. The Ancient of Days is
God the Father. Says the psalmist:
Before the mountains were
brought forth, or ever Thou hadst
formed the earth and the world, even
from everlasting to everlasting, Thou
art God. Psalm 90:2. It is He,
the source of all being, and the
fountain of all law, that is to
preside in the judgment. And holy
angels as ministers and witnesses, in
number ten thousand times ten
thousand, and thousands of
thousands, attend this great
tribunal.
And, behold, one
like the Son of man came with the
clouds of heaven, and came to the
Ancient of Days, and they brought Him
near before Him. And there was given
Him dominion, and glory, and a
kingdom, that all people, nations and
languages, should serve Him: His
dominion is an everlasting dominion,
which shall not pass away.
Daniel 7:13, 14. The coming of Christ
here described is not His second
coming to the earth. He comes to the
Ancient of Days in heaven to receive
dominion and glory and a kingdom,
which will be given Him at the close
of His work as a mediator. It is this
coming, and not His second advent to
the earth, that was foretold in
prophecy to take place at the
termination of the 2300 days in 1844.
Attended by heavenly angels, our
great High Priest enters the holy of
holies and there appears in the
presence of God to engage in the last
acts of His ministration in behalf of
man to perform the work of
investigative judgment and to make
atonement for all who are shown to be
entitled to its benefits.
In the typical service
only those who had come before God
with confession and repentance, and
whose sins, through the blood of the
sin offering, were transferred to the
sanctuary, had a part in the service
of the Day of Atonement. Therefore,
in the great Day of Atonement and
Investigative Judgment the only cases
considered are those of the professed
people of God. The judgment of the
wicked is a distinct and separate
work, and takes place at a later
period. Judgment must begin at
the house of God: and if it first
begin at us, what shall the end of
them that obey not the gospel?
1 Peter 4:17.
The books of record in
heaven, in which the names and deeds
of men are registered, are to
determine the decisions of the
judgment. Says the prophet Daniel:
The judgment was set, and the
books were opened. The
revelator, describing the same scene,
adds: Another book was opened,
which is the book of life: and the
dead were judged out of those things
which were written in the books,
according to their works.
Revelation 20:12.
The book of life
contains the names of all who have
ever entered the service of God.
Jesus bade His disciples:
Rejoice, because your names are
written in heaven. Luke 10:20.
Paul speaks of his faithful fellow
workers, whose names are in the
book of life. Philippians 4:3.
Daniel, looking down to a time
of trouble, such as never was,
declares that Gods people shall
be delivered, everyone that
shall be found written in the
book. And the revelator says
that those only shall enter the city
of God whose names are written
in the Lambs book of
life. Daniel 12:1; Revelation
21:27.
A book of
remembrance is written before
God, in which are recorded the good
deeds of them that feared the
Lord, and that thought upon His
name. Malachi 3:16. Their words
of faith, their acts of love, are
registered in heaven. Nehemiah refers
to this when he says: Remember
me, O my God,
and wipe not out
my good deeds that I have done for
the house of my God. Nehemiah
13:14. In the books of Gods
remembrance, every deed of
righteousness is immortalized. There
every temptation resisted, every evil
overcome, every word of tender pity
expressed, is faithfully chronicled.
And every act of sacrifice, every
suffering and sorrow endured for
Christs sake, is
recorded. Says the psalmist:
thou tallest my wanderings: put
Thou my tears into Thy bottle: are
they not in Thy book? Psalm
56:8.
There is a record also
of the sins of men. For God
shall bring every work into judgment,
with every secret thing, whether it
be good, or whether it be evil.
Every idle word that men shall
speak, they shall give account
thereof in the day of judgment.
Says the Savior: By thy words
thou shall be justified, and by thy
words thou shall be condemned.
Ecclesiastes 12:14; Matthew 12:
36,37. The secret purposes and
motives appear in the unerring
register, for God will bring to
light the hidden things of darkness,
and make manifest the counsels of the
hearts. 1 Corinthians 4:5.
Behold, it is written before
Me,
your iniquities, and the
iniquities of your fathers together,
saith the Lord. Isaiah 65: 6,7.
