THE GOSPEL AND ITS
MINISTRY
PREFATORY NOTE TO THE THIRTEENTH EDITION.
THE first ten chapters of The Gospel and its Ministry were
written some five-and-thirty years ago for a religious "Monthly." When
published in book form these chapters were supplemented by a number of appendix
notes; and further notes were added from time to time, as new editions were
called for. But, in response to appeals from many quarters, the bulk of the
Appendix was afterwards recast, and printed as Chapters XI. to XVIII. This will
account for the marked difference which the reader cannot fail to notice between
these later chapters and the original ten.
I intended to rewrite Part II. before issuing this "Library Edition"
of the book. But, yielding to advice, I have abandoned that intention. For it
has been urged upon me that as the work has been so long before the public, and
copies of it are in circulation in all lands, drastic changes would be
undesirable; the more so as foreign editions and versions are beyond my control.
Of these the most recent is a Japanese translation which was published in
Fukuoka and placed in the hands of all the native workers of the Church
Missionary Society in Japan.
R. A.
PREFACE
IN these days men have left off faith. The spirit of the martyrs is not in them.
Opinions have taken the place of convictions ; and the result is a liberality
which is the offspring, not of humility and love, but of indifference or doubt.
Opinions are our own, and should not be too firmly held. Truth is Divine, and is
worth living for and dying for. But what is truth? Each one, surely, must answer
for himself; and does it not resolve itself therefore into a question of opinion
after all ? This is just what characterises the day we live in. Listening to the
discordant voices that abound on every side, men are content to give heed only
to the points on which the greater number appear to be agreed; and even these
are held on sufferance till some new voice is raised to challenge them. FAITH is
impossible. If an angel from heaven were heard above the discord, or an apostle
should return to earth, then indeed the anarchy of opinion might yield once
again to the reign of faith. Meanwhile, we must be content to drift on in
darkness, blindly trusting that when the day dawns we shall find ourselves in
safety.
Was it for this the Son of God lived and died on earth? Was it for this
"the glorious Gospel of the blessed God" was preached "with the
Holy Ghost sent down from heaven"? How different from the spirit of the age
is the language of the inspired Apostle! "Though WE or an ANGEL FROM HEAVEN
preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let
him be accursed." Such warnings in Holy Writ are not the words of wild
exaggeration. In the last days the new light which men seek for to dispel
"the deepening gloom" will not be wanting; but it will prove a
wrecker's fire, though seemingly accredited as the beacon light of truth.
God has given us a revelation. And, while doubt still lingers round innumerable
questions on which we crave knowledge, Divine certainty is our privilege in
respect of "all things that pertain unto life and godliness." The man
who would force his opinions on others is a boor. He who would die for his
opinions is a fool. But Christianity has not to do with opinions. It is founded
on established facts and Divine truth; and faith based thereon is the heritage
of the Church. Her martyrs knew the power of faith. The truth they died for was
not "the general sense of Scripture corrected in the light of reason and
conscience," and thus reduced to the pulp-like consistency of modern
theology. In the solitude of the dungeon, or amidst the agonies of the rack,
they calmly rested on the Word of God; and, even when assured that all others
had recanted, they could stand firmly against both the world and the Church.
Faith, which makes the unseen a present reality, brought all heaven into their
hearts, and, refusing to accept deliverance, they braved death in every form.
We are not called upon to wear the martyr's crown, but it is ours to share the
martyr's faith. We can have no toleration for the veiled scepticism which is
passing for Christianity to-day. Agnosticism is Greek for ignorance, and
ignorance is both shameful and sinful in presence of a Divine revelation. The
Christian is not ignorant; neither is he in doubt. We do not think this or that:
we KNOW. "We know that the Son of God is come." "We know that He
was manifested to take away our sins." "We know that we have passed
from death unto life." "We know that if our earthly house were
dissolved, we have a building of God, eternal in the heavens." "We
know that when He shall appear we shall be like Him."
It is in this spirit that "The Gospel and Its Ministry" is written.
The book is designed to confirm faith, not to suggest doubts. And what
distinguishes it from many other valuable works on the same great subject, is
that it is not hortatory but doctrinal in character. Addressed to no special
class, it is intended for all who are interested in the doctrine of the Gospel.
R.A.
CONTENTS
Chapter One -
INTRODUCTORY.
Chapter Two -
GRACE
Chapter Three -
THE CROSS
Chapter Four -
FAITH
Chapter Five -
REPENTANCE AND THE SPIRIT'S WORK
Chapter Six -
ELECTION
Chapter Seven -
SUBSTITUTION
Chapter Eight -
RIGHTEOUSNESS
Chapter Nine -
SANCTIFICATION
Chapter Ten -
RECONCILIATION
PART II
CHAPTER XI. -
JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH
CHAPTER XII. -
JUSTIFICATION BY WORKS
CHAPTER XIII.
- JUSTIFICATION BY BLOOD
CHAPTER XIV. -
HOLINESS AND SANCTIFICATION
CHAPTER
XV. - CLEANSED BY BLOOD
CHAPTER XVI. -
THE PRIESTHOOD OF CHRIST
CHAPTER
XVII. - ATONEMENT
CHAPTER XVIII.
- THE GODHOOD OF GOD
APPENDIX.
I. MIRACLES
II. LIST OF TEXTS WHERE (Greek - my PC cannot cope!) OCCURS
HI. LIST OF TEXTS WHERE Caphar OCCURS
IV. THE FATHERHOOD OF GOD
CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTORY.
CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY.
"God so loved the world, that he gave His only begotten
Son, that whosoever believeth in Hun should not perish, but have everlasting
life."-JOHN iii:16.
Just as an infant's hand "can grasp the acorn which holds the giant
oak" within it, so the youngest child who can lisp "the Nicodemus
sermon" may with truth be said to know the gospel, and yet in every word of
it there is a depth and mystery of meaning which God alone can fathom. Tell me
what it means to perish, and enable me to grasp the thought of a life that is
eternal. Measure for me the abyss of man's wickedness and guilt during all the
ages of his black and hateful history, that I may realise in some degree what
that world is which God has loved; and then, pausing for a moment in wonder at
the thought that such a world could be loved at all, hasten on to speak of love
that gave the Son. And when you have enabled me to know this love, which cannot
be known, for it passes knowledge, press on still and tell me of the sacrifice
by which it has measured and proved itself - His Son, His Only-begotten Son.
Make me to know, in the fulness of knowledge, Him who declared that 'the Father
alone could know Him.' And when you have achieved all this, I turn again to the
words of Christ, and I read that it was GOD who so loved the world, and I crave
to know Who and What God is. I can rise to the thought of love, perhaps even to
an evil world, and the conception of love giving up an only son is not beyond
me; but when I come to know that it was GOD who loved, that GOD was the giver,
and God's Son the gift, I stand as a wondering worshipper in the presence of the
Infinite, and confess that such knowledge is too high for me.
At the very threshold, therefore, I charge my reader to think becomingly of the
gospel, remembering that it is the gospel of God. And His gospel is like
Himself. The heaven of heavens cannot contain Him, and yet He owns the humble
heart as a fitting borne. So also, in its simplicity and plainness, the good
news is within the reach of the youngest and most ignorant, aye, and even of the
lowest and the worst, for such may hear and believe and live; but in its depth
and fulness it is known to God alone, for it is a revelation of Himself. Hence
it is that the old song of the redeemed on earth will be a new song throughout
eternity; for every advance we make in the knowledge of God will shed new light
on the message we received in our.sins and sorrows here.
But not only has the gospel a depth and dignity and glory all its own because it
is in a special sense a revelation of God, it has also a distinctive greatness
and solemnity by virtue of its peculiar mission, and of the issues involved in
the proclamation of it. It is divinely called "the power of God unto
salvation to every one that believeth." The power of God! no words can add
force to this, and words that detract from it are impious. The mighty power
which made the worlds and alone can raise the dead, such is its power to the
sinner who believes. Let the preacher remember this; and while he humbly
consecrates to God every talent he possesses, let him never attempt by unworthy
means to add attractiveness to such a message.
And what solemn issues are depending while it is being proclaimed! For the
preaching of the gospel must ever tend to life, or else to death, in those who
hear. How terrible then to be guilty of levity in such a ministry In the iron
days of Rome, public triumphs were sometimes accorded to victorious generals in
acknowledgment of brilliant services. Clad in gold and purple, his feet bedecked
with pearls, and a golden crown upon his brow, the victor entered the city of
the Empire in a chariot of ivory and gold. Triumphal music mingled with the
rapturous shouts that greeted him, and the air was filled with the sweet perfume
of flowers and spices scattered on his path. Waggons passed on before, filled
with the spoils and trophies of his victories. The senate and the priesthood
attended in his honour. In front of his chariot the doomed captives marched in
chains, while behind him followed the company of those who had been set at
liberty or ransomed. All Rome kept holiday, and joined with one accord to swell
the triumph of the conqueror.
It is to such a scene that St. Paul alludes in his Second Epistle to the
Corinthians when speaking of the gospel; for its ministry, whatever the results
in those who hear, is Christ's triumph none the less. "Thanks be unto God,
who always leadeth us in triumph in Christ, and maketh manifest through us the
savour of His knowledge in every place."' We are a savour of life to the
ransomed throng, and of death to the doomed and fettered captives. But whether
our ministry swell the glad company of the redeemed, or add to the condemnation
of those that perish, we are none the less, in the one as in the other, a sweet
savour of Christ unto God.
Can any amount of education or of training make men "sufficient" for
such a ministry as this?
Who," the apostle demands, "is sufficient for these things?" And
the answer is not doubtful, "Our sufficiency is from God, who also made us
sufficient as ministers of a new covenant." And how? The halo that
encircled Moses' face at Sinai betokened the glory of his ministry. But that
ministry, glorious though it was, had no glory in comparison with the ministry
now entrusted to men. What then shall we expect in him whom God has made
"sufficient" as a minister of the new covenant? We turn to behold a
poor creature, troubled on every side, perplexed and persecuted and cast down,
in bodily presence weak, in speech contemptible, held in repute as so much filth
and scum, and in him we find the man whom God deemed fit for a ministry so
glorious and so great. And the secret of his fitness was in this, that the
knowledge of the glory of God lit up his heart, and was reflected back with a
heavenlier light than that which dazzled Israel's gaze.
In Ex. 34: 33, the A.V. suggests a false meaning, by inserting till, instead
of when. Moses spoke to the people with unveiled face, but when he ceased
speaking he put on a veil that they might not see the glory fading; they were
not to know that the glory of the old covenant was transitory.
Such was the great apostle, and such his fitness. And can any one suppose that
mental training and moral culture can avail if this "sufficiency" be
wanting; or that if men lack both culture and training they are in a better
case! But this was not all. With natural advantages that were entirely
exceptional, and in spiritual attainments unsurpassed, pre-eminent among
ministers of Christ in his labours and sufferings, and as to his office
"not a whit behind the very chiefest apostles," for, in proof of his
apostleship, he could appeal not only to his unexampled life, but to "signs
and wonders and mighty deeds" which he had wrought; yet., when "in the
foolish confidence of boasting" he ransacked his history for a crowning
proof of his sufficiency" as a minister of Christ, he turned away from all
these things to tell how, crushed doubtless, and sick at heart, he was once
bundled out of Damascus in a basket to escape the Roman garrison that held the
city to apprehend him. Or if he goes on to tell of being caught up to the
highest heaven, and of hearing there unspeakable words impossible for man to
utter, he may glory indeed in such a Paul, for this was for him a brief
foretaste of the day when the redeemed shall bear the image of the heavenly. But
if he must boast of the servant and apostle here, he will point to the Damascus
flight and the "thorn in the flesh," "Satan's messenger to buffet
him."
Would that every one who claims to preach the gospel, whether arrayed in silk
and lawn, or clad in corduroy and frieze, would ponder this paradox of the
ministry of Paul. Let us picture to ourselves this mighty apostle, this greater
and more glorious than Moses, smuggled out through a window in a buck-basket!
and then let us search out the meaning of this mystery, that he appeals to this
his shame as the crowning boast of his whole life's labours. The answer in words
is not far to seek, but which of us has grasped its meaning? "Most gladly
will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon
me. Therefore I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in
persecutions, in distresses, for Christ's, sake ; for when I am weak, then am I
strong."' What God wants in those whom He will put in trust with the
gospel, is not that they shall be polished and educated gentlemen, much less
that they shall be coarse and ignorant boors; not that they shall be skilled in
dogmatic theology, much less that they shall be unlearned in doctrine; not that
they shall be brilliant and eloquent, much less that they shall be ungifted and
dull. All He seeks is a fitting instrument upon whom the power of Christ can
rest, an empty earthen vessel that He can fill with His priceless treasure. The
man, whoever he may be, whether on the highest round of the social ladder, or
the lowest, who can say with Paul,
"Most gladly will I glory in infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest
on me,"
and say it with unfeigned lips, and from a heart that has been taught it in the
school of God, has gained the secret of this competency for the ministry of
reconciliation.
Apart from this fitness, the highest and the greatest are but "clouds
without water," while with it the lowest and the least may become
"competent ministers of the new covenant."
'The ministry of the Gospel is the special subject of these pages but the
same fitness is essential to the ministry of the Church. The Apostle Paul was
called to the double ministry (" The gospel . . whereof I Paul am made a
minister; . . . the church, whereof I am made a minister,"- Col. I. 23-25).
Both these ministries are, no doubt, included in the title, "ministers of
God" (2 Cor. vi. 4), or "ministers of Christ "(2 Car. xi. 23).
The ministers are specially named, along with the elders or bishops, in the
address of the Epistle to the Philippians (Phil. i. i); and the characteristics
which were to be sought for in any who claimed that position are specified in i
Tim. iii. 2-.13. The word minister is derived from the Latin; deacon from the
Greek. Etymologically, and in their origin, the words are synonyms. But deacon
has in English acquired a meaning of its own; and its retention in the Revised
Version is a flagrant violation of the avowed principles on which the revision
was conducted. It is hard to believe, moreover, that it was not committed
intentionally, to perpetuate the popular error of supposing that the deacon was
a subordinate office-bearer in the Church. That it is an error is sufficiently
clear from the fact that the Apostle Paul so describes himself seven times.
The word diakonos occurs thirty times in the New Testament. In the Gospels it is
used eight times, where It means a servant in the ordinary sense, save only in
John xii. 26. The other places where it is used are the following passages in
the Epistles of Paul Rom. xlii. ~ XV. 8; xvi. i; iCor. iii. 5; 2COr. iii. 6; vi.
4; Xi. 15, 23; Gal. ii, i~ Eph. iii. 7 ; vi. 2! ; Phil. 1. 1 ; Cal. i. 7, 23,
25; iv.7; x Thess. iii. 2; i Tim. iii. 8,12; and iv. 6, where Timothy is called
a "deacon." The word is never applied to Stephen and his fellows (Acts
vi.), with whom it is popularly associated. Diakonia is used in Acts vi. i
(ministration), and also in ver. 4 (ministry). It occurs thirty-four times in
the New Testa-ment; once in its ordinary acceptation of "serving"
(Luke x. 40), and generally as equivalent to "ministry ' (e.g. 2 Tim. iv.
5, ii).
II
GRACE.
"THE GOSPEL OF THE GLORY OF THE BLESSED GOD!"
"Show me Thy glory, I beseech Thee," was the prayer of Moses; and God
answered, "I will make all My goodness pass before thee, and I will
proclaim the name of Jehovah before thee, and will be gracious to whom I will be
gracious, and will show mercy on whom I will show mercy." God's highest
glory displays itself in sovereign grace, therefore it is that the gospel of His
grace is the gospel of His glory.
Let us take heed then that we preach grace. He who preaches a mixed gospel robs
God of His glory, and the sinner of his hope. They for whom these pages are
intended, need not be told that salvation is only by the blood; but many there
are who preach the death of Christ, without ever rising to the truth of grace.
"Dispensational truth," as it is commonly called, is deliberately
rejected by not a few; and yet without understanding the change which the death
of Christ has made in God's relationships with men., grace cannot be
apprehended.
It is not that God can ever change, or that the righteous ground of blessing can
ever alter, but that the standard of man's responsibility depends on the measure
and character of the revelation God has given of Himself. God's judgments are
according to pure equity. They must have strange thoughts of Him who think it
could be otherwise. In the Epistle to the Romans we have the great principle of
His dealings with mankind. "He will render to every man according to his
deeds ; to them who, by patient continuance in well-doing, seek for glory and
honour and immortality, eternal life " but to the rest, indignation and
wrath tribulation and anguish upon evil-doers, but upon well-doers, glory,
honour, and peace; and this for all without distinction, whether Jews or
Gentiles, under law or without law; for God is no respecter of persons."
But is the standard of well-doing the same for all ? Shall the same fruit be
looked for from the wild olive as from the cultured tree ; from the mountain
side in its native barrenness, as from the vineyard on the fruitful hill ? Far
from it. The first two chapters of the Epistle to the Romans are unmistakable in
this respect. The Gentile will be judged according to the light of nature, and
of conscience neglected and resisted; the Jew, by the revelation God entrusted
to him.
Paul's sermon at Athens is no less clear as regards the condition of the
heathen. As he said at Lystra, they were not left without a witness, in that God
did good, and gave rain and fruitful seasons, filling their hearts with food and
gladness. By such things, he declares again in another place, God's eternal
power and Godhead are clearly seen, so that they are without excuse. And so
here, God left the heathen to themselves, not that they should forget Him, but
that they should seek Him, even though it were in utter darkness, so that they
should need to grope for Him -" to feel after Him, and find Him." And,
though there was ignorance of God, He could wink at the ignorance and give
blessing notwithstanding, for " He is a rewarder of diligent seekers."
Moreover, this is still the case with all whom the witness of the Holy Ghost has
not yet reached. If it be asked whether any have, in fact, been saved thus, I
turn from the question, though I have no doubt as to the answer. There is no
profit in speculations about the fate of the heathen their judgment is with God.
But there is profit and blessing untold in searching into His ways and thoughts
toward men, that we may be brought in adoration to exclaim, "0 the depth of
the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!"
But to resume: "The times of this ignorance God winked at; but now
commandeth all men everywhere to repent, because He hath appointed a day in the
which He will judge the world in righteousness." And the change depends on
this, that God has now revealed Himself in Christ, and therefore ignorance of
Him is a sin that shuts men up to judgment. See the Lord's sad utterance in John
xv. 24, as a kindred truth. Indeed, the whole Gospel of John is a commentary on
it. Darkness had reigned, but God did not hold men accountable for darkness ; it
was their misfortune, not their fault. But He did hold them accountable to value
and obey the little light they had, "the candle set up within them,"
and the stars above their head - those gleams of heavenly light, which, though
they failed to illumine the way, might at least suffice to direct their course.
But now, a new era dawned upon the world; "The Word was made flesh and
dwelt among us."' The Light had entered in; the darkness was past. the true
Light was shining. To turn now to conscience or to law was like men who, with
the sun in the zenith, nurse their scanty rushlight, with shutters barred and
curtains drawn; like men who cast their anchor because the daylight has eclipsed
the stars. The principle of God's dealings was the same, but the measure of
man's conduct was entirely changed. It was no longer a question of conscience or
of law, but of the Only-begotten in their midst.
It was in words of solemn, earnest truth that the blessed Lord replied to the
inquiry, "What shall we do that we might work the works of God?"
"This (said He) is the work of God, that ye believe on Him whom He hath
sent."' The question was a right one, and the answer enforced the
unchanging principle, that the light they had was the measure of their
responsibility. The same great truth is no less plainly stated in the Nicodemus
sermon. This was the condemnation, not that men's deeds were evil, though for
these too there shall be wrath in 'the day of wrath, but that, because their
deeds were evil, they had brought upon themselves a still direr doom; light had
come into the world, but they had turned from it and loved the darkness.'
But this is not all; even yet the reign of grace had not begun. Grace was there
truly, for "grace came by Jesus Christ" : but, like Himself, it was in
humiliation; it had yet to be enthroned. Grace was there. No adverse principle
came in to influence His ways and words; but though pure and unmixed, as it must
ever be, it was restrained. He had a baptism to be baptized with, and how was He
straitened till it was accomplished! While there was a single claim outstanding,
a single tie unbroken, grace was hindered, though it could not be alloyed.
But, now was about to come the world's great crisis - the most stupendous event
in the history of man, the only event in the history of God! He had laid aside
His glory, and come down into the scene. At His own door He had stood and
knocked, but only to find it shut in His face. Turning thence, He had wandered
an outcast into the world which His power had made, but He wandered there
unknown. "His own received Him not"; "the world knew Him
not." As He had laid aside His glory, He now restrained His power, and
yielded Himself to their guilty will. In return for pity He earned but scorn.
Sowing kindnesses and benefits with a lavish hand He reaped but cruelty and
outrage. Manifesting grace He was given up to impious law without show of mercy
or pretence of justice. Unfolding the boundless love of the mighty heart of God
He gained no response but bitterest hate from the hearts of men.
