Chapter Introduction to Restoration
Section 3
The History of the Providence of Restoration and I
As
an individual, each one of us is a product of the history of the providence of
restoration. Hence, the person who is to accomplish the purpose of history is
none other than I, myself. I must take up the cross of history and accept
responsibility to fulfill its calling. To this end, I must fulfill in my
lifetime (horizontally), through my efforts, the indemnity conditions, which
have accumulated through the long course of the providence of restoration
(vertically). Only by doing this, can I stand proudly as the fruit of history,
the one whom God has eagerly sought throughout His providence.
In
other words, I must restore through indemnity, during my own generation, all
the unaccomplished missions of past prophets and saints who were called in
their time to carry the cross of restoration. Otherwise, I cannot become the
individual who completes the purpose of the providence of restoration.
To
become such an historical victor, I must understand clearly the Heart of God when
He worked with past prophets and saints, the original purpose for which God
called them, and the details of the providential missions, which He entrusted
to them.
Yet
there is no one among fallen humanity who can become such an historical victor
by his efforts alone. For this reason, we must understand all these things
through Christ at the Second Advent, who comes to fulfill the providence of
restoration. Moreover, when we believe in him, become one with him, and attend
him in his work, we can stand in the position of having fulfilled horizontally
with him the vertical indemnity conditions in the history of the providence of
restoration.
The
path, which all past saints walked as they strove to fulfill God’s providential
Will is the very path we must walk again today. Beyond that, we must continue
on to the end of the path, even walking trails they left untrodden. Therefore,
fallen people can never find the path that leads to life without understanding
the particulars of the providence of restoration. Herein lies the reason why we
must study the Principle.
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