Every mans work
passes in review before God and is
registered for faithfulness or
unfaithfulness. Opposite each name in
the books of heaven is entered with
terrible exactness every wrong deed,
every selfish act, every unfulfilled
duty, and every secret sin, with
every artful dissembling. Heaven-sent
warnings or reproofs neglected,
wasted moments, unimproved
opportunities, the influence exerted
for good or for evil, with its
far-reaching results, all are
chronicled by the recording angel.
The law of God is the
standard by which the characters and
the lives of men will be tested in
the judgment. Says the wise man:
Fear God, and keep His
commandments: for this is the whole
duty of man. For God shall bring
every work into judgment.
Ecclesiastes 12:13,14. The apostle
James admonishes his brethren:
So speak ye, and so do, as they
that shall be judged by the law of
liberty. James 2:12.
Those who in the
judgment are accounted
worthy will have a part in the
resurrection of the just. Jesus said:
They which shall be accounted
worthy to obtain that world, and the
resurrection from the dead,
are equal unto the angels; and are
children of God, being the children
of the resurrection. Luke 20:
35, 36.
And again He declares
that they that have done
good shall come forth
unto the resurrection of
life. John 5:29. The righteous
dead will not be raised until after
the judgment at which they are
accounted worthy of the
resurrection of life. Hence,
they will not be present in person at
the tribunal when their records are
examined and their cases decided.
Jesus will appear as
their advocate, to plead in their
behalf before God. If any man
sin, we have an advocate with the
Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous. 1 John 2:1.
For Christ is not entered into
the holy places made with hands,
which are the figures of the true;
but into heaven itself, now to appear
in the presence of God for us.
Wherefore He is able also to
save them to the uttermost that come
unto God by Him, seeing He ever
liveth to make intercession for
them. Hebrews 9:24; 7:25.
As the books of record
are opened in the judgment, the lives
of all who have believed on Jesus
come in review before God. Beginning
with those who first lived upon the
earth, our Advocate presents the
cases of each successive generation,
and closes with the living. Every
name is mentioned, every case closely
investigated. Names are accepted,
names rejected.
When any have sins
remaining upon the books of record,
unrepented of and unforgiven, their
names will be blotted out of the book
of life, and the record of their good
deeds will be erased from the book of
remembrance. The Lord declared to
Moses: whosoever hath sinned
against Me, him will I blot out of My
book. Exodus 32:33. Moreover,
says the prophet Ezekiel: When
the righteous turneth away from his
righteousness, and committeth
iniquity,
all his
righteousness that he hath done shall
not be mentioned. Ezekiel
18:24.
All who have truly
repented of sin, and by faith claimed
the blood of Christ as their atoning
sacrifice, have had pardoned entered
against their names in the books of
heaven; as they became partakers of
the righteousness of Christ, and
their characters are found to be in
harmony with the law of God, their
sins will be blotted out, and they
themselves will be accounted worthy
of eternal life. The Lord declares,
by the prophet Isaiah: I, even
I, am He that blotteth out thy
transgressions for Mine own sake, and
will not remember thy sins.
Isaiah 43: 25. Jesus said: He
that overcometh, the same shall be
clothed in white raiment; and I will
not blot out his name out of the book
of life, but I will confess his name
before My Father, and before His
angels. Whosoever shall
deny Me before men, him will I also
deny before My Father which is in
heaven. Revelation 3:5; Matthew
10: 32,33.
The deepest interest
manifested among men in the decisions
of earthy tribunals but faintly
represents the interest evinced in
the heavenly courts when the names
entered in the book of life come up
in review before the Judge of all the
earth. The divine Intercessor
presents the plea that all who have
overcome through faith in His blood
be forgiven their transgressions,
that they be restored to their Eden
home, and crowned as joint heirs with
Himself to the first
dominion. Micah 4:8. Satan in
his efforts to deceive and tempt our
race had though to frustrate the
divine plan in mans creation;
but Christ now asks that his plan be
carried into effect as if man had
never fallen. He asks for His people
not only pardon and justification,
full and complete, but a share in His
glory and a seat upon His throne.
While Jesus is
pleading for the subjects of His
grace, Satan accuses them before God
as transgressors. The great deceiver
has sought to lead them to
skepticism, to cause them to lose
confidence in God, to separate
themselves from His love, and break
His law. Now he points to the record
of their lives, to the defeats of
character, the unlikeness to Christ,
which has dishonored their Redeemer,
to all the sins that he has tempted
them to commit, and because of these,
he claims them as his subjects.