THE SON OF GOD HAS DIED AT THE HANDS OF MEN!
This astounding fact is the moral centre of all things A bygone eternity knew no
other future: 'an eternity to come shall know no other past. That death was this
world's crisis.' For long ages, despite conscience outraged, the light of nature
quenched, law broken, promises despised, and prophets cast out and slain, the
world had been on terms with God. But now a mighty change ensued. Once for all
the world had taken sides. In the midst stood that cross in its lonely majesty
God on one side, with averted face; on the other. Satan, exulting in his
triumph. The world took sides with Satan: His 'darling was in the power of the
dog,' and there was none to help, none to pity.
There, we see every claim which the creature had on God for ever forfeited,
every tie for ever broken. Promises there had been, and covenants; but Christ
was to be the fulfiller of them all. If a single blessing now descend on the
ancient people of His choice, it must come to them in grace. Life, and breath,
and fruitful seasons freely given, had testified of the great Giver's hand, and
declared His goodness; but if "seedtime, and harvest, and the changing
year, come on in sweet succession" still, in a world blood-stained by the
murder of the Son, it is no longer now to creation claims we owe it, nor yet to
Noah's covenant, but wholly to the grace of God in Christ.
In proof of this I might cite prophecies and parables, and appeal to the great
principles of God othat are the basis of gospel doctrine, as above both parable
and prophecy. Nay, I might leave it to men. themselves, as Christ did, to decide
between themselves and God. But I rather turn again to that solemn utterance of
the Lord, in view of :His lifting up upon the tree: "Now is the judgment of
this world."
"These things the angels desire to look into."' And if angels were our
judges, what would be our doom! For ages they had both witnessed and ministered
the goodness of God to men. But yesterday the heavens had rung with their songs
of praise, as they heralded the Saviour's birth in Bethlehem:
Peace on earth, goodwill to men." Goodwill! and this was what had come of
it! Peace! and this was what men turned it to! What thoughts were 'theirs as,
terror-struck, they beheld that scene on Calvary! Crucified amid heartless
jeers, and cruel taunts, and shouts of mingled hate and triumph! Buried in
silence and by stealth; buried in sorrow, but in silence. He who hears in
secret, heard the stifled cry from the broken hearts of Mary and the rest, and
the smothered sobs that tore the breasts of strong men bowed with grief - the
last sad tribute of love from the little flock now scattered. But as for the
world, no man's lamentation, no woman's wail was heard! They had cried,
"Away with Him, away with Him!" and now they had made good their cry:
the world was rid of Him, and that was all they wanted. Angels were witnesses to
these things. They pondered the awful mystery of those hours when death held
fast the Prince of Life. The forty days wherein He lingered in the scenes of His
rejection and His death - was it not to make provision for the little company
that owned His name, to gather them into some ark of refuge from the
judgment-fire. so soon to engulph this ruined world? And now, the gates lift up
their heads, the everlasting doors are lifted up, and with all the majesty of
God the King of Glory enters in.' The Crucified of Calvary has come to fill the
vacant throne, the Nazarene has been proclaimed the Lord of Hosts! But, mystery
on mystery! the greatest mystery of all is now - the mystery of grace. That
throne is vacant still. Those gates and doors that lifted up their heads for Him
are standing open wide. Judgment waits. The sea of fire which - one day - shall
close in upon this world to wipe out its memory for ever, is tided back by the
word of Him who sits upon the Father's throne in grace. When the Son of Man
returns for judgment, "then shall He sit upon His glorious throne."'
And how unutterably terrible will be that judgment! Half measures are impossible
in view of the cross of Christ. The day is past when God could plead with men
about their sins.' The controversy now is not about a broken law, but about a
rejected Christ. If judgment, therefore, be the sinner's portion, it must be
measured by God's estimate of the murder of His Son; a cup of vengeance,
brimful, unmixed, from the treading of the "winepress of the fierceness and
wrath of Almighty God."'
'For the believer, the question of sin was settled at the cross; for the
unbeliever, it is postponed to the day of judgment. Who His own self bare our
sins on His own body on the tree" (i Pet. ii. 24). "The Lord knoweth
how to reserve the unjust unto the day of judgment to be punished" (2 Pet.
11. 9).
The distinction between judgment and punishment is important. The criminal is
judged before he leaves the court-house for the prison, but his punishment has
yet to come—it is a consequence of judgment, not a part of it’. All
unbelievers are precisely on a level as regards judgment. “He that believeth
on Him is not judged but he that believeth not is judged already, because he
hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God” (John iii. x8).
Here the moral and the immoral, the religious and the profane, stand together,
and share the same doom. But when judgment, in the sense of punishment, is in
question, there can be no equality; every sentence shall be apportioned to the
guilt of each by the righteous and omniscient Judge. See Rev. xx. i3 Matt. xii.
36; Luke xii. 47, 48; Jude 15; and 2 Pet. ii. 9, already quoted.
But if grace be on the throne, what limits can be set to it? If that sin
committed upon Calvary has not shut the door of mercy, all other sins together
shall not avail to close it. If God can bless in spite of the death of Christ,
who may not be blest? Innocence lost, conscience disobeyed and stifled,
covenants and promises despised and forfeited, law trampled under foot, prophets
persecuted, and last and unutterably terrible, the Only-begotten slain. And yet
there is mercy still! What a gospel that would be! But ‘the gospel of the
glory of the blessed Gods’ is something infinitely higher still. It is not
that Calvary has failed to quench the love of God to men, but that it is the
proof and measure of that love. Not that the death of Christ has failed to shut
heaven against the sinner, but that heaven is open to the sinner by virtue of
that death. The everlasting doors that lifted up their heads for Him are open
for the guiltiest of men, and the blood by which the Lord of glory entered there
is their title to approach. The way to heaven is as free as the way to hell. In
hell there is an accuser, but in heaven there is no one to condemn. The only
being in the universe of God who has a right to judge the sinner is now exalted
to be a Saviour.’ Amid the wonders and terrors of that throne, He is a Saviour,
and He is sitting there in grace.
The Saviour shall yet become the Judge; but judgment waits on grace. Sin has
reigned, and death can boast its victories: shall grace not have its triumphs
too? As surely as the sin of man brought death, the grace of God shall bring
eternal life to every sinner who believes. One sin brought death, but grace
masters all sin. If sin abounded, grace abounds far more. Grace is conqueror.
GRACE REIGNS.
"The Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment unto the
Son." "I judge no mane” the Lord says again in another place.
"if any man hear My words and believe not, I judge him not; for I came not
to judge the world but to save the world’ (John v. 22, viii. 15). The day of
grace must end before the day of judgment can begin. "The acceptable year
of the Lord" must run its course before the advent of "the day of
vengeance."
Compare isa. lxi. i, 2, with Luke iv. 16—21, and notice the precise point at
which the Lord "closed the book."
Not at the expense of righteousness, but in virtue of it. Not that righteousness
requires the sinner’s death, and yet grace has intervened to give him life.
Righteousness itself has set grace upon the throne in order that the sinner may
have life : " That as sin hath reigned unto death, even so might grace
reign, through righteousness, unto eternal life, through Jesus Christ our
Lord." Such is the triumph of the cross. It has made it possible for God to
bless us in peifect harmony with everything He is, and everything He has ever
declared Himself to be, and in spite of all that we are, and of all that He has
ever said we ought to be.
I have already referred to Paul’s allusion to the ancient military triumphs,
when writing to the Corinthians. The word there used occurs again in his Epistle
to the Colossians : "Having spoiled principalities and powers, He made a
show of them openly, leading them in triumph in Him." In the hour of His
weakness, our enemies became His own, and fastened upon Him to drag Him down to
death; but, leading captivity captive, He chained them to the chariot-wheels of
His triumph, and made a public show of them. Just as Israel stood on the
wilderness side of the sea, and saw Pharaoh and his hosts in death upon the
shore, it is ours to gaze upon the triumphs of the cross. God there has mastered
sin, abolished death, and destroyed him who had the power of death.
God has become our Saviour. Our trust is not in His mercy, but in Himself. Not
in divine attributes, but in the living God. "GoD is for us"; the
Father is for us; the Son is for us; the Holy Ghost is for us. It is God who
justifies; it is Christ that died; and the Holy Ghost has come down to be a
witness to us of the work of Christ, and of the place that work has given us as
sons in the Father’s house. "Behold, God is my salvation; I will trust
and not be afraid: for the Lord JEHOVAH is my strength and my song; He also is
become my salvation."
THE NIGHT OF THE BETRAYAL.
Hell has gone forth in power.
And ye should wake and weep:
Could ye not watch one little hour!
This night is not for sleep.
Earth trembles in the scale,
Yet knows not of the fight,
And if her fearful foe prevail,
It will be always night.
- Unpitying as the grave,
Fierce as the winter breeze,
And mightier than the mountain wave
That sweeps o’er midnight seas,
The Prince of Darkness came:
Woe to the hated race!
What man can meet that brow of game,
Or live before his face!
No seraph’s sword of light,
Reddened in righteous wrath,
Flashed downward from the crystal height
To bar his onward path.
No trumpet’s warning cry
Rose through the silent air,
No battle shout went forth on high
From guarding squadrons there.
Above, the holy light
Slept on the mountain’s breast;
Beneath, the tender breath of night
Hushed moaning woods to rest.
Yet ne’er shall blackest night
Such deepened horror know,
While stars look down on Olives height,
Or Kedron’s waters flow
For who shall tell His woes,
Whose grief out-gloamed the night,
When His strong love, bright star! arose,
O’erfilling heaven with light ?
The gentlest heart on earth
Must taste her sharpest woe,
The tender plant of heavenly birth
Hell’s fiercest blast must know.
King! of the wounded breast,
King! of the uncrowned brbw,
What faithful heart shall bring Thee rest
What arm shall aid Thee now!
Lo, sheathed in shining light,
Heaven’s wondering warriors stand,
With pinions closed for downward flight,
Waiting their Lord’s command.
But never comes that word,
That hight knows yet no dawn,
And still must each impatient sword.
Sleep on each thigh, undrawn.
Not Angels’ deathless feet
May dare the darkening path,
Arched by the thunder clouds that meet,
Heavy with coming wrath.
Alone His steadfast eye
Can cleave the rolling gloom,
Where that dread sentence flames on high,
The sinner’s death of doom.
Oh! all ye Stars of light
Veil all your glowing spheres;
Weep out your radiance; drown the night
In dew of heaven’s tears.
Poor Earth! Go tnourn beneath
Thy withered roses now;
Thy thorns alone may twine the wreath
To crown the Victor’s brow.
Firmer than Carmel’s might,
When the long-leaping tide
Shivers its thousand shafts of light
Far up his patient side,
His will unshaken stands
Though that wild sea of wrath,
Upsurging to its outmost bands,
Breaks foaming on His path.
Soft breezes of the West
That, sighing as ye go,
Bear ever on, with kindly breast,
Each whispered human woe,
Here droop your wings and die
Low murmuring at His feet,
Then rise and bear His victor cry
Up the long golden street
High Heralds of His birth,
Make His new honours known!
Tell how the Blood, despised on earth,
Sparkles before the throne!
Lo! struck from Star to Star,
The gracious echoes fall
To this poor world that rolls afar,
Lowest and last of all;
Soft, as from weeping skies
Drops the sweet summer rain,
Yet clear through all earth’s Babel cries—
Hear them ye sons of men;
Nor thrust His mercy back,
Who claims your hearts to-day:
Oh! kiss His feet. Their wounded track
Hath crimsoned all the way.
CHAPTER III.
THE CROSS.
"THE preaching of the cross." It is on this the great
truth of grace depends. Not the death of Christ merely, but "the
cross." Synonyms are few in Scripture, and a change of words is not to
please fastidious ears but to express a different or fuller thought. "The
preaching of the cross is foolishness to them that perish." Not so the
preaching of the death of Christ, apart from the truths which cluster round
"the cross." The whole fabric of apostate Christianity is based upon
the fact of that death, and by virtue of it the Scarlet Woman shall yet sit
enthroned as mistress of the world. The Saviour's death is owned as part of the
world's philosophy. It is a fact and a doctrine which human wisdom has adopted,
and rejoices in as the highest tribute to human worth. How great and wonderful
must that creature be on whose behalf God has made so marvellous a sacrifice!
And thus God is made to pander to man's pride and sense of self-importance.
And as with the world's philosophy, so also is it with the world's religion. The
doctrine of the death of Christ, if separated from "the cross," leaves
human nature still a standing ground. It is consistent with creature claims and
class privileges. Sinners of the better sort can accept it, and be raised
morally and intellectually by it. But the preaching of the cross is "the
axe laid to the root of the tree," the death-blow to human nature on every
ground and in every guise. It is not merely that Christ has died - the great
fact on which redemption depends; but that that death has been brought about in
a way and by means which manifest and prove not only the boundless and causeless
love of God to man, but also the wanton and relentless enmity of man to God;
that that death, while it has made it possible for God, in grace, to save the
guiltiest and worst of Adam's race, has made it impossible, even with God, that
the worthiest and best could be saved except in grace. It has measured out the
moral distance between God and man, and has left them as far asunder as the
throne of heaven and the gate of hell. If God will now give blessing, He must
turn back upon Himself, and find in His own heart the motive, just as He finds
the righteous ground of it in the work of Christ. There is no salvation now for
"the circumcision" as such - for diligent users of the means of grace,
for earnest seekers, for anxious inquirers, for a privileged class under any
name or guise. If such were granted special favour, "then were the offence
of the cross ceased," and grace would be dethroned.
Circumcision did not deny the death of Christ. On the contrary, it betokened
covenants and class privileges granted by virtue of the great sacrifice to which
every ordinance in the old religion pointed. But it utterly denied the cross,
and grace as connected with the cross; for there every covenant was forfeited,
every privilege lost.
Before the cross, therefore, circumcision was the outward sign of covenant
blessing; but after the cross, it became the token of apostasy. The cross has
shut man up to grace or judgment. It has broken down all "partition
walls," and left a world of naked sinners trembling on the brink of hell.
Every effort to recover themselves is but a denial of their doom, and a denial
too of the grace of God, which stoops to bring them blessing where they are and
as they are. The cross of Christ is the test and touch-stone of all things.
Man's philosophy, man's power, man's religion - behold their work, the Christ of
God upon a gallows! In distinguishing thus between the death of Christ and
"the cross," let me not be misunderstood. It is not that God ever
separates them thus. On the contrary," the preaching of the cross is the
emphasising and enforcing of the very facts and truths which the heart of man
always struggles to divorce from the doctrine of redemption, but which God has
inseparably connected with it.
The idea of redemption was perfectly familiar to the Jew, and every student
knows how entirely it accords with human philosophy. The Jew and the Greek could
shake hands upon it, and set out together to seek the realisation of it. But the
one demanded signs of Messiahship, and the passion of the other was wisdom. The
death and resurrection of the Son of God, if accomplished in a manner which men
would deem worthy of the Son of God, might have satisfied the one, as it did in
fact, as soon as the cross was lost sight of, satisfy and charm the other. But
the cross was a stumbling-block to the religious man, and folly to the
wisdom-lover. If human philosophy today adopts and glories in redemption, as in
fact it does, it is just because the cross is forgotten ; and if, in spite of
what Christianity is in the world and to the world, the Jew is still
unchristianised, it is just because with him that cross can never be forgotten.
It is not, I repeat, that God ever separates them, but that man always does. A
gospel that points to the death of Christ in proof of God's high estimate of
man, and then turns the doctrine of that death into a syllogism, so that men, in
no way losing self-respect, can calmly reason out their right to blessing by it,
will give no offence to any one, nor be branded as foolishness. Such a gospel
pays due deference to human nature, and satisfies man's sense of need without
hurting in the least his pride. Such a gospel has, in fact, produced that
marvellous anomaly, a Christian world. Even in Paul's day "the many"
were but hucksters of the Word of God. Their aim was to make their wares
acceptable, to secure a trade, as it were, and so they sought popularity and an
apparent success by corrupting the gospel to make it attractive to their
hearers. "As of sincerity, as of God, in the sight of God," says the
apostle in contrast with all this, "we speak in Christ." The gospel he
preached would have created a Church in the midst of a hostile world. The gospel
of " the many" has constituted the world itself the Church. And the
fable of the wolf in sheep's clothing finds a strange fulfilment here, though
indeed the metamorphosis is so complete that we are at a loss to distinguish
either wolf or sheep remaining. Rationalism and Ritualism are the great enemies
of the cross.
The First Epistle to the Corinthians touches on the one: the Epistle to the
Galatians deals with the other. A gospel which pays court either to man's reason
or man's religion will never. fail to be popular. Well versed, no doubt, in
Greek philosophy, and no careless student of human nature, Paul might have drawn
all Corinth after him had he gone there "with excellency of speech or of
wisdom" in announcing the testimony of God. He did "speak wisdom among
the perfect," as witness his letter to the Romans, or indeed his letter to
the Corinthians themselves. His argument for the resurrection, the germ and
pattern of Bishop Butler's great masterpiece of reasoning, would havee charmed
and won not a few of the disciples of Plato and the other brilliant men who
raised unenlightened reason to its highest glory at the very time when the voice
of revelation was being hushed amid the sad echoes of Malachi's wail over the
apostasy of Jehovah's people. But just because the Greeks were
wisdom-worshippers, he turned from everything that would pander to their
favourite passion, and became a fool among them, a man of one idea, who knew
nothing "save Jesus Christ, even Him crucified." The enthronement of
Christ on high and the glories of His return, are inseparable from the
Christian's faith, but in Corinth it was the cross the apostle preached, the
cross in all its marvellous attractiveness for hearts enlightened from on high,
in all its intolerable repulsiveness for unregenerate men.
With the Galatians it was against the religion of the flesh he had to contend.
He testified to them that if they were circumcised Christ should profit them
nothing. How was this? Had grace found its limits here, so that if any
transgressed in this respect, they committed a sin beyond the power of Christ to
pardon? Grace has no limits. But there are limits to the sphere in which alone
grace can act. Circumcision in itself was nothing; but it was the mark of, and
key to, a position of privilege under covenant utterly inconsistent with grace.
"The offence of the cross" was that it set, aside every position of
the kind ; not that it brought redemption through the death upon the tree, but
that because it so brought redemption all were shut up to grace.
If Paul had so preached Christ as to pay homage to human nature, and respect and
accredit the vantage ground it claimed by virtue of its religion, persecution
would have ceased, for the Cross would have lost its offence.
Redemption as preached by "the many" in Apostolic days brought no
persecution, because it left man a platform on which "to make a fair show
in the flesh." But the cross set aside the flesh altogether. If the death
of Christ be preached as a means of salvation, not for lost sinners, but for the
pious and devout, where is the offence? But the cross comes in with its mighty
power to bring low as well as to exalt, for it exalts none but those whom first
it humbles. It calls upon the pious worshipper, if indeed he would have
blessing, to come out from the shrine in which he trusts, and take his place in
the market square beside the outcast and the vile. It tells the "earnest
seeker" and the "anxious inquirer," that by their efforts they
are only struggling out of the pit where alone grace can reach them.. It
proclaims to the worthy "communicant" of blameless life, whose mind is
a treasury of orthodox doctrines, and whose ways are a pattern of all good, that
he must come down and stand beside the drunkard and the harlot, there to receive
salvation from the grace of God to the glory of God. They who do thus preach the
cross can testify that its offence has not ceased in our day and in our midst.
Redemption is not, first, an easy way of salvation for the sinner, and then a
display of the character of God. God must be supreme. A man who makes self his
chief aim is contemptible, but in the very nature of things God must be first in
everything, else He would be no longer God. The obedience of Christ was
infinitely precious to, God, apart altogether from any results accruing to the
sinner; and the cross is the expression of that obedience tried to the utmost.
In this light, His death was but the crowning act of a life yielded up to God.
"He was obedient unto death, even the death of the cross "- the cross,
as expressive beyond all else of agony and contempt to the full; and because it
was, this, an expression too, the completest and most blessed, of perfect love
to God and man. That death was but the climax of His life. It had another
character, doubtless, in which it stands alone, for there divine judgment fell
on Him for sin, and He became the outcast sin-offering. We do well, truly, at
times to think thus of Calvary; but we do not well to think only of it thus. The
great burnt-offering aspect of the cross ought ever to be first, and never to be
forgotten.
'Even as we preach the sin-offering or the passover, the joy and slxength of
our own hearts ought to be the burnt offering. And thus, whatever may be the
results of our testimony, it will always be itself a continual burnt-offering,
"a sweet savour of Christ unto God" (2 Cor. ii. is). .'And the
burnt-offering could never be accepted without the accompanying meat-offering.
The work of Christ, even in its highest aspect, must never be separated from the
intrinsic perfectness and majesty of His person. It was the burnt-offering with
its meat-offering that Israel daily sacrificed to God; and this aspect of the
cross ought ever to be before us, and that for its own sake and not because of
special need in us.
The law of the leper may teach us a lesson here. Two sparrows were sold for a
farthing, and no more was needed for the leper's cleansing. A farthing! if price
was to be paid at all, could it possibly be less? It is impossible that the
outcast sinner can have high or worthy thoughts of Christ, nor does God expect
it from him. The acknowledgment of Him suffices, if only it be true, how poor
and low soever it may be. The bitten Israelite who looked upon the brazen
serpent lived; 0 as many as touched Him were made perfectly whole." It was
only the leper's farthing offering, but it was enough. And so also now:
"whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved,"
"they that hear shall live."
But after the sinner has been brought nigh to God, and found peace and pardon,
and life, shall the poor estimate he formed of Christ and of His sacrifice,
while yet an outcast, be still the limit of his gratitude, the measure of his
worship? Shall the farthing gospel that met the banished sinner's need,
satisfy the heart of the citizen, the saint, the child of God? The two sparrows
restored the leper to the camp, but it then behoved him to bring all the great
offerings of the law. Christ in all His fulness is God's provision for His
people, and nothing less than this should be the measure of their hearts'
worship (Lev. xiv.).
And how we lower everything! In the Jewish ritual we find the passover, the
dedication of the covenant, and the sin-offering of the red heifer - the
foundation sacrifices which were offered once for all. We have further the
burnt-offering, the meat-offering, the peace-offering, and the great yearly
sin-offering, besides others still of which I will make no mention here. Each
one of all these many types has found its antitype in Christ; but what do
Christians know of them? The passover alone would more than satisfy the gospel
of to-day, and even that is humanised and lowered. Christ has died, and that is
everything. How He died is scarce thought of, and Who He is who did so die is
well-nigh forgotten altogether. Christ has died - that is certain. Rationalists
and Ritualists, Protestants and Romanists, all are agreed that Christ has died.
Whether it be in our Ragged Sunday schools, or in our Houses of Parliament, as
day by day their sittings are begun by prayer, the death of Christ is a fact
which need not be asserted, for none but an infidel would question it. But
inquire in what way and to what extent sinners are benefited by that death, and
at once the harmony is broken. Upon this every school has its creed, and every
"ism" its theories, and the theme is the signal for a scramble and a
struggle between all the rival banners of Christendom.
Here is a master-stroke of Satan's guile. That which God intended should be an
impossibility to the natural mind, he has made the common creed of men. In the
wildest fables of false religions, there is nothing more utterly incredible than
the story of the life and death of the Son of God. For one who knows who Jesus
was, and what "the Christ" means, to believe that Jesus is the Christ
is so entirely beyond the possibilities of human reason that it is proof of a
birth from God. He who believes that Jesus is the Son of God is a man with a
supernatural faith, a faith that overcomes the world. Yet just as in Him the
carnal eye could 'find no beauty,' so in His gospel the carnal mind can see no
wonders. But it behoves the evangelist so to preach that gospel that the Holy
Ghost may own the word to reveal thereby the mighty mysteries and marvels of
redemption; not lowering and humanising it to bring it within the reach of the
natural man apart from the work of the Holy Spirit.
If Christians are commonplace in our day, ma.y it not be because the gospel they
believe is common-place ? Divine faith is faith in the divine. The difference is
not in the faith, but in the object of it. If we have really believed the Gospel
of God, we have each one of us received for himself a revelation from on high, a
revelation to which flesh and blood could never reach. Let us remember this.
These pages are proof how much I value clear and scriptural statements of the
truth but it is not on clearness, or even orthodoxy, that the power depends. The
gospel may be so sifted and simplified that none shall fail to understand it,
and yet sinners may never be brought to God at all. The preaching that is wanted
is not " with persuasive words of man's wisdom," reasoning out
salvation, and cheapening the gospel to suit the condition of the hearers, but
"in demonstration of the Spirit and of power -preaching that will be
"foolishness to them that perish," but to the saved " the power
of God."
It is one thing to master Christianity ; it is quite another thing to be
mastered by it. And it is the cross that attracts and conquers. The cross, not
as an easy way of pardon for the sinner, not as a " plan of
salvation," but as a fact and a revelation to change a heartless worldling
into an adoring worshipper. The cross, not as the ruling factor in the equation
of man's redemption, but as a display of the love and righteousness and wrath of
God, and the sin of man, to subdue the hardest heart, and change the whole
current of the most selfish and ungodly life. To faith the unseen is real; and
to those who believe in the cross, "Jesus Christ has been openly set forth
crucified before their eyes." They have seen that marred and agonised face.
They have been witnesses to the reproach that broke His heart, the scorn, the
derision, and the hate, of all the attendant throng. They have heard
"Emmanuel's orphan cry" when forsaken of His God. And in gazing thus
upon that scene their inmost being has sustained a mighty change. Till
yesterday, the world and self ensnared their hearts, and filled the whole
horizon of their lives. But now the cross has become a power to divorce
themselves from self, and to separate them from that world which crucified their
Lord. 0 for power so to preach the cross of Christ that it shall become a
reality to all, whether they accept it or despise it : that men who never were
conscious of a doubt, because they never really believed, shall see what priests
and soldiers saw, and the rabble crowd that mocked His agonies, and seeing,
shall exclaim, "It is impossible that this can be the Son of God ! "
that some again shall see what John and Mary witnessed, and gazing, shall cry
out, with broken hearts, in mingled love and grief, "My God, was this for
me!" and turn to live devoted lives for Him who died and rose again.
I conclude in borrowed words, more worthy than my own: "With the
loyal-hearted believer, there is one master-object which in measure conceals
every other by its surpassing glory; and this is not redemption, which, blessed
as it is, is simply a matter of course, if Christ died by this end, but the
CROSS itself, with its ignominy - the death of the Prince of Life, the
crucifixion of the Lord of Glory; incredible antithesis! Not only the freedom
from eternal and frightful slavery, but the divine price paid for that freedom.
And this 'not silver and gold' (though we were not worth so much as brass), but
'the precious blood of Christ,'
"And so I would preach to those who hear, and say 'There is life, there is
pardon, there is right-eousness for you-nay, there is worth for you- and they
are all Divine, besides their own integrity; and they are a free gift to the
godless and lost. But I tell you more, and beg you tQ hasten on; this life,
these riches, come to you through His poverty and death; and God and God's love
are revealed to you in this poverty, this death, even the death of the cross.'
"And if I were to tell you of forgiveness of sins through His mercy, and
leave you there; if I preached to you the results flowing of necessity fmm the
cross to each believer, but not the cross itself, or the cross itself as a
judicial work, but not the Crucified One, I should leave you still to self, and
I desire to save you from self, as well as from everlasting shame and contempt.
But I preach Christ Jesus the Lord, the Son of God, the brightness of His glory
and express image of Himself, on the cross made a curse and smitten there by the
hand of God judicially for the guilty. - See the dreadfulness of that cross, and
know who it is that was lifted up on it, and for whom, and to what end, as it is
written. Look steadily; mark, study, search into those unsearchable moral
riches; and blessing after blessing will come to you, and so freely, from this
one object, in which all truth and all love are alike declared, and in which you
will learn to love, to worship and to obey, to abhor wrong, to forget yourself
and think of Him, and to 'count all things but loss,' as the apostle says, not
for the grace of your deliverance, but "for the excellency of the knowledge
of Christ Jesus your Lord.'"
Chapter Four - FAITH.
FAITH is a mystery to many, a stumbling-block to not a few. By
some it seems to be regarded as the condition upon which God compounds with men
who ought to have righteousness, but have it not: with others it is the last
mite added to make up the price of our redemption. At times it appears like a
new barrier set up between the soul and God, when the work of Christ had broken
all the old barriers down; and not unfrequently it is represented as an
operation, like the new birth itself, in which the sinner is a passive agent in
the hands of God. There is the rationalist view of faith, making it merely the
assent of the mind to truth demonstratively proved; there is the Romanist view
of faith, which makes it a sort of good work of a mystical and spiritual kind;
and again, there is what I may term the fatalist theory of faith, which regards
it as a kind of grace imparted to the soul by God. But when we turn to Scripture
all such subtleties and errors vanish like mists before the sun. "Faith
cometh by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God." What simplicity, and
yet what reality and power are here! "Faith cometh by hearing,"
whether it be faith of the gospel, or of the news of some temporal calamity or
good. There are no two ways of believing anything. And hearing comes - the true
hearing - by the Word of God:not by reasonings founded on it, it may be rightly
founded on it; not by " enticing words of man's wisdom," but by the
Word of God. And here is where the difference lies, not in the character of the
faith, but in the object of it. The sinner is brought into the presence of God.
He hears God, he believes God, and he is blest with believing Abraham, and just
on the same ground, for "Abraham believed God, and it was reckoned unto him
for righteousness."
In its first and simplest phase in Scripture, faith is the belief of a record or
testimony; it is, secondly, belief in a person; and it has, lastly, the
character of trust, which always points to what is future. To speak of trust as
the only true phase of gospel faith, is wholly false and wrong. In fact, the
word generally rendered "trust," is never used in this connection once
in Scripture. It is etymologically "hope," and the element of hope
invariably enters into it. In what is pre-eminently the gospel book of the
Bible, it occurs but once, and in.the sermons of the Acts we shall seek for it
in vain. "We are saved by trust," is a statement at once true and
scriptural, if only we understand salvation in its fullest sense, as yet to be
made good to us in glory;' but the salvation of our souls is not matter of
trust, but of faith in its simplest form. The redemption of our souls is a fact
to us, because we believe the record God has given of His Son, no less so is the
redemption of our bodies, but it is because of our trust in God. As the apostle
writes to Timothy, "We trust in the living God, who is the Saviour of all
men, especially of those that believe." Trust springs from confidence in
the person trusted, and that again depends on knowledge of the person confided
in. In this sense, faith may be great or little, weak or strong " I write
unto you, little children" (says the Apostle John), "because your sins
are forgiven you for His name's sake."' Here is a testimony and a fact.
Upon our state of soul may depend the realisation, the enjoyment of it, but this
faith can admit of no degrees. But trust in God has as many degrees as there are
saints on earth. Some believers could not trust Him for a single meal others can
look to Him, without misgivings, to feed a thousand hungry mouths, or to convert
a thousand godless sinners. Our faith in this sense, depends entirely on knowing
God, and on communion with Him, the faith of the gospel comes by hearing Him.
At every pier along the new embankment of the Thames, there hangs a chain that
reaches to the water's edge at its lowest ebb But for this, some poor creature,
struggling with death, might drown with his very hand upon the pier. An appeal
to perishing sinners to trust in Christ is like calling on a drowning wretch to
climb the embankment wall. The glad tidings, the testimony of God concerning
Christ, is the chain let down for the hand of faith to grasp. Once rescued, it
is not the chain the river waif would trust for safety, but the rock beneath his
feet; yet, but for that chain, the rock might have only mocked his struggles.
And it is not the gospel message the ransomed sinner trusts in, but the living
Christ of whom the gospel speaks; but yet it was the message that his faith at
first laid hold upon, and by it he gained an eternal standing-ground upon the
Rock of Ages.
He who truly hears the good news of Christ believes it just as the little child
believes a mother's word. And none but such shall ever enter the kingdom. There
is neither mystery nor virtue in the faith, in the one case any more than in the
other ; the only difference is in the testimony itself. He who believes the
gospel, receives a word that is nothing less than "the power of God unto
salvation."
The case of Cornelius affords a striking example of this. "A devout man,
and one that feared God with all his house, and prayed to God alway," it
might well be asked, What did he lack? Yet to such an one the message came:
"Send men to Joppa and call for Simon Peter, who shall tell thee words
whereby thou and all thy house shall be saved" (Acts xi. i3, Z4).
If, in fact, none can believe apart from the work of the Holy Spirit, the
difficulty depends on no peculiarity in the faith itself. It is not a question
of metaphysics, but of spiritual depravity and death. As far as the act of faith
is concerned, the gospel is believed in the same way as the passing news of the
passing hour. The hindrance lies in the apostasy of the natural heart of man.
And, doubtless, the reason faith is made the turning point of the sinner's
return to God is just because distrust was the turning point of his departure
from Him. Disobedience was not the first step in Adam's fall; it was the last,
and it followed disbelief.
Faith then in its simplest character is not trust, nor even faith in a person,
but belief of a record. "Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ, is
born of God." "Who is he that overcometh the world, but he that
believeth that Jesus is the Son of God.?" And so, if we read through the
chapter from which these words are quoted, we find it is the witness, or
testimony of God, that is in question between the sinner and Himself.
"There are three who bear witness, the Spirit and the water and the blood;
and the three agree in one. If we receive the witness of men, the witness of God
is greater; for the witness of God is this, that He hath borne witness
concerning His Son. He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in
himself. He that believeth not God hath made Him a liar, because he hath not
believed in the witness that God hath borne concerning His Son." And so
also if we turn to the Gospel of John. The Book was written that we might
believe "that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that, believing, we
might have life through His name.
Nor will this seem strange to any who understand the gospel. The gospel is not a
promise or a covenant, but a message, a proclamation. It is the "good news
of God, concerning His Son Jesus Christ our Lord."' And the belief of that
good news is life: not indeed when retailed as the word of man, to suit the
whims or errors of the natural heart, but when it comes in the power of the Holy
Ghost, and, "as it is in truth, the word of God." "The words that
I have spoken unto you, they are spirit and they are life," the Lord
declared,. when many of His disciples were offended at His teaching. The many
heard but the words of Jesus the Nazarene, and were offended and went back. To
the few, these same words were "words of eternal life," and called
forth the confession of Him as Christ the Son of God.' The ioth chapter of
Romans claims notice here, confirming, as it does so fully, what the other
Scriptures already quoted amply prove. God has brought the gospel as near to men
as in the old time He brought the law. "This commandment which I command
thee this day, it is not hidden from thee,. neither is it far off," said
Moses in his parting charge to Israel, -"It is not in heaven, that thou
shouldest say, Who shall go up for us to heaven, and bring it unto us, that we
may hear it and do it? Neither is it beyond the sea, that thou shouldest say,
Who shall go over the sea for us, and bring it unto us, that we may hear it and
do it. But the word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth, and in thy heart, that
thou mayest do it."
Thus spake the righteousness of law, now, hear the righteousness of faith.
"Say not in thine heart, Who shall ascend into heaven? (that is, to bring
Christ down from above:) or, Who shall descend into the deep? (that is, to bring
up Christ again from the dead). But what saith it? The word is nigh thee, even
in thy mouth and in thy heart: that is, the word of faith, which we preach, that
if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine
heart that God hath raised Him from the dead, thou shalt be saved." It was
for Israel to have the commandment in their mouth, and to do it with their heart
it is ours to have the gospel in our mouth, and to believe it with our heart.
There is no mystery in the one case any more than in the other Metaphysical
distinctions between believing with the head and with the heart, are wholly
untenable A Christian believes with his heart, just as a Jew obeyed with his
heart. It was the obedience of the inner man, the real man, that God required,
and so it is with faith.
In modern English "the heart" is synonymous with the affections; but
not in Scripture. The Lord speaks of "the heart" as the moral being,
the true man as distinguished from the mere outward man. And so also here. With
the mouth man speaks, but the confession of the lip may or may not be the
expression of what is within, and therefore secret. The confession of Christ by
the outward man is the sequel and complement of the faith of the inward man. A
man cannot believe with lus affections; indeed, all such expressions are
fanciful. Love and hope and faith and fear are not independent entities with
rival or co-ordinate rank in the complex being, man. It is the man himself who
loves, and hopes, and believes, and fears. Just as he may say he loves, and
never love at all, so he may say he believes, and the profession may be a sham;
but if he really believes, and believes God, the gift of God is his. But there
is no subtlety in the faith. "Faith comes by hearing"; faith in God
comes by hearing God. "Every one that hath heard from the Father,"-
said the Lord Himself, or perhaps, making due allowance for the English idiom,
the verse would be better rendered, "Every one that hath heard the Father,
and hath learned of Him, cometh unto Me." But as for them to whom He spoke,
they could not hear.
Some men speak of the Spirit's work in the soul, as though the sinner were an
irresponsible vessel which God fills with faith; and yet these same men, when
faith itself becomes their theme, seem to forget the Spirit's work entirely, and
enlarge on subtle distinctions between head faith and heart faith. "faith
in" and "faith on," faith of saving truth, and faith in. general,
until faith itself looms great and mysterious upon the burdened sinner, shutting
Christ out altogether.
Let us then get this great fact implanted firmly in our minds, that there is
neither merit nor virtue in faith, no; even in the letter of the truth believed;
but that to believe God is eternal life. To believe God, whether it be, as with
Abraham, the promise of a family, or, as with us, the testimony to a Person and
a fact. Faith is the opened lattice that lets in the light of heaven to the
soul, bringing gladness and blessing with it. It is only in ophthalmic hospitals
that people are always thinking of their eyes, and it is due entirely to the
prevailing errors and follies of modern teaching that so many Christians are
hypochondriacs respecting faith. In Scripture, faith is like healthy eyesight,
unheeded and forgotten in the ease and enjoyment of its use. Nowadays it is more
like the glasses of people with failing or defective visicn, sometimes lost,
often dim, and constantly a trouble.
But faith not only receives the word of Christ; it reaches on, and lays hold
upon the person of Christ. Belief of His word leads to belief in Himself. And
here, again, there is no difficulty, save such as men have made. To receive
Christ, to come to Christ, to believe in Christ - for all these words are used
in Scripture - means today just what it meant when the Lord was living upon
earth. To come to Christ, was not outward contact with the son of Mary, but
submission of heart to the Son of God. "No man can come to Me except the
Father draw him," was His word to those who had followed Him from Capernaum
to Tiberias, and back again across the sea. Anyone might come to Jesus, and rone
need leave His presence without proof of His power and grace. He fed the hungry
just because they hungered. He healed the oppressed of Satan, just because they
were oppressed, and His mission was to destroy the devil's work. But how few
there were of those who thus came to Jesus, that ever truly came to Christ!
"If ye believe not that I am He, ye shall die in your sins."
"That I am He" : it was this that faith laid hold upon. They who did
believe it as a divine revelation came to believe in Himself in a further and
fuller sense, and this again led to confidence and trust, j.ust in proportion as
they were abiding in Him, and His word in them, and, moreover, as their
knowledge of Him increased. "How is it that ye have no faith?" was the
Lord's appeal to the terrified disciples on the Sea of Galilee, when they awoke
Him with upbraidings for neglecting them. In the gospel sense they believed on
Him then, as they ever did; and indeed their remonstrances were based on their
unchanging confidence othat, being the Christ the Son of God, He had power to
deliver them, but did not. They believed on him, but as yet they did not know
Him, and therefore their knowledge of His power only led them to doubt His love.
"Acquaint now thyself with Him and be at peace," is a word for the
tempest-tossed believer. The faith that "comes by hearing," brings us
salvation and the knowledge of salvation. The faith that springs from abiding in
Him and acquainting ourselves with Him, is the secret of a peace-ruled heart and
a holy life. Like all the sons of faith, Saul of Tarsus believed God, and so set
out upon the Christian course And the "faithful saying" that brought
life and joy to him at the starting-post, was the strength of his heart even to
the goal. It is the same gospel that is the resting-place for our feet as we lay
hold upon the Rock of Ages, which becomes the pillow of our dying hout as we
pass away from our service and our sins on earth Whether as the converted
persecutor on the Damascus road, or as the Apostle of the Lord at the close of
that matchless life of labour and testimony, Paul's faith in the gospel was the
same. Here it is not growth we speak of, but steadfastness. At the beginning,
just as at the end of his race, he "believed God," but at the end,
when looking back upon his life from his Roman prison, he could add "I know
whom I have believed" , and having come to know Him, he had learned to
trust Him.
Everybody understands what it means to believe in the claimant of a fortune or a
title. It is just to receive him for what he represents himself to be. And
believing in Christ means primarily nothing more than this. It leads to more,
doubtless, but that depends not on any peculiarity or virtue in the faith, but
on Him who is the object of faith. They who thus believe in the Lord Jesus come
to confide in Him, to trust Him, and to love Him, but to believe on Him is
simply to "receive His testimony," and thus to "set to our seal
that God is true." And yet, such faith is impossible apart from the work of
the Holy Spirit in the soul. "Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ
is born of God." Not, I repeat again, for it needs to be repeated, that
faith in Christ is a metaphysical achievement so difficult that man is
insufficient to accomplish it; but that the heart is utterly apostate, and man's
natural condition is that of pure distrust of God.
More than this, "the carnal mind is enmity against God." Man is
capable of the firmest and most implicit faith in himself and in the world -
aye, and in the devil too, as will be proved one day; but his whole spiritual
being is so utterly estranged from God that not only does he not know Him, but,
if left to himself, he is incapable of knowing Him. Just as a warped window pane
distorts all objects seen through it, so the human heart perverts even the very
truth of God, and changes it into a lie. A heart in fellowship with God would
have found proof in every act and word of Christ that He was divine; but men
heard His words and saw His works - sincere men, too, and good and estimable -
and yet adjudged Him to be an impostor. Because He told them the truth, they
believed Him not. And as it was then, so is it still. It is not the head that is
at fault, but the heart; it is not that man is silly, but that he is sinful ;
not that he is weak, but that he is wicked.