Jesus does not excused
their sins, but shows their penitence
and faith, and claiming for them
forgiveness. He lifts His wounded
hands before the Father and the Holy
angels, saying: I know them by name.
I have graven them on the palms of My
hands. The sacrifices of God
are a broken spirit: a broken and a
contrite heart, O God, Thou wilt not
despise. Psalm 51:17. And to
the accuser of His people He
declares: The Lord rebuke thee,
O Satan; even the Lord that hath
chosen Jerusalem rebuke thee: is not
a brand plucked out of fire?
Zechariah 3:2. Christ will
clothe His faithful ones with His own
righteousness, that He may present
them to the Father a glorious
church, not having spot, or wrinkle,
or any such thing. Ephesians
5:27. Their names stand enrolled in
the book of life, and concerning them
it is written: They shall walk
with Me in white: for they are
worthy. Revelation 3:4.
Thus will be realized
the complete fulfillment of the
new-covenant promise: I will
forgive their iniquity, and I will
remember their sin no more.
In those days, and in that
time, saith the Lord, the iniquity of
Israel shall be sought for, and there
shall be none; and the sins of Judah,
and they shall not be found.
Jeremiah 31: 34; 50:20. In that
day shall the branch of the Lord be
beautiful and glorious, and the fruit
of the earth shall be excellent and
comely for them that are escaped of
Israel. And it shall come to pass,
that he that is left in Zion, and he
that remaineth in Jerusalem, shall be
called holy, even everyone that is
written among the living in
Jerusalem. Isaiah 4: 2,3.
The work of the
investigative judgment and the
blotting out of sins is to be
accomplished before the second advent
of the Lord. Since the dead are to be
judged out of the things written in
the books, it is impossible that the
sins of men should be blotted out
until after the judgment at which
their cases are to be investigated.
However, the apostle Peter distinctly
states that the sins of believers
will be blotted out when the
times of refreshing shall come from
the presence of the Lord; and He
shall send Jesus Christ. Acts
3: 19, 20. When the investigative
judgment closes, Christ will come,
and His reward will be with Him to
give to every man, as his work shall
be.
In the typical service
the high priest, having made the
atonement for Israel, came forth and
blessed the congregation. So Christ,
at the close of His work as mediator,
will appear, without sin unto
salvation. (Hebrews 9:28), to
bless His waiting people with eternal
life. As the priest, in removing the
sins from the sanctuary, confessed
them upon the head of the scapegoat,
so Christ will place all these sins
upon Satan, the originator and
instigator of sin. The scapegoat,
bearing the sins of Israel, was sent
away unto a land not
inhabited (Leviticus 16:22); so
Satan, bearing the guilt of all the
sins which he has caused Gods
people to commit, will be for a
thousand years confined to the earth,
which will then be desolate, without
inhabitant, and he will at last
suffer the full penalty of sin in the
fires that shall destroy all the
wicked. Thus, the great plan of
redemption will reach its
accomplishment in the final
eradication of sin and the
deliverance of all who have been
willing to renounce evil.
At the time of the
appointed judgment the close
of the 2300 days, in 1844
began the work of the investigation
and blotting out of sins. All who
have ever taken upon themselves the
name of Christ must pass its
searching scrutiny. Both the living
and the dead are to be judged
out of those things which are
written in the books, according to
their works.
Sins that have not
been repented of and forsaken will
not be pardoned and blotted out of
the record, but will stand to witness
against the sinner in the day of God.
He may have committed his evil deeds
in the light of day or in the
darkness of night; but they were open
and manifest before Him with whom we
have to do. Angels of God witnessed
each sin and registered it in the
unerring records. Sin may be
concealed, denied, covered up from
father, mother, wife, children, and
associates; no one but the guilty
actors may cherish the least
suspicion of the wrong; but it is
laid bare before the intelligences of
heaven. The darkness of the darkest
night, the secrecy of deceptive arts,
is not sufficient to veil one thought
from the knowledge of the Eternal.
God has an exact record of every
unjust account and every unfair
dealing. He is not deceived by
appearances of piety. He makes no
mistakes in His estimation of
character. Men may be deceived by
those who are corrupt in heart, but
God pierces all disguises and reads
the inner life.