Indeed, if Christians were made, as certain writers upon evidences would lead us
to suppose, by reasoning out Christianity from the miracles of Christ, the
company of the Lord's disciples would have numbered thousands more than the
little band who owned His name. Those who believed on Him thus were not few, but
many. But He who could judge the heart refused to commit Himself to such. The
true faith is not based on "evidences," but on the word of God; and
these miracle-made believers could not and would not hear that word. To
acknowledge Jesus of Nazareth as the promised Son of David, on account of the
miracles He did, was one thing; to receive eternal' life in Christ was quite
apart from it.
There had never risen a greater prophet than John the Baptist; and yet at the
very time this testimony was given to him, his political faith, if I may use the
expression, had broken down, and his disciples were on their way back to his
prison, to reassure him by the record of the Lord's miracles. And so it was at
the last with His most favoured saints: "We trusted that it had been He
which should have redeemed Israel," was their sad tribute to the memory of
His name. Their faith had failed, their hope had died out, leaving only love to
cling to Him; but still they were His own. In common with the multitude around
them, they had seen His miracles, and hailed Him as their coming king. But more
than this, they had themselves been the subjects of a miracle the multitude knew
nothing of: they had been born again by the word of Him whom now they mourned.
They had received the gift of life from God; and though they knew it not, that
death which seemed to them the end of all their hopes secured to them eternal
glory.
However," says Bishop Butler in summing up his argument on this point,
"the fact is allowed that Christianity was professed to be received into
the world upon the belief of miracles," and "that is what its first
converts would have alleged as their reason for embracing it." True it is
that no earnest, honest man, with the Scriptures at hand, could doubt the
Messiahship of Jesus, while witnessing the miracles He wrought; but it is no
less true that men cannot reason themselves into Christianity. How different
from Butler's account of it, is the story the early Christians told of their
conversion! What is the testimony of those who were with Him in the Holy Mount,
and witnessed that greatest miracle of all? "Which were born," writes
the beloved disciple, "not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of
the will of man, but of God." "Being born again, not of corruptible
seed, but of incorruptible, by the word of God, which liveth and abideth for
ever," is the kindred witness of the Apostle Peter.
Nor did Paul, as great a reasoner as Butler, strike a discordant note:
"God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our
hearts." Such was his glad but humble testimony. The multitudes followed
Him because of the loaves His power supplied: they cared not for the bread of
heaven. But His true disciples knew and owned Him as the One who had the words
of eternal life. This was the bond that kept them at His side when the many were
offended and drew back. The works of God might convince the ,reason; but it was
not thus the dead got life, the troubled conscience peace. To weigh the
evidences and embrace Christianity, as the true religion, is the part of a fair
and prudent man; but salvation is God's work altogether. The blessing is not for
the apt scholar, but for the outcast and lost. It is not for the clear head, but
for the contrite heart. Not for the clever reasoner, but for .the self-judged
and guilty, not for logicians, but for sinners; not for the wise and prudent,
but for babes.
So it has been in every age. The public revelation of God to man has varied
again and again, but His secret revelation to the soul that turns to Him has
ever been the same. "He brought me up out of a horrible pit, out of the
miry clay, and set my feet upon a rock, and established my goings, and He hath
put a new song in my mouth." Thus sang His saints in the old days three
thousand years ago; so sing they still. " It pleased God to reveal His Son
in me," is the testimony of Paul; and if Peter owned Him as the Son of the
living God, it was not a deduction from His miracles, but a revelation from the
Father in heaven.3 And so with the rest. It was not that they saw His works, but
that they heard His words. We are saved by faith; and faith is the reception, as
true, of what is beyond the range of proof, either by demonstration or by
evidence. It is the substance (or assurance) of things hoped or trusted for, the
conviction of things not seen. Salvation is within the reach of all, but it is
as suppliant sinners they must receive it. Grace does not place either the
Saviour or the Gospel at the bar of human judgment; that is the arrogance of
infidelity. As has been already seen, grace is based upon the cross, and assumes
that man is guilty and lost. It does not place him in the dock, but it finds him
there: it does not brand him as ruined and lost, but it comes to him as thus
branded already. And the very gospel which tells of life and peace and pardon,
is itself the power to make good this testimony. It is not a question of God's
submitting either Himself or His revelation to the tribunal of the creature's
judgment, but of the sinner's waking up from his death-sleep in sin to hear the
voice of God. The hour is come of which it is written, "The dead shall hear
the voice of the Son of God, and they that hear shall live."
We are saved through faith, but faith is not our saviour. If faith had intrinsic
virtue and could bring blessing with it, hell would be impossible; for there are
no unbelievers save on earth, and that, too, in the days of Christ's humiliation
and His absence. The day is coming when all shall believe and confess His name.
And if faith and confession bring blessing now, it is not because of any merit
they possess, but because God is saving men in sovereign grace. . If the
blessing were not by grace, it never could be gained by such as we are.
"Therefore it is of faith, that it might be by grace."' As it is
written, "By grace are ye saved through faith; and that (salvation) not of
yourselves, it is the gift of God." Salvation is the gift of God, bestowed
on the principle of grace, and received on the principle of faith..
"The gift of God" here is salvation by grace through faith. Not the
faith itself. "This is precluded," as Alford remarks, "by the
manifestly parallel clauses 'not of yourselves,' and 'not of works,' the latter
of which would be irrelevant as asserted of faith." It is still more
definitely precluded, he might have added, by the character of the passage. It
is given to us to believe on christ, just in the same sense in which it is given
to some "also to suffer for His sake" (Phil. i. 29). But the statement
in Ephesians is doctrinal, and in that sense the assertion that faith is a gift,
or indeed that it is a distinct entity at all, is sheer error. This matter is
sometimes represented as though God gave faith to the sinner first, and then, on
the sinner's bringing Him the faith, went on and gave him salvation! Just as
though a baker, refusing to supply empty-handed applicants, should first
dispense to each the price of a loaf, and then, in return for the money from his
own till, serve out the bread. To answer fully such a vagary as this would be to
rewrite the foregoing chapter. Suffice it, therefore, to point out that to read
the text as though faith were the gift, is to destroy not only the meaning of
verse 9, but the force of the whole passage.
And how does faith come? "Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word
of God." This is the time of which Isaiah spoke, when God is found of them
that seek Him not; the time in which the gospel is to be carried to the lanes
and highways of the world, and men are to be compelled to come in 'when
forgiveness of sins is to be proclaimed far and wide, and all that believe are
justified; when there is salvation for the lost, life for the dead, heaven for
the outcast sinner. The cross has been set up, not half-way on the road to
heaven, where man's unbelieving heart would place it, but right down in the
market square of the City of Destruction, that men may look and live. Such are
"the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness toward us through Christ
Jesus."
Chapter Five - REPENTANCE AND THE SPIRIT'S WORK.
PAGAN mythology had a three-headed monster at the door of hell,
but modern Christianity has its Cerberus at the gate of heaven. Faith,
repentance, and the Spirit's work, by God intended to bring salvation to our
very door, are turned by men into a threefold hindrance on the way to life. Or,
to change the figure, faith is a rugged mountain on the pilgrim's path, and
repentance a dreary slough beyond it. The mountain and the marsh are passed in
safety, only to find perplexities more hopeless still ; for the fickle phantom
of the Spirit's work must then be grasped and made his own, before the pilgrim
can cross the threshold of the pearly gate. What a burlesque upon the gospel!
From the twilight days of prophetic testimony a divine voice still vibrates in
our air, "As I LIVE, saith the Lord God, I HAVE NO PLEASURE IN THE DEATH OF
THE WICKED." And turning to the clearer light and surer word of Him who
came to give a ghastly but most blessed proof of the deep meaning of God's great
oath, we gaze on Calvary, and as we gaze and worship, the words seem written
there in judgment fire and redeeming blood: "GOD SO LOVED THE WORLD THAT HE
GAVE HIS ONLY- BEGOTTEN SON." Every fact and testimony of the gospel
assures, and is intended to convince us, that God is on the sinner's side, and
"will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the
truth."' Is the case so hopeless that man can do absolutely nothing for
himself? Then righteousness is "to him that worketh not but believeth"
"It is of faith that it may be by grace." Is man so utterly at enmity
that even this would not suffice? The Holy Ghost has come down from heaven to
turn our hearts to God and to secure to us every blessing Christ has won.
But here I have spoken only of faith and the Spirit's work: what then about
repentance? Are faith and the Spirit's work enough? or is not repentance no less
a necessity, if men are to be saved? I meet this question boldly and at once by
denouncing it as based, not so much on ignorance as on deep-seated and
systematic error. The repentance which thus obtrudes itself and claims notice in
every sermon is not the friend of the gospel, but an enemy. It is like the
officious guide who forces himself upon the traveller only to mislead him. Faith
and repentance are not successive stages on the road to life; they are not
independent guides to direct the pilgrim's path; they are not separate acts to
be successively accomplished by the sinner as a condition of his salvation. But,
in different phases of it, they represent the same Godward attitude of soul,
which the truth of God, believed, produces.
Salvation there cannot be without repentance, any more than without faith; but
the soundest and fullest gospel-preaching need not include any mention of the
word. Neither as verb nor noun does it occur in the Epistle to the Romans -
God's great doctrinal treatise on redemption and righteousness - save in the
warnings of the 2nd chapter. And the Gospel of John - pre-eminently the gospel
book of the Bible - will be searched in vain for a single mention of it. The
beloved disciple wrote his Gospel, that men might believe and live, and his
Epistle followed, to confirm believers in the simplicity and certainty of their
faith; but yet, from end to end of them, the word "repent" or
"repentance" never once occurs. It is to these writings, before all
others, that men have turned in every age to find words of peace and life ; and
yet some who profess to hold them as inspired will cavil at a gospel sermon
because repentance is not mentioned in it: a fault, if fault it be, that marks
the testimony of the Apostle John, and the preaching of our Lord Himself, as
recorded by the Fourth Evangelist. The repentance of the gospel is to be found
in the Nicodemus sermon, and in the gracious testimony to the woman at the well.
And, I may add, any repentance that limits or jars upon those sacred words, is
wholly against the truth.
What then is repentance? The question, bear in mind, concerns the truth of God
and our own salvation. It is not a problem in etymology. Etymologically, metanola
in Greek, and repentance in English, have exactly the same significance - an
after-mind, the result of second thoughts or reflection. Moreover, the word in
Greek is often used in this its primary sense. But second thoughts too often
involve regret, and not unfrequently remorse; and it will not seem strange to
any who have studied the history of words that nietanoia should have come to
cover the entire range of meaning, from mere change of mind to sorrow and
remorse. Our task is therefore to turn to Holy Writ, and, comparing Scripture
with Scripture, to discover what God means when He calls men to repentance.
And here we do well to bear in mind a canon of interpretation, given specially
regarding prophecy, but true of revelation as a whole. No passage of Scripture
is to be isolated, and explained apart from other Scriptures. The words are to
be interpreted consistently with what the Holy Spirit has elsewhere revealed.
Taking heed then to the two rival errors, toward one or other of which our
creeds are always tending, we can clear the ground at once by deciding that
repentance does not mean penitence or sorrow, or any condition of soul or change
of heart that makes the sinner acceptable to God, or has merit of its own. The
Romanist view of repentance we reject at once, as opposed to the doctrinal
teaching of the Epistle to the Romans, and the plain testimony of the Fourth
Evangelist. Whatever repentance means, it must be something consistent with
grace, and something implied in the Gospel of John.
But while refusing to exalt repentance at the cost of grace, we must guard
against the Rationalist extreme of reducing it to a mere mental change. Much of
what I have said respecting faith might well be repeated here. God must have
reality. If He demands "a change of mind," it is not of the
intellectual faculty He speaks, but of the man himself, the real man. So the
apostle uses the word in the Epistle to the Romans and elsewhere, "I
myself, with the mind, serve the law of God." Repentance is the turning of
the mind or heart - the man himself.
It is but natural that the recoil from what I have termed "the Romanist
view of repentance" should have carried men into extremes; and at this
moment there is some danger of a reaction toward the old error of the Douay
Bible, which confounds repentance with penitence. But the true antidote to the
prevailing levity of the day is not a return to legality in preaching, but a
more just appreciation of the solemnity of grace, and a worthier testimony to
the greatness and majesty of the God with whom we have to do
Repentance is not faith, nor faith repentance; but yet they are inseparable.
Inseparable, that is, in connection with the gospel. Therefore it is that the
word "repent" is so seldom used in the sermons of the New Testament,
and also that it sometimes stands alone as the principle on which man receives
the blessing. "He that believeth hath," implies repentance;
"repent and be converted," involves faith. The hand that clutches the
assassin's knife must open ere it can grasp the gift its intended victim
proffers; and opening that hand, though a single act, has a double aspect and
purpose. Accepting the gift implies a turning from the crime on which the heart
was bent, and it was the gift itself that worked the change. Faith is the open
hand, relatively to the gift; repentance is the same hand, relatively, not only
to the gift, but more especially to the dagger it has flung from it.
The schoolmen would explain that, chronologically, faith comes first, and then,
repentance; but that, in their logical order, repentance has precedence. But the
question of priority, though an interesting problem in metaphysics, is a
profitless study in theology. Practically, they are simultaneous. He who truly
believes in the Lord Jesus Christ may rest assured that he has repented; and
"repentance toward God" equally implies "faith toward our Lord
Jesus Christ." That is, under the preaching of the gospel.
Judgment-warnings might produce repentance, as Jonah's preaching did at Nineveh;
but in the gospel, it is not the wrath, but the goodness of God, that leads to
it.
Repentance, as I have said, has a twofold bearing. The characteristic of gospel
repentance is repentance to; under the past dispensation, it was repentance
from. John the Baptist, for instance, preached repentance in order to faith in
One then yet to come. A man is crossing a moor at night; his eye fixed upon a
light that marks, as he supposes, the homestead of a friend. Presently he meets
another traveller, belated like himself, who tells him that the light he has
been pressing towards is nothing but a gipsy's tent. As for the house he seeks,
the stranger only knows that it is in a different direction altogether, but
where, he cannot say; a shepherd will soon be passing who knows it well.
Convinced of his mistake, he turns from the path he has been following, and sits
down upon a stone to await the coming of the expected guide. Such was the
repentance that the Baptist preached, a repentance from dead works, in order
that they should believe in Him which should come after Him. But the full gospel
of Christ is like a friend who meets the erring wanderer, and, by the same
testimony that convinces him he is on a wrong path, turns him to the destination
which he seeks.
According to an ingenious derivation suggested for it, the Greek word for
"man" implies a face turned upwards. And such, in a moral sense, is
the normal condition of the creature; such was Adam as he came from the hand of
God. But sin brought in estrangement; and our race springs, not from Adam in
Eden innocence, but from the fallen outcast. By nature man's face is now averted
from his God. He needs, therefore, to be turned right round again. There is no
difficulty here save such as theology has made. The student of Scripture finds
there, in clear and simple language, what every one who has a spiritual history
has learned as plainly from his own heart, that man by nature gravitates from
God; spiritually "his countenance is fallen," his back is turned upon
his Maker. The need, therefore, is not that he should mend his ways, but that he
should change his course altogether.
The traveller's gait may be slovenly, and his pace slow; yet little does it
matter, if every step is taking him further from his home. His first and great
need is to be turned right about; and this turning is conversion, the objective
phase of the change which, when considered subjectively, Scripture calls
repentance; a change, moreover, which depends upon belief of the gospel.
"To the Gentiles hath God granted repentance unto life," we read in
the Acts of the Apostles. Referring to the same event, Paul and Barnabas
announced at Antioch, that "God had opened the door of faith unto the
Gentiles"; and elsewhere, again, it is alluded to as "the conversion
of the Gentiles." The same event was thus described in various aspects of
it; and yet another might have been added, bringing in the fact of the new
birth.
This change then, and the need of it, are indisputable realities. Whether we
open the Scriptures, or turn to our own hearts, or look out upon the world
around us, we find clear proofs and tokens that man's course by nature leads
downwards; that there is a controversy pending between the creature and his God.
And from first to last that controversy has been the same in its nature and
results; but, as already shown, the ground and subject of it changed when the
Son of God was manifested. Repentance and conversion were not less necessary in
presence of a rejected Christ, than in view of a broken law; but the whole
controvetsy between God and man now became centred in Christ; and therefore,
acknowledging Him, believing in Him, implied, and carried with it the great
change, the turning of the man to God. Hence the prominence which faith has in
the gospel. The word "believe" occurs about a hundred times in the
Gospel of John, and, as already stated, "repent" is not found even
once. To believe in Christ involves a turning of heart to Him, and that is the
only true conversion, the only true repentance.
I have mentioned the Spirit's work as another hindrance to man's efforts after
salvation, and in truth it is the crowning difficulty. Faith and repentance;
however they be regarded, seem to be within human capacity; but if the Holy
Ghost must act, before a sinner can have life, man falls back helplessly in
presence of the sovereignty of God.. And here let me say that this is precisely
the value of the doctrine of the new birth in connection with the gospel; It is
to convince man that salvation is impossible as far as human effort is
concerned, and thus to cast him wholly upon God. He who preaches the Spirit's
work without regard to the condition of his hearers is like a quack who, because
one patient has been cured by a certain remedy, administers it promiscuously to
all. "Ye must be born again" was addressed to Nicodemus, but not to
the Samaritan woman at the well, nor to the multitude around the pool of
Bethesda. It was true, doubtless, for all, but it was not the special truth they
needed; and the more the Lord's words are weighed and studied, the more we shall
be struck by the wisdom with which truth was ever ministered by Him.
In this view, indeed, the 3d, 4th, and 5th chapters of John demand the earnest
and unceasing study of all who preach the gospel. In the 5th chapter, the Lord's
hearers are the multitude, brought together by the miracle He has just
performed, and further interested by the opposition of the Pharisees. And to
such He gives a threefold testimony: first, to His own personal dignity and
glory; then, to life for the sinner through His word; and lastly, to judgment
coming upon those to whom that word does not bring life. Here we have a general
testimony suited to the common need of all; but in each of the other chapters we
have special dealing with the intricacies of a special case. In the 4th chapter
we are face to face with a sinner living in open immorality, yet without any
sense of sin - a case more common than we are apt to think, where a sinful
course is not so much the result of a depraved heart or an abandoned will, as of
a conscience wholly dead. And here He seeks, first to interest, and then to
awaken her, and finally He declares Himself. But in Nicodemus we have a man who
is ostensibly in the right path. His coming to Christ is itself a proof that he
is a seeker after God. But he comes claiming a position that ousts grace
altogether, and the Saviour must bring him to His feet before He can be a
Saviour to him. Supposing himself already in the kingdom, he comes to the Lord
as a God-sent Teacher; but the Lord "answers" him at once by declaring
the need of the Spirit's work. Had the Lord exposed sin in Nicodemus, he wouki
earnestly have repented of it. Had He unfolded to him a higher morality than he
had ever learned, he would eagerly have pursued it. But, "Ye must be born
again" not only put him outside the threshold within which he claimed a
place, but seemed withal to shut the door against him.
'The common interpretation of John iii. 5, which connects it with Christian
baptism," not only fritters away the meaning of the passage, but involves a
very glaring anachronism. It appears from the 12th verse that the doctrine
related to the kingdom as known to Israel - it pertained to "earthly
things." And from verse 20 we learn that the Lord's word ought to have been
understood by a Jewish Rabbi; i.e., that it was truth contained in the Old
Testament Scriptures. The well-taught Scribe would at once have turned to
Ezekiel's prophecy, "I will sprinkle clean water upon you and ye shall be
clean, . . . and I will put My spirit within you." Or if he missed the
reference at first, the words that follow, "The wind bloweth where it
listeth," etc., might well afford the clew to the passage on which they are
so plainly based "Come from the four winds, 0 breath, and breathe upon
these slain that they may live" (Ezek. xxxvi. 25-27, XXXVII. 9). The
"clean water" alludes of course to the rite enjoined in Num. xix. (see
p. 127). Nicodemus claimed his place within the kingdom by virtue of his
nationality, as Israel might have done had they been faithful. But in the carnal
and apostate condition of the nation, this showed thorough ignorance not only of
the things of God, but of the plain teaching of the Scriptures. No one could
have any part in the kingdom without the cleansing typified by the water of
purification, and the regeneration promised in Ezekiel's prophecy. The reference
in the Nicodemus sermon is to that rite and to that promise, and not, I need
scarcely add, to a dogma which the Church in its apostasy based upon a false
interpretation of this very passage. And if without this new birth from God, the
Jew, even on his high platform of privilege and covenant, could not receive his
promised blessings, how doubly true must be the word to us, "Ye must be
born again."
It is no longer now "the teacher of Israel" seeking wisdom from
"the Teacher come from God," but the sinner in the presence of his
Saviour, seeking pardon and life. The declaration of the love of God and of the
lifting up of Christ, are not the answer to the difficulty, "How can these
things be?" but the answer to the need which that difficulty has awakened
in the heart of Nicodemus. The mystery which Nicodemus, "the teacher of
Israel," could not fathom, is solved for Nicodemus the sinner, in hearing
and believing the word of Christ.
It was thus the Master preached. With the profligate Samaritan, He probed with
matchless grace and wisdom the festering but hidden wound of sin. For the
ignorant and needy multitude He flung the door of mercy open wide, that all
might enter there. But with the Pharisee, who slighted grace, He seemed to
change His purpose, and to close that door against him; yet no sooner did he
take the sinner's place than Nicodemus found the way as free and open as the
power and love of God could make it. So was it again when He declared Himself to
be the bread of God come down from heaven to give life unto the world. One and
another may have hearkened, and to such the blessing was as full and free as
grace itself. But with the rest who kicked against the word, the Lord withdrew
behind the sovereignty of God, and rebuked their murmurs by the truth that no
one can come to Him except the Father draw him.
Here, then, is the value of the Spirit's work. For the humble penitent it
bridges over and conceals the gulf that separates the sinner from his God. For
the self-righteous or profane, it serves but to prove that gulf to be
impassable. To the one it testifies of sovereign grace, to the other it
testifies that grace is sovereign.
The Holy Ghost has come, and now He gives a double testimony. He bears witness
against the world's rejection of the Son, and He testifies to the rejected One
as now exalted to be a Saviour. It is His mission to convict the world of sin,
of righteousness, and of judgment: of sin, because the Son of God has been cast
out by earth; of righteousness, because the Outcast of earth has been welcomed
by the Father in heaven; and of judgment, because Satan, who put forth all his
power against Him, has now himself been judged. The presence of the Comforter is
proof that Christ has triumphed, and a token of judgment on the world now lying
in the wicked one.
But if God testifies to judgment in this day of mercy, it is in order thus to
turn men's hearts to grace. And to the sinner who looks up to heaven for pardon,
the mission of the Comforter is only to speak of Christ. The Spirit is come down
to bear witness to the Saviour. But His is not like the Baptist's testimony,
telling of a greater than Himself to follow. His word is itself the power by
which dead souls are born again to God. The love of God to man, and the cross of
Christ which manifests that love, and the inspired page which contains the
record of it, would all be of no avail to save a single sinner, were it not for
the Spirit's work.
But men draw strange inferences here. "Preaching the Spirit's work,"
as it is usually understood, seems based upon the thought that the Holy Ghost
has interests and claims peculiar to Himself; and so the sinner must propitiate
Him by prayer or worship in order to secure His aid. But all such thoughts are
wholly false. Christianity is a great system of mediation. The Son came down to
earth, not to supplant the Father, but to reveal Him the words He spoke were not
His own, but His that sent Him. The Spirit has come down, not to supplant the
Son, but to bear witness to Him. He does not speak from Himself, but receives of
Christ for us. "He that hath seen Me hath seen The Father" was the
word of Christ. He that has heard the Spirit's voice has received both the
Father and the Son. We are not regenerated in order to believe. The Word of God
is itself the seed by which we are begotten. Faith comes - not by prayer, for
there can be no true prayer without it; nor yet by any work of the Spirit in the
soul, apart from the message which He brings - faith comes by hearing, and it is
by the hearing of faith that the Spirit is received.
"In maintaining the duty of praying before believing, you cannot surely
be asserting that it is your duty to go to God in unbelief? You cannot mean to
say that you ought to go to God believing that He is not willing to bless you,
in order that, by so praying, you may persuade Him to make you believe that He
is"
The prayer of Philip, that Christ would reveal to him the Father, was not more
unintelligent and wrong than a prayer for the Spirit to reveal the Saviour.
Apart from the Holy Ghost no one can be saved. Therefore He has come that no one
need be lost. Christians speak too often of His. work as though it were a
limitation upon grace. God intends it as a crowning proof that grace is
boundless and triumphant.
It is the sovereignty of God that makes the Spirit's work so insurmountable a
barrier on the way to life; but when the sinner comes to know that God's
sovereignty is entirely on his side, the mountain which seemed to close heaven
against him becomes a plain, nay, rather, it rises now behind him to bar the way
to the City of Destruction.
It may be important that the theologian should define these truths; but the work
of the preacher is to set forth Christ, and it is thus alone that the need of
the true hearer can be met. The burdened sinner who came face to face with Him
in the streets of Jerusalem or the village ways of Galilee, and heard words that
revealed to him the Christ of God, received, with the revelation, peace and life
and the birthright of heaven. He might have been unable to explain faith or to
define repentance, and ignorant of the doctrine of the Spirit; but yet he had
repented, and believed, and been born again. And the blessing is as near to men
now as in the days of the Lord's humiliation, and the way of life is just the
same. There is blessing for the sinner as freely, and on the same ground. If
then some reader of these pages should be kept from Christ by misgivings based
on false thoughts of repentance or the Spirit's work, let him turn away to Him
who now speaks from heaven the words which once He uttered upon earth, and,
hearing and believing, receive the blessing which the testimony brings
"Verily, verily, I say unto you, he that heareth My word and believeth on
Him that sent Me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into judgment, but
is passed from death into life" (John v. 24).
I know no definition of repentance equal to that of the Westminster Divines
(Shorter Catechism, Q. 87). But when men begin by confounding conviction with
contrition, and go on to insist upon a certain amount of it as a condition
precedent to receiving blessing, it is sheer error. Moreover, it is wholly
untrue that the convert must be subjectively conscious of the various elements
of the change involved in repentance, or even doctrinally acquainted with them.
The qualities of the new nature may be latent for a time ;. and In the deepest
repentance, all thought of self and sin may be lost in the overwhelming
appreciation of present grace.
THE PRODIGAL'S RETURN.
I think upon the past, and feel
My heart sink hopelessly, and fears
Of judgment seize on me; I kneel
Before my God, and own that years
And years of deep, dark, deadly guilt
Are dragging down my soul to hell.
I know the wretched hopes I've built
Of heaven, if His judgment fell
On me, would vanish as a dream:
Before the dreadful judgment throne,
Such hopes, I know, though they may seem
All fair and right, when by our own
Poor godless hearts surveyed, would all
But serve to prove what godless hearth
We had, to cling to them, at all.
O God, my life no hope imparts,
And yet I scarcely dare to hope
In Thee. My heart is like a stone;
My soul is dead; I blindly grope,
And long for light. And yet I own
It is not Thee, but only rest
And safety for my soul, I seek,
My guilty soul. 0 God, at best
I'm godless, even while I speak
To Thee! Not love but selfish fear
It is that brings me to Thy feet;
My wretched sins are far more dear
To me - but then, Thy judgrnent seat
Ah! yes, I own, were there no hell,
I would not seek Thy heaven, 0 God;
A Father's love is not the spell
That draws me, but Thy judgment rod.
O God, I cannot ask for bread,
For bread, I know, is children's fare,
And I'm a dog; I bow my head,
And own I'm but a dog: nor dare
I seek to claim a higher place;
I have no right to children's meat;
I only cast myself on grace,
I lay me prostrate at Thy feet.
O God, have mercy on my soul:
Before th' eternal night begins,
O save my dark and guilty soul;
Forgive my sins - O God, my sins I
Hast Thou not given Thlne only Son
To bear my sins upon the tree?
And wilt Thou now, when all is done,
Refuse, my God, to pardon me?
And, 0 my God, hast Thou not said,
"He that believeth on the Son
Hath life"? and I believe; though red
Like crimson are my sins, and one
By one they rise before me now,
Sins long forgotten, and they fain
Would make me doubt Thy word: I bow
My head in shame: yet wilt Thou deign
To look on me? If I am lost,
I need a Saviour: 'tis for such
He came to die; and what a cost
To pay I 'tis not for me to touch
That finished work of His, or seek
To add a sigh, or tear, or groan
Of mine to what He bore, or speak
Of aught in me but sin. Alone,
O Christ, Thou hadst to bear my doom
To take my deep dark curse on Thee,
And bear it all; and now theres room
For grace to pardon even me.
Then look on me, my Father. Yes,
I call Thee Father, for I know
Thy word is sure, and humbly bless
The grace that deigned to stoop so low,
That such as I can come to Thee,
And as a sinner reconciled
By His most precious blood, for me
Once shed, can know that I'm Thy child.
'Tis but a moment since I thought
There scarce was hope for one like me;
I heeded not the love that bought
Me with the blood of Calvary.
Yet now I dare to look above
And call Thee Father; though my heart's
Defiled, my lips unclean - Thy love
Has conquered fear - though Satan's darts
Fall thick around me, and within
I dare not look - 'tis like a sea
That cannot rest, and full of sin
I now can look away to Thee,
And find in Thee my peace, nor fear
To rest my trembling sin-stained soul
Upon Thy word, and so draw near.
My Saviour's blood has made me whole.
I'm black and worthless, but I'm Thine;
My God L'm Thine; to Thee I owe
My life, my life to Thee resign.
O teach Thy child in life to show
Thy praises forth. I bless Thy name;
I worship, magnify, adore,
And praise Thy great and glorious name,
O fill my soul yet more and more
With praise to Thee. The miry clay
Still clings to me, and yet I raise
My triumph song and bless the day:
O fill my soul yet more with praise!
Chapter Six - ELECTION.
WHEN the gift of life was proffered us, we were conscious in
accepting it that we did so (freely) voluntarily. Since then, we have come to
see that grace did not exhaust itself even in working out our deliverance at a
cost so priceless, and bringing it within our reach, but that our very
acceptance of the gift was the Spirit's work, and as directly the action of
grace as Calvary itself. But more than this, now that we have received the
message, and are come within the scene of joy and blessing to which it bids us,
we have to learn that, in a sense deeper and fuller still, grace is sovereign.
The gospel of our salvation spanned the open door of grace as we approached it;
above the inner portal, we now read the words "Chosen in Him before the
foundation of the world."
And surely this mystery of election is both fitted and intended to bring deep
blessing to the believing heart; but the sad fact is too patent to be ignored,
that with the vast majority of Christians it is so inseparably linked with
controversy as to be removed from blessing altogether. Upon one side, the plain
testimony of Scripture is tampered with, if not rejected; upon the other, the
doctrine is asserted with a narrowness which is uncongenial, if not absolutely
incompatible with truth. To introduce into these pages a treatise upon the
election controversy would be obviously a departure from their plan and purpose.
I will content myself, therefore, with offering a few remarks in passing, for
the consideration of the thoughtful reader. First, the scriptural expression
"God's elect" is not the mere statement of a fact, or even of a
purpose, but, like "first-born," It is a title of dignity and
privilege, applicable exclusively to the Christian. And secondly, the prominent
thought in election, especially in this dispensation of the Church (as the very
word ecclesia suggests), is rank and privilege, not deliverance from
perdition. The distinctive truth of election must not be lost in the kindred but
wider truth of the sovereignty of God.
And if a full exposition of election would here be out of place, still more so
would be a defence of it. It needs not to be defended, for it is plainly taught
in Scripture. But the theological doctrine based upon it is too often pressed
beyond the limits of the positive teaching of Holy Writ, and thus the divine
mystery which crowns the great truth of sovereign grace, is degraded to the
level of a narrow dogma, inconsistent alike with both sovereignty and grace.
A cogent proof of both these statements is afforded by the fact, that the
title of "elect," like that of "first-born," primarily
applies to Christ Himself. (i Pet. ii. 4, 6 ; Luke xxiii. 35.)
One passage may suffice - "We are bound to give thanks alway to God for
you, brethren beloved of the Lord, because God hath from the beginning chosen
you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth
whereunto He called you by our gospel." (2 Thess. 2. 13, 14).
I desire therefore to treat the subject only as it bears upon my theme, and to
show that election cannot either warp or limit the plain meaning of the gracious
words in which the gospel message comes to us.
One of the most popular systems of metaphysics is based upon the fact that
certain of our ideas seem to spring from the essential constitution of the mind
itself ; and these are not subject to our reason, but, on the contrary, they
control it. A superficial thinker might suppose the powers of human imagination
to be boundless. He can imagine the sun and moon and stars to disappear from the
heavens, and the peopled earth to vanish from beneath his feet, leaving him a
solitary unit in boundless space ; but let him try, pursuing still further his
madman's dream, to grasp the thought of space itself being annihilated, and his
mind, in obedience to some inexorable law, will refuse the conception
altogether. Or, to take an illustration apter for my present purpose, wild fancy
may thus change the universe into a blank, but, though there should remain no
shadow and no dial, no sequence of events, the mind is utterly incapable of
imagining how time could cease to flow. And the practical conclusion we arrive
at is that our idea of "past, present, and future," like that of
space, is not derived from experience, but depends upon a law imposed upon our
reason by the God who made us.
I am far from appealing to German philosophy in defence of God's truth, but I do
enthusiastically appeal to it as a protest against the arrogance, of limiting
God by the standard of our own ignorance and frailty. What is, in plain words,
the practical difficulty of election in its bearing upon the gospel? Why, that
at some epoch in the past, God decided that this or that individual was to be
saved or lost; and, therefore, that his future depends, not on the present
action of the grace or the righteousness of the living God Who can appeal
through the gospel to his heart and conscience, but on what is nothing more or
less than an iron decree of fate. May not the whole difficulty depend on the
arrogant supposition that God Himself is bound by the same laws that He has
imposed upon His creatures? But whatever we may think of the theories of Kant,
this at least is certain, that there is no deception in the gospel as proclaimed
by God to men. "Truth is one"; and though, to our finite minds,
election and grace may seem as far as the poles asunder, and as antagonistic as
the magnetic currents which set toward them; to the Infinite they may appear but
inseparable parts of one great whole. Every truth has its own place; and there
is no more reason why grace should be denied by dragging election into the
gospel, than why election should be denied, because, when so thrust out of its
proper sphere, it seems to be opposed to grace. "Rightly dividing the Word
of truth," is a precept which we need to remember here.
I repeat, there is no deception in the gospel. Some men who can preach with
freedom to a multitude, are very often puzzled when face to face with an
individual the heart and the head are at issue directly, and they either throw
their theology overboard, and preach grace boldly, or else they state the gospel
so ingeniously that the difficulty created by their views about election is kept
out of sight. In the gospel of God there is no reservation whatsoever. And let
us remember that it is His gospel, "God's good news concerning His Son
Jesus Christ our Lord." Mark also that it is not "concerning the
sinner." To some the distinction may appear self-evident, and to others it
may seem so trifling as almost to savour of a quibble; but in fact it is at the
root of many of our difficulties and mistakes in gospel preaching. The gospel
then is God's good news about Christ. And this gospel is as true for a single
individual as for a crowd; and, moreover, it is absolutely and unequivocally
true whether men believe it or not. Another most important practical distinction
is that the gospel is, strictly speaking, not a doctrinal statement, but a
divine proclamation. "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be
saved" was Paul's answer to the question of the jailer at Philippi, to
explain to him that salvation was on the principle, not of doing, but of faith
in Christ. The next verse adds, "and they spake to him the word of the
Lord" ; that is, they preached the gospel to him. Now, some preachers,
instead of proclaiming the gospel, appeal unceasingly to their hearers to
believe in Christ; and the consequence is that too often, instead of having
their thoughts turned to the person and work of the Saviour, people are occupied
with efforts to get faith. And the difficulty is frequently increased by reading
the second chapter of Ephesians as though "the gift of God" there
spoken of were faith. Salvation is the gift of God: "faith cometh by
hearing, and hearing by the Word of God."
But the distinctions I have noticed, important though they be, serve only to
clear the ground for the consideration of the real question here raised - How
can grace be compatible with election? The gospel proclaims universal
reconciliation, and grace is "salvation-bringing to all men."'
Election, on the other hand, assumes that the believer's blessings are the
result of a divine decree. These, it is objected, are wholly inconsistent, and
one or other of them must be explained away. Doubtless they may appear to be
incompatible, but to maintain that therefore they are so in fact, is to put
reason above revelation, or in other words, to place man above God. Is the
Christian to reject truths so plainly taught, because, forsooth, they are beset
with difficulties of a kind which even German metaphysics would suffice to solve
True it is that what is clearly contrary to reason must be rejected; but so far
from what is here contended for being against reason, it is perfectly consistent
with a recognised system of metaphysics, than which, moreover, when separated
from the jargon of a certain school, none is more philosophical. This then is
the object of my appeal to Kant. I should deprecate the pedantry of introducing
a discussion of the critical philosophy in such a connection and I do not
pretend that it affords the true solution of the seeming paradox of election and
grace; I notice it merely to show how easily the difficulty may be solved.
Surely the Christian may be contept to accept the mystery, and to trust God for
the solution of it.
Nor are the difficulties here involved at all peculiar to the present question.
The very same objection which many Christians urge against the gospel, is used
by the infidel to prove the absurdity of prayer. Will the great God, "with
whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning," change His purpose at
the cry of a sinful creature? A man once "prayed earnestly that it might
not rain, and it rained not on the earth by the space of three years and six
months; and he prayed again, and the heavens gave rain, and the earth brought
forth her fruit."' Nor can we tolerate the figment that the prayer itself
was but another result of the inexorable rule of fate. We do not trust in fate,
but in "the living God," and we are taught the solemnity and reality
of prayer, not merely by the record of the blessings it has won, but by the
ominous words, "He gave them their own desire," endorsed on many a
rebellious cry sent up to heaven by His people.
But there is another prayer, of which the solemn record should suffice to set at
rest every doubt that a perverted use of the doctrine of election has cast upon
the truth of grace. The Lord Himself, though come down to earth that He might
drink the cup which brimmed over upon Calvary, could pray, upon the very eve of
Calvary, that that cup might pass from Him. He, "the Lamb slain from the
foundation of the world "- He, who, ere a few days had passed, could chide
His doubting disciples with the word "Ought not Christ to have suffeted
these things?" recapitulating in their wondering ears the oft-told record
of prophecy which Calvary fulfilled - He found, neither in that record, nor in
the divine purpose it unfolded, anything to hinder the prayer of Gethsemane,
"0 My Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from Me." With Him
the dire necessity to drink it arose from no stern and irrevocable edict of the
past, but from the sovereign will of a present living God, Who, even then, would
hearken to His cry if redemption could be won at any price less terrible and
costly and. yet there are some who would rebuke a Christian mother for pouring
out her heart in prayer, without reserve or fear, that God would save the
children He has given her !
Among the strange phenomena of practical Christian life, one of the saddest
is that so often witnessed of Christian parents attributing to a divine decree
the fact of their children growing up unconverted. "Having believing
children" was one of the qualifications of a bishop, because it was a
pledge and proof of the parents faithfulness to God. (Tit. i. 6.) The precept
"Bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord," implies a
promise; and God's implicit promises are sure and certain.
Eternity is God's domain, but no less is "the living present" in His
hand, and if the doctrine of election become a limitation of His power to bless
and save, it degenerates into a denial of the very truth on which it rests - the
sovereignty of Jehovah. The plausible but empty objection may perchance be
urged, that the relations between the Father and the incarnate Son, are so
different from those which govern His dealings with sinful men, that the
inference here drawn from the record of Gethsemane is worthless. I will
therefore press the matter further, and call attention to the fact that this
paradox of election and grace, so far from being in any sense without a
parallel, is merely a single phase of the great mystery of divine sovereignty in
relation to human will. A passage in Peter's Pentecostal sermon may be cited to
illustrate my meaning: "Him, being delivered by the determinate counsel and
foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have crucified and
slain." The murderers of Christ were acting in fulfilment of a divine
decree, and yet their deeds were really and absolutely their own. Theirs were
"wicked hands," and guilt of necessity supposes the action of an
independent will. When this can be explained, that they who set up the cross on
Calvary were fulfilling a divine purpose, though acting in direct antagonism to
the divine will, the clew will have been found to every difficulty here alluded
to,
Nor is this mystery peculiar to great and momentous events foretold in prophecy;
it surrounds our life from first to last. To recognise and act upon the fact of
our own responsibility and freedom, and yet to accept the consequences of our
acts as coming from the hand of God, is the part of a spiritual Christian. But
to act upon the truth of divine sovereignty, yielding to blind impulse as
guiding the execution of its decrees, is the part of a heathen fatalist. As I
leave my door, I am conscious of being absolutely free to turn to the right hand
or to the left. The one path may lead to the attainment of some signal blessing,
the other to the commission of some terrible sin : I make choice, and in
choosing the wrong path I am sensible, not only that I have power to take the
other, but that I am going in direct violation of the will of God in not taking
it. When the consequences are startling, as for instance if my error cost me my
life, every one recognises the sovereignty of God in the whole matter, but that
truth applies as really to the fall of a sparrow as to the death of a king. And
thus every day of our lives we act upon a principle which appears to be
absolutely incompatible with sovereignty; and yet we recognise this truth of
sovereignty in reviewing our actions and their consequences.