How solemn is the
thought! Day after day, passing into
eternity, bears its burden of records
for the books of heaven. Words once
spoken, deeds once done, can never be
recalled. Angels have registered both
the good and the evil. The mightiest
conqueror upon the earth cannot call
back the record of even a single day.
Our acts, our words, even our most
secret motives, all have their weight
in deciding our destiny for weal or
woe. Though they may be forgotten by
us, they will bear their testimony to
justify or condemn.
As the features of the
countenance are reproduced with
unerring accuracy on the polished
plate of the artist, so the character
is faithfully delineated in the books
above. Yet, how little solicitude is
felt concerning that record which is
to meet the gaze of heavenly beings.
Could the veil which separates the
visible from the invisible world be
swept back, and the children of men
behold an angel recording every word
and deed, which they must meet again
in the judgment, how many words are
daily uttered would remain unspoken,
how many deeds would remain undone.
In the judgment, the
use of every talent will be
scrutinized. How have we employed the
capital lent us of Heaven? Will the
Lord at His coming receive His own
with usury? Have we improved the
powers entrusted us, in hand and
heart and brain, to the glory of God
and the blessing of the world? How
have we used our time, our pen, our
voice, our money, and our influence?
What have we done for Christ, in the
person of the poor, the afflicted,
the orphan, or the widow? God has
made us depositories of His holy
word; what have we done with the
light and truth given us to make men
wise unto salvation? No value
is attached to a mere profession of
faith in Christ; only the love that
is shown by works is counted genuine.
Yet, it is love alone that in the
sight of Heaven makes any act of
value. Whatever is done from love,
however small it may appear in the
estimation of men, is accepted and
rewarded of God.
The hidden selfishness
of men stands revealed in the books
of heaven. There is a record of
unfulfilled duties to their fellow
men, of forgetfulness of the
Saviors claims. There they will
see how often were given to Satan the
time, thought, and strength that
belonged to Christ. Sad is the record
that angels bear to heaven.
Intelligent beings, professed
followers of Christ, are absorbed in
the acquirement of worldly
possessions or enjoyments of earthly
pleasures. Money, time, and strength
are sacrificed for display
and self-indulgence; but few are
the moments devoted to prayer, to the
searching of the Scriptures, to
humiliation of soul and confession of
sin.
Satan invents
unnumbered schemes to occupy our
minds, that they may not dwell upon
the work with which we ought to be
best acquainted. The arch deceiver
hates the great truths that bring to
view an atoning sacrifice and an
all-powerful mediator. He knows that
with him everything depends on his
diverting minds from Jesus and His
truth.
Those who would share
the benefits of the Saviors
mediation should permit nothing to
interfere with their duty to perfect
holiness in the fear of God. The
precious hours, instead of being
given to pleasure, to display, or to
gain seeking, should be devoted to an
earnest, prayerful of the word of
truth. The subject of the sanctuary
and the investigative judgment should
be clearly understood by the people
of God. All need knowledge for
themselves of the position and work
of their great High Priest.
Otherwise, it will be impossible for
them to exercise the faith that is
essential at this time or to occupy
the position that God designs them to
fill. Every individual has a soul to
save or lose. Each has a case pending
at the bar of God. Each must meet the
great Judge face to face. How
important, then, that every mind
contemplate often the solemn scene
when the judgment shall sit and the
books shall be opened, when, with
Daniel, every individual must stand
in his lot, at the end of the days.
All who have received
the light upon these subjects are to
bear testimony of the great truths
that God has committed to them. The
sanctuary in heaven is the very
center of Christs work in
behalf of men. It concerns every soul
living upon the earth. It opens to
plan view the plan of redemption;
bringing us down to the very close of
time and revealing the triumphant
issue of the contest between
righteousness and sin. It is of the
utmost importance that all should
thoroughly investigate these subjects
and be able to answer to everyone
that asketh them for a reason of the
hope that is in them.
The intercession of
Christ in mans behalf in the
sanctuary above is as essential to
the plan of salvation as was His
death upon the cross. By His death,
He began the work that after His
resurrection He ascended to complete
in heaven. We must by faith enter
within the veil, whither the
forerunner is for us entered.
Hebrews 6:20. There the light from
the cross of Calvary is reflected.