And so it is precisely with the true evangelist. He goes forth with a
proclamation which seems to ignore election, as the full gospel revealed to the
Apostle of the Gentiles always does but, as he reviews his labours, his thought
is "As many as were ordained to eternal life believed."
If the truth of election hinders or even shapes his testimony, it is proof that
he has yet to learn the truth of grace. Sin reigned once. God was dealing with
men on the ground of their being what they ought to be, while by their very
nature they were what they ought not to be. God's attitude toward the sinner
therefore was adverse. There was a covenant no doubt, but that only served to
make the doom of the world more definite. God was imputing sin, and the normal
and legitimate result to men was death. But now sin is dethroned, and grace is
reigning. God is no longer imputing sin, but preaching peace. He to whom all
judgment is committed is now seated on a throne of grace. It is not that He has
grace for the elect and judgment for all besides, but that grace is the great
characteristic of His reign. He is a Saviour, and not a Judge. He shall yet come
to judge; but now, the amnesty has been proclaimed, and judgment waits. It is
not, as in a bygone dispensation, that there is mercy for a favoured class, but
that there is mercy, and nothing else, for all without distinction. The day is
coming when judgment will be as unmixed as grace is now, but during all this
" acceptable year of the Lord," His throne is a throne of grace, and
the guiltiest sinner upon earth will find there only mercy.
And this is "the good news of the grace of God." Election can in no
way limit it. To raise the question whether unconverted men around us are elect,
is to betray ignorance both of election and of grace. "Secret things belong
unto the Lord," and it is not ours to attempt to fathom the deep mysteries
of that death on Calvary; but this at least is plain as the noonday sun, that
that death has in such sense settled the question of sin, that sin is no longer
a barrier between the sinner and his God. The sin is still opon his head, and
judgment will overwhelm him if be die unsaved; but it is none the less true that
the death of Christ has made it a righteous thing in God to proclaim Himself a
Saviour, and to preach pardon and peace to every creature.
There is no shuffling of the cards; there is no deception in it. If forgiveness
is preached to all, it is because all may share it. If God beseeches men to be
reconciled, it is because He has provided a reconciliation; if He appeals to
them to come to Him, it is because the way is open right up to His throne and to
His heart. It is impossible that election can ever limit the value of the death
of Christ, or the power of that mighty name to save and bless. Sovereignty! Why,
the universe will have no such proof of the depth of His counsels and the
almightiness of His power, as that of heaven filled with sinners saved from
hell.
With some the difficulty springs from treating the gospel as though it were a
problem as to the amount of suffering endured by Christ, and the numerical
quantity of the sins atoned for. But God points us to the cross with a far
different object ; and the power of the gospel is to know what it is to Him. It
is Himself that God would present before the sinner, and He points to that cross
in proof of the vastness of the sacrifice, and the boundlessness of the love
that made it. He so loved the world that He gave His only-begotten Son - and He
adds, not as a cold formula which the initiated know to be overshadowed by the
doctrine of election, but as the expression of the longing of that mighty love
-"that WHOSOEVER believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting
life."
Chapter Seven - SUBSTITUTION.
IN the days so lately passed away, when debt was treated as a
crime, we can imagine how a dishonest and vindictive creditor may have received
satisfaction of his claim without his debtor's knowledge, and have kept him
still in prison for the debt. If in some strange combination of circumstances
such an event occurred, great must have been the indignation of all good men
against him who traded upon his debtor's ignorance to hold him still liable for
a debt which was in fact discharged.
And thousands there are of earnest people in. whose minds the story of
redemption seems to put God in the place of the dishonest creditor, If that
death on Calvary be indeed the payment of His people's debt, how can forgiveness
now be preached as being of grace ? Is it not a matter of the strictest justice,
that they whose discharge was nailed to the cross of Christ nineteen centuries
ago, should, at the earliest moment possible, be set free ? How can it be
honest, or true, or right, to urge men to flee from the wrath to come, seeing
that for some all wrath has been already borne, and the infliction of it now
would be an outrage upon justice, and that for the rest there is no refuge open?
Is not the proclamation of the gospel like holding forth to the sinner the
account of God's outstanding claims against him, with the assurance that the
hand of the great Creditor is ready to sign his discharge for ever, the moment
he repents? And does not every principle of truth and right forbid that the
elect should be scared into repentance by concealment of the fact that the ink
upon their discharge was dry long centuries ago, and that others should be
tantalised with deceptive promises of blessings they can never know, enforced by
threats of judgment from which, for them, there is no escape?
For those who either ignore the great truth of divine righteousness in
connection with our salvation, or fritter away the revelation of divine love to
a lost world, such questions as these will only provoke a supercilious smile.
But with such as have in any measure grasped the great twin truths which
characterise Christianity, a juster estimate will be formed of these
perplexities, and a worthier value set upon any honest effort toward the
solution of them. It will therefore be here my aim to show that all such
difficulties spring, not from the gospel itself, nor from the teaching of Holy
Writ, but solely from forms of expression, and modes of thought, about the death
of Christ, which are unwarranted by Scripture. And this end will perhaps be best
attained by offering first a positive statement of the truth upon this subject,
as it is unfolded in the types of the Old Testament and in the doctrinal
teaching of the New.
Redemption is presented to us in the Scriptures in a twofold aspect, as
connected both with power and with blood. Israel was redeemed out of Egypt -
redeemed "with an outstretched arm." In another sense Israel was
redeemed in Egypt by the blood of the paschal Lamb. But it is essential to
remember that the redemption of the people was complete ere ever they commenced
their wilderness journey. It depended, therefore, not upon the offerings of the
law, but upon the passover in Egypt. The rites enjoined in Leviticus were for a
redeemed and holy people ; it was by the sacrifices recorded in Exodus that
Israel attained that privileged position. It is specially to Exodus, therefore,
that we must turn to learn the truth of the death of Christ in its aspect toward
the unsaved.
I say this without wishing in the least to pander to the tendency that prevails
to map out the Scriptures by hard-and-fast lines like the squares of a
chess-board. The Word of God is a two-edged sword, with a side both for saved
and unsaved; but the secret of attaining clear and scriptural thoughts is to
seek first the primary application of every truth or text, and then, without
danger of error or confusion, we can apply it in the widest sense. Israel's
title to the benefits of the sin offerings depended on the passover. Let us then
mark the difference between the two. In the case of the sin-offerings, the
offerer came to the door of the tabernacle to give his life as the penalty for
his sin, and there, having identified the victim with himself by laying his hand
upon its head, the death of the sacrifice was accepted instead of his own. And
this is what we understand by substitution; the sinner laid his sin upon the
animal, and the victim died instead of him. And here the death was everything.
Whatever ceremonial followed was the care of the priest, and not of the offerer;
that is, of God, and not of the sinner. But, as we have seen, this was a
provision for a people already redeemed. Israel's right to the services of the
priest depended on redemption accomplished.
But with the great redemption sacrifice of the passover it was wholly different.
The dread death-sentence had gone out against all the land of Egypt. None were
excepted from it. It embraced alike king and captive, Hebrew and Egyptian. But
for Israel that sentence was fulfilled in the blood of the paschal lamb. But
how? There was no laying of the hand upon the head of the victim, as with the
sin-offerings. The death of the lamb, though doubtless the foundation of every
blessing, would in itself have brought no deliverance. Beyond the threshold of
the blood-stained door, the Israelite would have shared in Egypt's doom; beneath
the shelter of that blood, the Egyptian would have shared in Israel's
redemption. The death upon which their deliverance depended was accomplished;
but their participation in the benefits of that death depended entirely upon the
sprinkling of the victim's blood. There was no question of substitution, in the
sense of the sin-offering. The benefits of the sin-offering were secured to him
whose hand had rested on the victim's head, and they could neither be extended
nor transferred. And so. also with the great day of atonement; it was only for
Israel.
It was the same great sacrifice, doubtless, which all these types prefigured for
Israel and illustrate for us, but in different aspects of it. And the way to
follow aright the teaching of the types is to regard their historical sequence
as marking their moral order. We thus learn the different aspects of the death
of Christ, and the divine order of the truth concerning it. I have contrasted
the types of Exodus with the offerings of the law ; but there is one rite of
Leviticus which presents all this truth at a single view, marking the moral
order above distinguished. I allude to the cleansing of the leper. The leper's
birds are the correlative of no offering of the law, but of the Exodus
sacrifices. Then followed the trespass-offering, the sin-offering, and the
burnt-offering with its meat-offering. I will here speak only of the birds and
the sin-offering. According to the analogy of the great day of atonement, the
twofold aspect of the same offering is presented by two victims, the one being
killed, the other sent out of sight. But mark here the same distinction as that
already noticed between the sin-offering and the passover. The leper's
identification with the victim's death depended on his being sprinkled with its
blood; but when he came to offer his sin-offering he identified the victim with
himself beforehand. In respect of both, the death accomplished was for the
leper, but in senses wholly different. The one blood-shedding was, as with the
passover, a means by which deliverance might be gained, but until that blood was
sprinkled the sinner had no part in it. The other was a substitutional
sacrifice, and the result to the offerer depended immediately, and only, upon
the victim's death. In both cases the death was for the unclean person; but in
the latter it was instead of him.
These different aspects of the death of Christ, though carefully distinguished
in Scripture, are hopelessly confounded in theology; and that confusion has
given rise to the difficulties now under consideration, and others of a kindred
nature. "Bearing sin !this is a figurative expression, and the figure is
derived from the sin-offering; substitution is essentially characteristic of it.
But Scripture never speaks of the death of Christ in its relation to the
unbeliever - the unsaved - in language borrowed from the sin-offering. Contrast
the words of i Peter ii. 24 with Paul's sermons to the idolaters of Athens, and
to the Jews of Pisidian Antioch, and my meaning will be plainly seen.
The sermons were addressed to the unsaved; the Epistle is for those who
"have returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls." Just as.
with the leper's sparrow the death of the victim - was typically the righteous
ground on which God could pronounce him clean, but that death was nothing to him
until he had been sprinkled with the blood, and then, and not till then, he was
entitled to bring the sin-offering; so the death of Christ is the righteous
ground on. which God can clean the guiltiest and vilest, and proclaim
forgiveness far and near, but until the gospel is received - for faith answers
to the blood sprinkling of the type - that death, though none the less precious
to God, brings no pardon to the sinner. When thus identified with the sacrifice
of Calvary, but only then, the sinner may adop language, of the. sin-offering,
and say "He self bare my sins in His own body on the tree" As the
utterance of faith, such words as these are absolutely and unequivocally true
but as doctrinal assertion upon the lips of the unconverted, they are utterly
false, and the falsehood is all the more, dangerous because of the perverted
truth it seems to embrace. The work of Christ has a great and real aspect to the
world, but this assert this truth of substitution of the unconverted is to
pander to the false peace which is ensnaring tens of thousands around us, and at
the same time to sap the foundations of the Christian's faith If the 53rd
chapter of Isaiah be true of one who may yet be lost, the ground of the
believer's confidence is gone; what seemed a rock beneath his feet is no better
than shifting sand.
But some, perhaps, will struggle to escape from this inevitable conclusion by
the strange and subtle subterfuge that, though the gospel is to be proclaimed to
all, it is true only for the believer. This error is not more wicked than it is
silly. If it be true only for the believer, it is false for all the rest; and
does a good and righteous God hold men guilty for refusing what is false? The
thought is sheer blasphemy. "The gospel of the glory of the blessed
God" is wholly and absolutely true to all, and for all, whether they
believe it or reject it - a proclamation and an appeal from sovereign grace, now
free in virtue of Calvary to bless without distinction or restriction, and
leaving, if unheeded or despised, the certainty of judgment. The word comes
forth from an open heaven, and if, even as he turns away from Christ, the sinner
could look right up to the very throne and heart of God, he would see a throne
of grace, and the heart that gave the Only-begotten Son. When Jerusalem rejected
the glad tidings, they who were behind the scenes could testify that there was
neither reserve nor artifice in the proclamation; and if that guilty people
could have witnessed what these were privileged to behold, they would have seen
a mighty Saviour pouring forth His heart in tears because their unbelief had
paralysed the hand stretched forth for their deliverance.
But, it will be urged, if Christ did not die as our substitute, salvation is
impossible; and if He did so die for us, this fact must date from Calvary, and
not from our conversion. This assumes that the death of Christ was instead of
some, in such a sense as to make their salvation forensically a necessity, and
that the salvation of any besides is a moral impossibility. Such difficulties
only prove the danger of departing from the strict accuracy of scriptural
expressions in dealing with these truths. To speak of Christ's dying instead of
us, or as our substitute, is to adopt the language of theology, not of
Scripture, and we must take care lest we use the words in a sense or a
connection inconsistent with the truth. The teaching of Scripture is that He
died for sinners (there is no emphasis on the preposition), and that, on
believing, they become identified with Him in that death.
The language of ancient Greece is far richer than our own in prepositions,
and "instead of" has its unequiwcal correhitive; but this word, though
freely used by the LXX. and found in the New Testament (Matt. 11. 22), is never
employed in such passages as Rom. v. 6, 7, 8. The statement of Matt. xx. 28,
repeated in Mark x. 45, will not be considered an exception to this by any one
who marks the form and purpose of the text. The word no doubt may bave the same
force, just as "for" in English. But in either case such a meaning is
exceptional and forced; and in our own language we should in that case pronounce
the word with emphasis, and print it in italics. A full and careful
consideration of every passage where the word occurs will satisfy the student
that it is never so used in the New Testament. The only text in which our
translators have thus rendered it (2 Cor. v. 20) is a signal proof of this. An
ambassador speaks on behal/ of, not in the stead of, the court which accredits
him. I need not say that substitution is an extra-scriptural expression.
Let the reader turn, for example, to Peter's sermon to the household of
Cornelius, and mark the character of the testimony given, ending with these
words:-"To Him give all the prophets witness, that through His name
whosoever believeth in Him. shall receive remission of sins." Christ was
presented, not in identification with the sinner, but objectively to faith; and
the word was added, "Whosoever believeth in Him shall receive remission of
sins." The hearers believed the testimony, and then and there they were
baptized with the Holy Ghost. Then and not till then, the doctrine of the 6th
chapter of Romans became true of them:-"We who died to sin, how shall we
any longer live therein?" If Christ died as our substitute, then we
ourselves are deemed to have died to sin. Of whom is this true? The next verse
gives the answer in unmistakable terms: "Or are ye ignorant that all we who
were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into His death?" And so on.
through the passage, which claims careful study throughout, ending thus at the
ioth and iith verses :-" For the death which He died He died unto sin once
for all, but the life which He liveth He liveth unto God. Thus do ye also
account yourselves dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God in Christ
Jesus." Words could not be plainer; all that Christ accomplished for us we,
as believers, are to reckon actually true of ourselves. In the face of this
chapter, to maintain that substitution is a truth for the unsaved is either
playing upon words or trifling with truth.
But it will be asked, are not the closing verses of 2 Cor .v. addressed to
the unconverted, and do not they teach substitution? To this question I give an
emphatic negative. In common with all the rest of the Epistle, these verses were
written to "the Church of God at Corinth with all the saints in all
Achaia." In the last two verses of chapter v. and the 1st verse of chapter
vi. the apostle states the character and purpose of his ministry. But the
"Received Text," by interpolating "for" at the beginning of
verse 5, and separating it from what follows, destroys the connection ot the
passage; and the English version, by introducing pronouns and altering the
emphasis of the words, has utterly disguised its purpose. "On Christ's
behalf, then, we are ambassadors: though God were exhorting by us, we beseech on
Christ's behalf, Be reconciled to God. Him who knew not sin He made to be sin on
our behalf that we might become the righteousness of God in Him. And as
fellow-workers (with God) we also exhort that you receive not the grace of God
to no purpose." Our entreaty to the world is, 'Be reconciled'; to you who
have received this grace our exhortation is, 'Receive it not in vain.' In our
ministry to the world we are ambassadors; in our ministry to you we are His
fellow-workers." The 20th verse is in immediate connection with the 18th
and 19th verses, and the last verse is introductory to the opening words of the
6th chapter, all being bracketed together as descriptive of the apostle's
ministry. And the prominent thought in the passage is not the identification of
the sinner with Christ, but the purpose of God to usward in making Him to be
sin: it was "in order that we might become the righteousness of God in
Him." It is not that He took this place instead of us (which, indeed, would
have no meaning), and that we thereby stood free, but that He became what we
were in order that we might become what He is.
Here then is the key to the difficulties stated in the opening paragraphs of the
chapter. Theology with its subtleties has given rise to questions from which the
simplicity of Scripture is entirely free. When the sinner believes in Christ he
becomes so thoroughly identified with Him in all His vicarious work, that he can
speak of Calvary as though the crucifixion were but yesterday, and he had there
and then been justified thereby. But to speak of the death of Christ as having
this substitutional relationship to the sinner, apart from the change which
takes place on his believing; and thus to make his pardon appear to be an act of
justice in such a sense that it ceases to be an act of grace, is wholly
unwarranted and false. If there be those on earth whose case is beyond the scope
of the work of Christ, it is not in the power of God to save them; and thus
redemption has failed of its first and highest aim, which is not the saving of
the sinner, merely, but the restoring to God His sovereignty compromised by sin.
But if the death of Christ be substitutionally instead of the unbeliever, his
conversion may alter his condition spiritually and morally, but it can in no
wise affect his judicial state: he is saved in fact and of right, whether he
believes or not. In either case, grace is in chains, and not enthroned.
Any who will, dismissing prejudice, compare the language of Scripture with
words and phrases popular among us, will be surprised to find how much there is
which is unwarranted, even in what God seems to sanction by His blessing. We
must not forget, however, that grace marks all His dealings with us, and we
ought therefore to be the more careful and earnest to test our words and
thoughts about Christ by Holy Writ. To make apparent success the test of what is
right is just as immoral in the things of God as in the affairs of men. 'If any
should oppose what is here urged by argument or inference, it would be an easy
task to silence them with their own weapons. The imputation of sin and
righteousness as taught in Scripture is reasonable in the highest sense; but the
doctrine here objected to might easily be shown to be not only false but absurd.
This, however, is not the place to enter on a discussion of such a character.
There is absolutely no limit to the value of the death of Christ to Godward; and
there is not between the poles a single child of Adam who may not know its
power, and receive the reconciliation which it wrought. And on the ground of
this accomplished reconciliation, forgiveness is proclaimed to all without
reserve or equivocation. But it is only the "all that believe" who are
justified; and if it be demanded, why, beneath the supremacy of boundless love
and almighty power, the few, and not the many should be saved, we can but fall
back upon divine sovereignty, and exclaim, "0 the depth of the riches both
of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are His judgments and His
ways past finding out!"
The distinctions here noticed between the different aspects of the work of
Christ are clearly marked in the ritual of the Great Day of Atonement (Lev.
xvi.)
There were two methods by which the Israelite became identified with his
sacrifice, viz., either by laying his hand upon the victim's head before it was
killed, as in the case of the ordinary sin-offerings (see pp. 89-op ante); or
else by having the blood sprinkled upon him after the victim had been offered,
as in the case of various special sacrifices. But in the ritual of the Day of
Atonement there was no such identification with the goat "upon which the
Lord's lot fell." The ceremonial was entirely to Godward. The blood was
carried, not without, to where the people stood, but within, to the presence of
God. And the efficacy of that blood to Godward was morally the foundation of the
cerethonial respecting the scape-goat, which followed. Aaron, as the appointed
representative of the people, laid his hands upon the head of the victim, and
"confessed over it all the iniquities of the Children of Israel, and all
their transgressions in all their sins, putting them upon the head of the
goat," which,- as the typical sin-bearer, was then led away" to a land
not inhabited." The efficacy to Godward of the atonement made through the
blood of the first goat was absolute and complete, apart from aught that
followed it; but its practical efficacy to the people depended on their becoming
identified with the scape-goat.
And so it is with the antitype. The perfectness of the work of Christ in no way
depends upon the benefits which accrue therefrom to the sinner. Whether men
receive it or reject it, reconciliation is accomplished, peace is made. But when
the sinner believes in Christ, he enters into peace, he "receives the
reconciliation" (Roms. v. 1, xi). Thus becoming identified with Christ,
that identification reaches back to His death for sin on Calvary.
Substitution, then, is merely a theological statement of one aspect of this
scriptural truth of the believer's oneness with Christ, and if it be taught
apart from that truth, it may degenerate into error. The gospel, instead of
being a divine revelation, may become a mere problem in metaphysics. Instead of
the heart being reached by the stupendous fact that "Christ died for the
ungodly," the intellect may seize upon the inference which obviously
follows if a forced emphasis be put upon the "for." (See Note, p. 95
ante.) That the danger is real, witness how many there are in our day who seem
to receive the Gospel without any exercise of either heart or conscience.
Chapter Eight - RIGHTEOUSNESS.
THE sentence upon sin is death. Man has fallen beneath that
sentence he is hopelessly, irretrievably doomed. No law-keeping therefore could
bring him righteousness if he is ever to be justified, it must be by the penalty
being borne. He must be justified by death, "justified by blood."
Moreover, his spiritual condition is just as hopeless. He cannot please God. So
then, even if atonement be made for him by another, no blessing can ever reach
him unless it come to him in spite of what he is, and not because of any good
thing in him. Christ may have died, but the power and value of that death he can
never prove, if he must needs raise himself to reach the sphere of its efficacy.
He must be justified on some principle as independent of self, as is the blood
of the atonement -he must be "justified by grace." - But grace implies
that there is no merit in him who is the object of it, no reason whatever in him
why he should be blessed. How then, if the blessing be not arbitrarily limited,
if it be really unto all, can a difference be made? how can one be justified and
another not? It cannot depend on merit; it cannot depend on effecting a change
in one's self; it cannot depend on doing. It must be simply that one accepts and
another rejects a righteousness which is perfect independently of the sinner.
How accepts ? how rejects ? accepts by believing, rejects by disbelieving, the
testimony of God. "Unto all and upon all them that believe." "It
is of faith that it may be by grace" : any other ground would be
inconsistent with grace. A sinner must be "justified by faith." Death
then is the judicial ground of righteousness for a sinner. Grace is the
principle on which God acts in reckoning him righteous. And it is on the
principle of faith, as opposed to works or merit, that he receives the blessing.
The death of Christ has, I trust, received due prominence in these pages, and I
have already dealt with the great truth of grace, and discussed at length the
character of faith. But yet the question of righteousness is of far too great
importance to be disposed of thus incidentally. It claims a fuller consideration
by the light of Scripture. And mark, the word is "justified." It is
not a question of pardon, merely, but of righteousness. The best of governments
might find a reason to pardon the guiltiest inmate of its jails ; but to justify
a criminal would be morally to become partaker of his crime. And yet, with God,
forgiveness is no mere remission of the penalty of sin ; it reaches on, and
embraces the justification of the sinner. Ours is the blessedness of those to
whom God imputes righteousness. The believer is pardoned, but that is not all ;
he is reckoned righteous. "To him that worketh not, but believeth on Him
that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness."
It is not that God compounds with the sinner, and accepts his faith instead of
righteousness ; but that He accounts him righteous, and that in virtue of his
faith. The question, How can this be? is the thesis of the open in ot the
Epistle to the Romans.
"I am not ashamed of the gospel" the apostle boasts, as he stands by
anticipation in the midst of Rome, where power, the power of man, was well-nigh
worshipped as divine. "I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power
of God unto salvation to every one that believeth, for therein is righteousness
which is of God revealed on the principle of faith to faith."
We have thus at the very threshold two important points established: first that
the righteousness with which the believer has to do, is not human but divine;
and secondly that it is a new revelation. Law and prohpets bore witness to it,
doubtless but the burden of their testimony was a demand for righteousness from
man, whereas the gospel is a revelation of righteousness which is of God. But
this revelation was of necessity postponed until the close of the controversy
respecting human righteousness. To faith, God did in fact reveal in the old time
that there was a divine remedy for man's unrighteousness. It was "witnessed
to by the law and the prophets." But to make a public revelation of divine
righteousness for man, while the express character of the dispensation was a
demand for human righteousness, would be to put a premium upon unrighteousness. (1)
The public revelation was a demand for righteousness from man on earth. The
alternative was, to faith, forgiveness through divine forbearance; to unbelief,
a warning of judgment to come. But now, in the gospel, human righteousness is
set aside for ever, righteousness which is of God is revealed, and the only
alternative, and that for all who fail to submit to this righteousness, is wrath
of God from heaven.
(1) Such was precisely the charge brought against the gospel by those who
judged it without giving up their standing under "the law and the
prophets" (see Rom. iii. 8); that is, under the past dispensation, for such
is the meaning of the expression. See e.g. Matt. vi. 12, and xxii. 40. To do as
we would be done by, is human righteousness, and therefore the Lord says it is
"the law and the prophets." So again in the 22nd chapter. This was the
special character of the dispensation. See also Luke xvi. i6, which means, not
that the Old Testament Scriptures had become obsolete, but that the ministry of
John the Baptist inaugurated a change of dispensation.
But is it so clear a case that human righteousness has failed thus signally? for
on this depends the opportuneness of the new revelation. To this, therefore, the
apostle forthwith addresses himself.
The creature claimed his liberty, and turned prodigal. God allowed him a long
probation to prove what that liberty would lead to, and the result was only
evil. Tried by every possible test, man has proved himself to be utterly
unrighteous. Left to the light of nature, he turned from it, and proved himself
lawless. When the commandment came, he turned against it, and proved himself a
transgressor. In the first chapter, the condition of the heathen is depicted in
colours dark but true. In the sequel, the exceptional advantages of the Jew are
shown to have produced no adequate result.
This is the scope of the passage following, i.e., from ver. 19 of chap. 1. to
ver. 20 of chap. iii. In it he states the thesis of the doctrinal portion of the
Epistle, and returns to it in iii. 21.
To say that man is precisely what God made him to be is sheer blasphemy.
"God made man upright." But, it may be urged, God might have made man
incapable of sin. That is, He might have created a being destitute of any
independent will. Doubtless but then such a creature must needs be of a far
lower order than Adam and his race. But God might in fact have prevented Adam's
sin. That is, He might have created him capable of an independent will, but
practically incapable of exercising it. The fact of man's apostasy is a terrible
but most signal testimony to the greatness and dignity of the place from which
he fell, and it ill becomes him to answer back his Maker, "Why hast Thou
made me thus?" Moreover, God has been vindicated in this respect by the
life of Christ on earth; for such an one as Adam was has perfectly obeyed Him,
even in the midst of suffering and sin. Nor is God's goodness at fault towards
the fallen race. Man has chosen his own will, and turned from God in the pursuit
of it. Let him now return to God, and he will find not only pardon, but
blessings far beyond those of which sin has robbed him. But if he refuses grace,
either through persisting in his wicked courses, or through going about trying
to justify himself, to "establish his own righteousness" (Rom. x. 3),
what can there be for him but wrath ?
And the history of Israel, remember, is the history of human nature tried in the
most favourable circumstances. Abraham was of our own flesh and blood. If he
differed from other men, it was only that, as judged by men, he was a splendid
specimen of the race. God has recorded a mean and wicked act committed by him,
for divine biographies are faithful, but the stress that men lay upon this
single fault is no common tribute to the character of the patriarch. Abraham's
family, therefore, was the little Eden vineyard reclaimed from nature's
wildness, and tended and nourished with the utmost care and wisdom. If then,
even here, no fitting fruit was yielded, the entire stock may fairly be
condemned. If the Jew is shown to have utterly failed, it is the crowning and
conclusive proof that Adam's race is evil.
But dreadful as was the outward condition of the heathen, the inward condition
of the Jew was just as bad. The first chapter states what man without law openly
showed himself to be; the third chapter records the judgment which God, who
reads the heart, has formed of man, even when the restraints of law produced an
outward morality. Not that this was any new discovery with God. At the very
outset, His judgment of the matter was declared in no doubtful terms. But, in
His infinite wisdom, He decreed that the creature should prove it for himself.
Now, he has done so. Every mouth, therefore, is stopped, and the whole world has
become subject to the judgment of God. The question of human righteousness is no
longer open. Man's period of trial with respect to it is at an end.
Now human righteousness is conformity to law. Not the law, for that would limit
it to the Jew, and the argument includes both Jew and Gentile; but to law in its
wider sense. God alone is supreme; the creature must of necessity be subject to
law. The law of Sinai was the promulgation, and that for the most part in a
negative or penal form, of the standard of creature perfectness, the law of
man's nature, as we say. Murder and theft were as really sinful before the law
as after it. They were forbidden, not to make them wrong, but because they were
so. The Gentile therefore had, by virtue of his very being, the law which at
Sinai was formally tabulated in commahdments. Having not the law he was a law to
himself. Love to God and man, worked out in the life, is the fulfilment of the
law ; it is, moreover, the attainment of creature perfectness. Indeed, it is the
one just because it is the other. Righteousness then would be the realisation of
this. To express it in the most popular way, it would be man's being exactly
what he ought to be.
But the history of Adam's race is God's answer to every pretension of the kind.
As we have already seen, man's probation is at an end. The door is shut upon
human righteousness altogether. It is not that by the deeds of the law, they who
had the law can no longer be justified; but that by deeds of law, upon that
principle in any sense, no flesh living can be justified.
At the cost of repeating myself, I must insist on this, that man is in this
sense no longer in a state of probation at all. That era God has finally brought
to an end. The Holy Spirit has come, not to reopen the question of sin and
righteousness and judgment, but to convince the world that it is closed for
ever. If then human righteousness - righteousness on the principle of conformity
to law, the principle, namely, of man's being what he ought to be - is
irrevocably set aside, there must be a revelation of righteousness which is of
God, and therefore, of course, on some principle altogether different. But now,
apart from law," the apostle proceeds, "righteousness which is of God
is revealed, being borne witness to by the law and the prophets." Hitherto,
human righteousness has been demanded; but now, divine righteousness is
revealed. We shall see presently what the principle is on which it is based; but
here, we have the point settled, that it is not on the principle of law.
"By deeds of law no flesh living can be justified" ; righteousness is
now on a wholly different ground. The contrast is not between personal and
vicarious law-keeping, but between righteousness on the principle of
law-keeping, and righteousness which is entirely apart from law; between
righteousness of man, worked out on earth, and righteousness of God, revealed
from heaven.
But righteousness is a complex word. It expresses either a personal moral
quality or a judicial state. If any one be personally righteous, he is, of
course, and by virtue of it, judicially righteous also. On the other hand, to
declare a person to be judicially righteous who personally is not righteous, is,
according to human judgment, unrighteous and immoral. But God has done this very
thing, and the great wonder of the gospel is how He could do it. How can God be
just, and yet the Justifier of ungodly Sinners? Here is the great problem of our
Epistle.
To say that, although man has broken the law, God regards him as having kept it,
is no solution of it. It is not an answer to the difficulty; it shelves it
altogether. If a man keep the law, or, what comes to the same thing, if God deem
him to have kept it, he is justified on that ground, and there is no room and no
need for justification through redemption. If righteous living, whether personal
or vicarious, can bring righteousness, then righteousness comes by law, and
Christ need not have died. But righteousness on that ground is shown to be
impossible, and righteousness which is of God is revealed - righteousness on a
wholly different principle. If God looks upon the believer as having kept the
law there is an end of the whole matter, for to declare a person righteous who
is righteous is simply a matter of course. But the great marvel of the gospel,
the great triumph of redemption, is that God can declare those to be righteous
who personally are not righteous; that He can justify the sinner, not by deeming
him a law-keeper, but even while He judges him as a law-breaker. It is not that,
being justified by the life of Christ on earth, we are saved by His
blood-shedding; but that, "being now justified by His blood, we shall be
saved from wrath through Him," as now risen from the dead. We are justified
without a cause, by God's grace, through the redemption that is in Christ
Jesus.'
But, as we have already seen, the gospel of this righteousness was a new
revelation. In the old time, God demanded righteousness from man, and pronounced
a death-sentence upon sin. And yet saint after saint, from Abel downwards, went
to heaven, though unrighteous, and in spite of sin.
Instead of death they found forgiveness. How then about the righteousness of
God? The law and the prophets bore witness that it would be manifested, but it
remained a hidden mystery. The whole question of God's righteousness was in
abeyance. But now, the time has come for bringing all things into light. God has
not only manifested righteousness for the sinner: He has set forth Christ, to
declare and vindicate His own work." Whom God set forth," the chapter
proceeds, "to be a propitiation, through faith, by His blood, to show His
righteousness, because of the passing over of the sins done aforetime, in the
forbearance of God."
It is no mere question here of a judicial standing-ground for the sinner, great
though that question be, but the personal character of God Himself. So dear is
the case against even the best of Adam's sons in the judgment of all the great
intelligences of the universe, so evil and polluted is this wretched race of
ours, that God thinks fit to vindicate His character in stooping to take up our
cause. All darkness now is past; the day of full revelation has dawned. God
loved His people in the old time, for God is love; but that love was manifested
when "God sent His only-begotten Son into the world." He spared not
His Son, but freely gave Him up.
Nor would a higher wisdom have found an easier redemption, nor sterner
righteousness have Rom. iii. 25, R.V. Alford remarks, "Observe, it is not
forgiveness, but overlooking, which is the work of forbearance (see Acts xvii.
30); whereas forgiveness is the work of grace (see chapter ii. 4); nor is it the
sins of each man which precede his conversion, but those of the whole world
before the death of Christ. See the very similar words, Heb. ix.
is."required a fuller satisfaction". Now is made known unto
principalities and powers in heavenly places, the manifold wisdom of God. Now,
before earth and heaven, is declared His righteousness. "To declare, I
say," the apostle repeats, to give it fitting emphasis : "to declare,
at this time, His righteousness, that He might be just, and the justifier of him
that believeth in Jesus." Heaven peopled with the lost of earth, might well
seem proof of God's weakness in forgiving, were it not that it is "the Lamb
as it had been slain," who now fills the throne. The blood-stained
mercy-seat above is the sinner's hope, his only right to enter there. The
blood-stained mercy-seat is God's eternal witness to His own great attribute of
righteousness. That blood is at once the sinner's justification, and the proof
that God Himself is just. When God imputed sin to Christ, He became so
thoroughly identified with it that the Word declares "He was made sin for
us." When God now imputes His righteousness to the believer, we become so
thoroughly identified therewith that the Word declares we are "made the
righteousness of God in Christ"' But wonderful though this be, it will be
asked, is even this enough? Must not the sinner have the personal quality of
righteousness, as well as the judicial, to fit him for the presence of God ?'
Undoubtedly he must; and the question arises, What is the ground and source of
it? But here, remember, we reach beyond the scope of the Scriptures we have been
considering. The first four chapters of Romans deal with the great question of
forensic righteousness; now we pass from the forensic altogether. It is a
question of moral fitness. 'The redeemed sinner must be not merely justified, he
must be righteous morally and in fact. In the picture of a parable, or the
poetry of prophecy, judicial righteousness may fitly be represented as a
"wedding garment," or a "robe"; but here the question is,
What lies beneath that robe, that garment? not the wearer's title to be where he
is, but his fitness for the place he holds by virtue of that title.
The doctrinal importance attached so generally to the expression "robe of
righteousness" in the 6ist of Isaiah, is one of the many strange phenomena
of theology. The expression used in the 59th chapter might naturally have been
expected to claim far more notice, on account of its being adopted in the New
Testament. (Eph. vi 14.) The point of the parable of the Marriage Supper (Matt.
xxii.) is not that the man was unbidden, nor that he was personally unfit for
the scene; but that, relying on his personal qualifications, he dispensed with
the wedding garment. He had such an opinion of himself, that he thought he might
attend court in his ordinary dress. It is the sinner, because of his personal
righteousness, refusing "to submit so the righteousness of God."
Sin unexpiated must be an insuperable barrier between the sinner and his God.
Love and grace there may be, and pity for his ruin; but righteousness forbids
their exercise, so long as ever its requirements are unsatisfied. But, by the
death of Christ, the believer is released from every claim and penalty
pertaining to his former state. He is redeemed, bought back by God, and is, now,
absolutely God's. Pity, now, may stoop to save, and love and grace may flow
unhindered. God may lavish blessings on the ransomed sinner. And He may raise
him to what place He will. He may either repair the ruin of the Adam race, and
restore the old creation, marred by sin; or else, dethroning him who is the head
of that creation and that race, He may introduce the sinner into a new sphere
altogether. And Scripture is not silent here, nor does it speak in doubtful
terms.
Justification is in no sense a believer's title to heaven, nor yet his fitness
to be there. If British law justify an accused person, he walks forth free; but
he does not gain thereby a right to live in Windsor Castle, nor any fitness for
such a position. He may already possess the title and the moral qualities
befitting it; but these are wholly independent of his acquittal, though upon it
might depend his power to profit by them. The same grace which justifies a
sinner is itself the source of every blessing the justified enjoys. Gal. vi.
That is, it is no longer a question of human perfectness, whether according to
the standard of the law of nature, or of the revelation of it made at Sinai; but
of passing out from that entire position, and gaining a new standing-ground in
Christ.
The pattern to which all the sons of faith are yet to be conformed, is not Adam
in Eden innocence, but the risen Christ at the right hand of God. For neither
circumcision, nor yet uncircumcision now avails, "but a new creation"
and the believer's fitness for the home that is before him, depends upon the
perfectness of Christ as Head of that creation, and his own part therein by
virtue of his oneness with Him. It is not in His work we are accepted, but in
Himself, and yet not in Himself as separated from His work. The Christ who now
sits upon the throne is the Christ of Calvary, and the Christ of Calvary is the
Jesus of Bethlehem and Bethany. There can be no union with Him save in
resurrection, and we can have no part whatever in His life on earth until first
we have been made one with Him in that death which justifies. But, once united
to Him, we stand accepted in all the perfectness of everything He is, and of
everything He has ever proved Himself to be. "If any man be in Christ, he
is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become
new." The Only-begotten Son has not come down to patch up the ruined fabric
of the old creation; but, closing its history for ever by His death, to bring
the redeemed of earth into a new creation of which He, the Lord from heaven, is
the Head. "He is made unto us from God wisdom, and both righteousness and
sanctification, even (complete) redemption."' By the light of the full and
final revelation of the gospel, I have thus sought to find the answer to the
problem left unsolved upon one of the earliest pages of Holy Writ: "How
should man be just with God ?" I have shown how the sinner can alone be
justified - justified not on the principle of law obeyed, but on the principle
of sin condemned; "justified freely by His grace through the redemption
that is in Christ Jesus." Having thus described the sure foundation of the
believer's blessedness in Christ, I, have gone on to speak of full salvation yet
to be realised in glory, when "the new man which after God is created in
righteousness and holiness of truth," will be displayed in all the
perfectness of Him who is the Head of that new creation.
And now I close the chapter, for my task is done. But I could wish that some
worthier pen were here to fill the page with exhortations fitting such a theme.
If such be the Christian's past, and such his destiny, what a present should be
his? Blameless before his fellow-men, as by grace he has been freed from every
charge before his God. Marked by strict, unswerving uprightness in all his ways
on earth, for he is destined one day to be conformed to the image of Christ in
glory. "For the grace of God hath appeared, bringing salvation to all men,
instructing us to the intent that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we
should live soberly, and righteously, and godly in this present world; looking
for the blessed hope, and appearing of the glory of our great God and Saviour
Jesus Christ; who gave Himself for us, that He might redeem us from all
iniquity, and purify unto Himself a people for His own possession, zealous of
good works."
Chapter Nine - SANCTIFICATION.
WE have thus seen how a sinner is once and for ever justified,
when he believes in Christ, and stands thenceforth righteous before God, beyond
every demand of law and every charge of sin. We have seen further how.the
personal moral quality which is akin to such a standing, pertains to the new
creation in which the believer has his place. And, in conclusion, we have
noticed how practical conformity to that standing, and cultivation of that
quality, are characteristic of true Christian life. All this, moreover, springs
from, and rests upon the truth that God is righteous.
But God is not only righteous, He is also holy; and every requirement of
righteousness has its correlative claim in regard to holiness. Sin not only
brings the sinner before the judgment seat, it excludes him from the sanctuary.
He is not only guilty, but defiled. And though faith accepts the blessings that
are ours in Christ, and humbly takes the place they give, and the heart presses
forward to the day of full redemption, when the redeemed shall be presented
faultless before God; yet, sure and full though the blessing be, and bright and
clear the hope, the sad stern facts around us and within are no less real.
Sinners in a world of sin, though justified and born of God, and on our way to
certain glory how can we pray and serve and worship, here on earth, for God is
holy? It is not a question, now, of our place in Christ at God's right hand, nor
yet of a new nature by virtue of a new birth from heaven. It is what we know
ourselves to be as we walk the streets or fall upon our knees to pray ;
ourselves, the responsible living persons in whom this new nature dwells. How
can we approach a holy.. holy, holy God? In the Epistle to the Romans, the scene
was laid in the hall of judgment. The righteous God was on the throne. At the
bar there stood the sinner, guilty, condemned, and silent. The righteous
sentence had gone forth, and he had not a word to offer why it should not be
fulfilled. And we saw how, when all hope was dead, sovereign grace could justify
the guilty even as he stood, and call him from the very bar of judgment to
fellowship with Christ in glory.
But now we turn to the Epistle to the Hebrews, and here a new scene presents
itself. The centre object is a holy shrine, and not the throne of righteousness.