There we may gain a clearer insight
into the mysteries of redemption. The
salvation of man is accomplished at
an infinite expense to heaven; the
sacrifice made is equal to the
broadest demands of the broken law of
God. Jesus opened the way to the
Fathers throne, and through His
mediation, the sincere desire of all
who come to Him in faith may be
presented before God.
He that covereth
his sins shall not prosper: but whoso
confesseth and forsaketh them shall
have mercy. Proverbs 28:13. If
those who hide and excuse their
faults could see, how Satan exults
over them, how he taunts Christ and
holy angels with their course, they
would make haste to confess their
sins and to put them away. Through
defects in the character, Satan works
to gain control of the whole mind,
and he knows that if these defects
are cherished, he will succeed.
Therefore, he is constantly seeking
to deceive the followers of Christ
with his fatal sophistry that it is
impossible for them to overcome.
However, Jesus pleads in their behalf
His wounded hands, His bruised body;
and He declares to all who would
follow Him: My grace is
sufficient for thee. 2
Corinthians 12:9. Take My yoke
upon you, and learn from Me; for I am
meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall
find rest unto your souls. For My
yoke is easy, and My burden
light. Matthew 11: 29,30. Let
none, then, regard their defects as
incurable. God will give faith and
grace to overcome them.
We are now living in
the great day of atonement. In the
typical service, while the high
priest was making the atonement for
Israel, all were required to afflict
their souls by repentance of sin and
humiliation before the Lord, lest
they be cut off from among the
people. In like manner, all who would
have their names retained in the book
of life should now, in the few
remaining days of their probation,
afflict their souls before God by
sorrow for sin and true repentance.
There must be deep, faithful
searching of heart. The light,
frivolous spirit indulged by so many
professed Christians must be put
away. There is earnest warfare before
all who would subdue the evil
tendencies that strive for the
mastery.
The work of
preparation is an individual work. We
are not saved by groups. The purity
and devotion of one will not offset
the want of these qualities in
another. Though all nations are to
pass in judgment before God, yet He
will examine the case of each
individual with a close and
searchable scrutiny as if there were
not another person being upon earth.
Everyone must be tested and found
without spot, wrinkle, or any such
thing.
Solemn are the scenes
connected with the closing work of
the atonement. Momentous are the
interests involved therein. The
judgment is now passing in the
sanctuary above. For many years, this
work has been in progress. Soon
none know how soon it
will pass to the cases of the living
during the Great Tribulation. In the
awful presence of God, our lives are
to come up in review. At this time
above all others it behooves every
soul to heed the Saviors
admonition: watch and pray: for
ye know not when the time is.
Mark 13:33. If therefore thou
shalt not watch, I will come on thee
as a thief, and thou shalt not know
the hour I will come upon thee.
Revelation 3:3.
When the work of the
investigative judgment closes, the
destiny of all will have been decided
for life or death. Probation is ended
at the close of the seventh trumpet,
a short time before the appearing of
the Lord in the clouds of heaven.
Christ in the Revelation, looking
forward to the time, declares:
He that is unjust, let him be
unjust still: and he which is filthy,
let him be filthy still: and he that
is righteous let him be righteous
still: and he that is holy, let him
be holy still. And, behold, I come
quickly; and My reward is with Me, to
give every man according as his work
shall be. Revelation 22: 11,
12.
The righteous and the
wicked will still be living upon the
earth in their mortal state
men will be planting and building,
eating and drinking, all unconscious
that the final, irrevocable decision
has been pronounced in the sanctuary
above. Before the Flood, after Noah
entered the ark, God shut him in and
shut the ungodly out; but for seven
days the people, knowing not that
their doom was fixed, continued their
careless, pleasure-loving life and
mocked the warnings of impending
judgment. So, says the
Savior, shall also the coming
of the Son of man be. Matthew
24:39. Silently unnoticed as the
midnight thief, will come the
decisive hour which marks the fixing
of every mans destiny, the
final withdrawal of mercys
offer to guilty men.
Watch ye
therefore
lest coming suddenly
He find you sleeping. Mark 13:
35, 36. Perilous is the condition of
those who, growing weary of their
watch, turn to the attractions of the
world. While the man of business is
absorbed in the pursuit of gain,
while the pleasure lover is seeking
indulgence, while the daughter of
fashion is arranging her adornments
it may be in that hour the
Judge of all the earth will pronounce
the sentence: Thou art weighted
in the balances, and art found
wanting. Daniel 5:27.