It is surrounded, not by lost and guilty outcasts, but by a redeemed and happy
people. They are in the wilderness, however, beset by need and infirmity and
sin. But they have a great leader to provide for need on the journey to the rest
before them, and a priest to help their infirmities and to make atonement for
their sin. The priest is theirs in virtue of a covenant, and the covenant has
also a sanctuary, an altar, and a sacrifice. Here then we have a people exactly
like ourselves, in circumstances like our own. For our present difficulty is not
at all how redemption can be obtained, or a home in heaven made sure; that
question has been set at rest. But it is as to the place redemption gives us
during our sojourn here on earth, and the provision made to maintain us in this
place, seeing we are weak, and wayward, and sinful, and in circumstances of
difficulty and trial. Let us seek then, by the help of the typical history of
Israel, to trace out the truth we are in search of for ourselves.
But, first of all, let this be clearly settled, that Israel's redemption was
accomplished ere ever they sang their hymn of triumph upon the wilderness shore
of the sea. Their redemption depended solely on the passover in Egypt, and the
waves that rolled between them and the House of Bondage - death in its spiritual
significance, and death in its separating power. It was in no respect,
therefore, the work of priesthood, or the result of priestly sacrifice. The
sacrifice of the passover was not a priestly act. Priesthood pertained to the
covenant, and this was not an ordinance of the covenant at all. The yearly
festival which the covenant enjoined was but a memorial celebration of the one
great passover of their redemption ; and it was as thus redeemed that Jehovah
entered into covenant with them. We must remember therefore, that in following
Israel's story, the moment we turn the page of the 12th chapter of the Book of
Exodus, we are dealing with a people whose pressing need was not redemption but
SANCTIFICATION.
Here, then, is precisely the point at which have ourselves arrived in this
inquiry. Let us pursue the matter further, and seek to ascertain how Israel was
sanctified, and thus to discern truth with reference to ourselves. Israel was a
redeemed people. But God had a purpose in this redemption, and that purpose had
yet to be fulfilled. He redeemed them from Egypt and from the power of Pharaoh,
that He might establish them as a holy people in covenant with Himself. Covenant
was based upon redemption, and followed as an separable consequence.
But the covenant ~ inaugurated with the blood of burnt-offerings an
peace-offerings sacrificed to Jehovah, and it was the blood of the covenant,
sprinkled on the peop that their sanctification was accomplished. ThU it was
that they were introduced into the place c which they were entitled by virtue of
redemption, and became in fact what they were already by the promise and purpose
of their God.
Truth has many sides, but here I am dealing with but one. In one sense
redemption is a result of covenant, and here sanctification precedes it; for the
meaning of sanctification b a setting apart for God. But In another sense,
redemption is the foundation of covenant, and sanctification follows as a
consequence. Both These seem to be Included in the opening words of t Pet.
"Elect through sanctification of the Spirit unto sprinkling of the blood of
Jesus Christ."
Christ is the great Paschal Lamb of our redemption. He is also the
Burnt-offering of the covenant. We are "redeemed with the precious blood of
Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot." "We are
sanctified by the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all." The
covenant is inseparable from redemption, and it is by the blood of the covenant
that the believer is sanctified. And this is no mere form of words, no piece of
idle rhetoric. Sanctification was a reality for Israel. Without it, there could
have been no covenant, no priest, no sanctuary. And it is likewise a reality
with us, and just as necessary. It is as much a fact as our justification, and
as absolute and complete. By nature not righteous but guilty, we have seen how
the sinner is justified. By nature not holy but defiled, he is likewise
sanctified, And both depend alike, and only, upon blood. He is righteous,
moreover, because God has declared him righteous; and it is by the call of God
that he is holy. "And such were some of you," the apostle reminds the
Corinthian Christians, after naming transgressors of the grossest kind,
"but ye are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified"
"Sanctified in Christ Jesus, called saints," as he had described them
in the salutation of the epistle.
Sanctification in this sense, therefore, is not a gradual change or a
progressive work, nor yet a moral attribute ; it is an act, like justification,
accomplished once for all. Just as the guilty sinner passes, immediately when he
believes, into a new condition relatively to sin and a righteous God, and
becomes thereby and thenceforth righteous; so the defiled sinner gains, as
immediately and in the same way, a new standing relatively to sin and a holy
God, and becomes thereby and thenceforth holy. "Whatsoever God doeth, it
shall be for ever: nothing can be put to it, nor anything taken from it."
But it will doubtless be argued, However true and blessed this may be, it fails
to satisfy our need, for this is only the setting out upon our pilgrimage; and
though perfectly sanctified when we believe, we may soon become defiled again.
What provision then has been made to keep us holy on the way? This is precisely
what we learn, in part by comparison and in part by contrast, from the Epistle
to the Hebrews. And here let me give the reader a threefold clew to the seeming
difficulties which make that wonderful and blessed book so profitless to many.
Judaism, first of all, is here regarded not as the apostate faith which
crucified Messiah, but as that holy religion whose aim and work it was to lead
to Him. The true Israelite had no need to be converted to Christianity. He had
already, as a Jew, experienced the new birth of water and the Spirit, without
which no one can see the kingdom; and he accepted Christ, not as the founder of
a new religion, but as the author and fulfiller of the true and holy faith which
had already knit his soul to God. It is to such that the book is especially
addressed. Secondly, the believer is looked at, not as seated in the heavens in
Christ, but as here on earth ; nor yet as a member of His Body, but as one of a
company of "holy brethren, partakers of a heavenly calling," setting
out on their wilderness journey home. And thirdly, the book takes up our
spiritual history at the point which Israel had reached in the 24th chapter of
Exodus. Redemption is complete. The covenant has been established. The people
have been sanctified. And having thus made purification for sins, the Mediator
of the covenant is gone up to God.
And here it is that priesthood meets us. As yet we have known no priestly
functions. It was not a priestly hand that killed the passover, or sprinkled the
door of the dwelling with its blood. It was not a priestly hand that sacrificed
the dedication offering of the covenant; and the sanctification of the people
was the work of the mediator, not of the priest. It is as "brought again
from the dead, in virtue of the blood of the everlasting covenant," and now
passed into the heavens, purification for sin being made, that the Son of God
has been proclaimed a Priest.
Here the type fails us. Moses went up to the Mount as mediator of the covenant,
and would then have been called to the priesthood, had not the offices become
separated, owing to his want of faith (Ex. iv. ia). Aaron, therefore, was made
priest; but it was then, and not before, that he received the call. His formal
consecration was still later. See Lev. viii. ix., which is connected with Ex.
xxiv., and gives us the fulfilment of that which took place on the Mount. And
mark that it was Moses who ofliciated in regard of these offerings (comp. Ex.
xxix.); and further, that he was associated with Aaron in the act which typified
Christ's coming forth hereafter as Royal Priest to bless His people (Lev. ix.
23). It is most important to see that the Lord's priesthood dates from His
enthronement in heaven. See Heb. ii. i. (where the word is "that He might
become"); v. 5-10, VI. 20, vii. 23, 24, viii. 1-4. He could not be a priest
while on earth (Heb. viii. 4). See chap. xvi. Heb. iv. 15. Our English Version
is ambiguous here, arid the words have been very generally perverted to mean
that the Lord's temptations were exactly similar to ours, the result alone being
different. Were this so, He must have known the powerof Sin within - the source
of so many of our trials. But the words are "apart from sin". So that
throughout these temptations, in their origin, in their process, in their
result, sin had nothing in Him: He was free and separate from it" (Alford).
We have thus not only a great leader,- the Captain of our salvation, and a home
to which He guides; but if through sin or frailty we fail to follow Him aright,
and turn aside or stumble by the way, we know Him also as a great High Priest,
who can sympathise and help. He can sympathise, for He was in all points tried
as we are; He can help, for the trial found no sin.
But to offer sacrifices for sins was Aaron's peculiar vocation. There are other
priestly functions different from this, and higher; but this was the
characteristic of the Aaronic order. It was founded on the necessity for,
expiation. If then the sacrifice had in fact accomplished the work it typified,
and sin had been put away, there would have been no need for the priesthood of
the law. A priest there must have been truly, for there can be no worship
without a priest and a sanctuary; but not a priest of the Aaronic type. Faith
grasped the truth which the sacrifice prefigured; but sin was not, in fact, put
away, and therefore, on account of the inefficacy of the blood with which they
had to do, there was a remembrance again of sins continually, and every
transgression demanded a new Sacrifice to maintain them in holiness befitting
the covenant. But now, by the death of Christ, expiation has been accomplished,
sin has been purged, and not only is the worshipper sanctified, but the
sanctified ones are perfected for ever. There is therefore no longer room for
sacrifice, no need henceforth for blood.shedding. The Aaronic priesthood is at
an end; the priesthood of the Son of God is of a different order altogether,-
the order of Melchisedec. But the priesthood is connected with the covenant; and
if the one be changed, the other follows as of course. And it is with the new
covenant that the believer has to do, a covenant in keeping with the priesthood
of Meichisedec, a covenant based on the great fact that sins and iniquities are
for ever expiated, and on the promise that God will remember them no more. To
the covenant, again, there pertains a sanctuary. The sanctuary of the old
covenant bore witness by its very structure that there was a place of access
still closed against the worshipper, and "a greater and more perfect
tabernacle" yet to be revealed. The new covenant and the priesthood of
Christ have to do with this the true tabernacle in heaven itself.
Ours, therefore, is an eternal redemption, and an everlasting covenant; we have
the Son of God Himself as the Apostle and High Priest of our profession, the
Holiest in the heavens as our sanctuary, and the blood of Christ to perfect us,
and make us fit for such a shrine. If, then, the question should still be
pressed, What have we further that is akin to the great yearly sin-offering of
the law, and the offerings for trespasses and sins of ignorance? I answer, the
need of these repeated sacrifices arose entirely from the inefficacy of the
blood of the covenant to which they pertained; but the blood of the new covenant
has brought us remission fully and absolutely, and, "where remission of
these is, there is no more offering for sin." We have seen how, when once
justified by blood, we stand in perfect righteousness; so now we see how, once
sanctified by blood, we stand in holiness as absolute and perfect.
But though sin can no longer master the sacrifice which purges it, and is as
powerless to exclude us from the sanctuary as to drag us into judgment, still we
are in daily contact with what defiles ; is there then no need for cleansing?
There is truly, and full provision for it, too, through the same death which
justifies. Every ordinance of the old covenant that was required by reason of
the "weakness and unprofitableness" of the sacrifices, we are for ever
done with; but there was a special rite to meet the need that was inseparable
from the circumstances of the people, and this has its abiding antitype for us.
A Jew of blameless life might possibly have had no cause to resort to the
offerings for sins and trespasses; yet he could not on that ground absent
himself upon the great day of atonement, for that depended on the inherent
inefficiency of the sacrifice. But even if sin had been fully purged, and the
worshipper absolutely sinless, he would have been none the less liable at any
moment to become defiled; for under the ceremonial law the Israelite became
unclean by contact with death in any form. And this defilement was met by water,
not by blood. But it was by water which owed its efficacy to a sacrifice
accomplished. I allude, of course, to the offering of the red heifer, enjoined
in the i9th chapter of Numbers. The victim was led forth without the camp, where
it was slain and burnt to ashes, part of the blood being first brought in and
sprinkled before the tabernacle of the congregation. The ashes were then laid up
outside the camp, and water that had touched those ashes availed to purify. The
Israelite who had become unclean was sprinkled with this "water of
separation," and then, having washed his clothes, and bathed his person, he
was cleansed from the defilement.
It is impossible that the blood of Christ can do less than make perfect the
sinner whom it sanctifies; but, even in the case of those who are so richly
blest, there can be no fellowship with a holy God, no access to His presence, if
that be allowed which is opposed to Him. The touch of evil cannot but defile;
and if we insist that there is no need to come back again to blood, it is not
that we make light of sin, but that we pay due homage to the sacrifice that has
once and for ever purged it. The blood has achieved its work; our future
cleansing results from "the water of the Word," as applied by the Holy
Ghost. The sprinkling of the water which had flowed over the ashes of the
sacrifice, typified our bringing the Spirit's testimony about the death of
Christ to bear upon ourselves in regard to that which has defiled us. The
washing which followed upon that sprinkling is the clearing ourselves
practically from the evil. It is not enough to judge the evil while continuing
in it; it is not enough to turn from it, however zealously, without having to do
with God respecting it. But to turn from it, even as we judge it in the presence
of the Cross by that Word which is sharper than a two-edged sword, is to bring
us face to face with a Priest whose work secures to us divine compassion, and
the grace our weakness needs.
And here it is, indeed, that true priestly work begins. I have already noticed
that Israel was not only redeemed, but brought into covenant with God, and
sanctified, apart from priesthood; and in the 19th chapter of Numbers, we have
again a sacrifice and a rite in which the high priest took no part. And this is
the more remarkable because these, the three great sacrifices that were not
sacerdotal, were precisely those which were offered once for all, and could
never be repeated.
The death of Christ was not a priestly sacrifice. It was the foundation of the
covenant, and, as I have already said, it is to the covenant that priesthood
pertains. It was "after He had made purification for sins and sat down at
the right hand of the Majesty on high" that the Son of God was proclaimed a
Priest Purification by blood, as we have seen, was not priestly work, but the
prerogative of the Mediator of the covenant. The purification by water was the
work of neither priest nor mediator ; and in keeping with the truth that any
hand could sprinkle the water of separation, there is the exhortation, "Let
us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit."'
I have said that Hebrews teaches us partly by contrast and partly by
comparison; and in exemplification of that remark I may here give another key to
that Epistle, and a clew by which to follow aright the teaching of the types.
Everything pertaining to the old covenant, which existed in virtue of some
unchanging principle, or of the condition and circumstances of the people, finds
Its exact correlative in the new covenant. But on the other hand, with respect
to all in the old covenant that depended on the powerlessness of the ordinance,
$be Inefficacy of the sacrifice, we learn from the absence of any antitype the
perfectness of the new. They had a sanctuary, and so have we. But the veil that
divided theirs is rent for us, and the holiest is open. Christ Is the fulfilment
of the great sacrifices I have enumerated; but if we turn to seek the antitype
of their continually repeated sin-offerings, we are reminded by their absence of
the virtue of the blood shed on Calvary. They had a priest, as we have. But
Aaron's special work arose from the special need which now has been for ever
satisfied. The priesthood of the Son therefore is of another order.
To make intercession and reconciliation for sins, and to offer gifts and
sacrifices, here are the functions which belong essentially to priesthood: it
was the peculiarity of the Aaronic priesthood that the sacrifices they offered
were for sins. Our great High Priest has no need to sacrifice for sins. He did
this once for all ere ever His priesthood was proclaimed. But, like Meichisedec
of old, He receives and offers up to God the gifts of the believer's service and
the sacrifice of his praise and worship, feeding him in return with the bread
and wine of heaven, and crowning all with the blessing Of His God. (Gen xiv.
11-2O).
But the words which follow those I have this moment cited remind me that what I
have said of righteousness is no less true of holiness: the word has various
meanings. When we predicate of someone that he is holy, we may be giving
expression, if we are speaking in scriptural language, to any one of three
ideas, which, though allied, are by no means inseparable. We may mean that he is
one of those who have been sanctified by the blood of Christ, or in other words
that he is a Christian. All such are holy in a sense both true and deep,
irrespective of their conduct.
But a holy person may become defiled, even as were the Corinthian saints at the
very time the apostle wrote to them. They had been made holy in Christ Jesus,
and were holy by their calling, but yet they were unclean through dreadful sin
unjudged among them. I may speak of holiness therefore as describing a life, or
practical condition, in keeping with the Christian's calling. He is holy and
separated to God by virtue of his calling: his daily life ought to be in
accordance therewith. Christians are holy persons; they ought therefore to live
"as becometh holy persons" they ought to be holy in this practical and
secondary sense.
But it will be observed that in both these senses, holiness describes a relation
rather than a quality; it represents a condition, not an attribute. And this
brings us to a third meaning of the word, a meaning which it bears in the verse
already quoted" Let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh
and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of the Lord." "Perfecting
holiness" observe; proving that the holiness he speaks of is incomplete and
capable of degrees. Therefore he is not speaking here of attaining holiness by
the blood, nor yet of maintaining ourselves in the position into which it brings
us, but of cultivating in a practical way the character akin to such a state.
Now, in either of the senses in which hitherto I have used the word, to speak of
incomplete holiness or sanctification, is a mere contradiction in terms. An
unconverted person is absolutely unholy, and a Christian is absolutely holy.
That, in virtue of the blood, the Christian is perfectly and for ever holy, is
the most prominent truth of the Epistle to the Hebrews. "Christ has
perfected for ever them, that are sanctified." And again, in its secondary
sense, holiness admits of no degrees. Here it is not advancing that we speak of,
but continuing in holiness. The Israelite who touched defilement became not less
holy, but unholy; and, until his purification was accomplished, he was
absolutely unclean; but, when the rite was fulfilled, he became immediately and
absolutely clean.
If we forget this, we shall be betrayed into light and sinful thoughts of God.
Lovingly to touch a dead wife's hand, excluded the Jew as absolutely from the
tabernacle, as would her blood if in guilty anger he had shed it." It was a
severe and stern enactment, and must seem, more than strange to those who fail
to see its spiritual significance. There is no question of degrees in the
holiness of a thrice holy God. It is not that great, sins shut the sinner out,
while allowance can be made for triffing faults. Perfection is the only standard
that can avail with Him; and full provision has been made, not only to make us,
but to keep us, perfect.
But yet, in saying this, we stand at an immeasurable distance from all the low
thoughts of God, and light views of sin, that alone can lend an air of
plausibility to such a delusion as that any cultivation of piety, or attainment
in sanctity, can ever give us right to seek His presence, or fitness to be
there. It is only and altogether in virtue of the blood of Christ that the
saintliest saint on earth can hold fellowship with God. A higher title is
impossible, and no lower will avail.
But this holiness is merely the correlative of forensic righteousness.
"Merely," I say, not to make little of it, for the one is as real and
as essential as the other, but because something more is needed for the home of
God. No one shall be there who is not intrinsically holy. And here I would beg
the reader to turn back to the preceding chapter, and to read the latter part
again, substituting holiness for righteousness throughout. Our moral fitness for
heaven, in this respect as in the other, is independent of attainments achieved
on earth. As regards rewards for faithfulness and service upon earth, no two of
the redeemed, it may be, will stand upon a level; but the perfectness of the new
creation will be shared alike by all. The standard is not what the Christian
becomes by the work of the Spirit, here, but what Christ now is as seated at the
right hand of God. I cite the words again, The new man "is created in
righteousness and holiness of truth." No change of scene can add virtue to
the blood of Christ, therefore heaven itself can add nothing to the holiness in
which we stand by reason of that blood. No holy living upon earth can add to the
intrinsic perfectness of Christ Himself; therefore it can add nothing to the
holiness which shall be ours when made like unto Him who is the head of the new
creation.
I have thus endeavoured to unfold, and establish on the authority of Scripture,
the truth of the believer's absolute and perfect sanctification in Christ. I
have also spoken of what I may venture to term continuous sanctification, the
constant conformity to that standard in his life on earth. Thirdly, I have
alluded, though still more briefly. as being still further beyond the scope of
my subject, to progressive sanctification, the cultivation of holiness as a
moral quality. And lastly, I have shown that the sinner's meetness for heaven in
this respect, as in regard of righteousness, depends not on attainment here, but
on his perfectness as a part of the new creation in Christ.
And now it is once more with a feeling of reluctance that I lay down my pen. I
cannot but fear lest the great truth I have sought to unfold should suffer in
the estimation of some, through being divorced from practical exhortation is to
a holy life. But I take comfort from the hope that thoughtful minds will in no
way share the prejudice. Valuable though exhortation be, truth has a power
independent of the appeals we base upon it; and, therefore, no teaching that, is
truly doctrinal can fail to be likewise practical. In dealing with this subject
I have already gone. somewhat beyond the due limits of my theme,. which is the
gospel, and not the Christian life; but I have struggled in vain to keep within
them.
The unusual interest which the doctrine of holiness excites, combined with the
fact that the great truth of sanctification by blood is unknown to our creeds,
and but little noticed in our religious literature, has not only made the task
important, but has vastly increased my difficulties in the effort to fulfil it.
I now dismiss it with a parting word. Even by those who own it, this truth is
sometimes spoken of as though it were a fiction or a theory. But with the
Israelite his sanctification was one of the most true and solemn facts of his
existence. Upon it depended, not alone his citizenship in the commonwealth, but
his life itself. And shall it be deemed less real in this dispensation, when
shadows have given way to substance, types to their fulfilment? If the
sanctification of the Jew was a great and practical reality, how much more the
sanctification of the believer now. "If the blood of bulls and goats, and
the ashes of an heifer, sprinkling the unclean, sanctifieth to the purifying of
the flesh, how much more shall the blood of Christ purge your conscience from
dead works to serve the living God?"
And again, the practical maintenance of holiness is the true effort of a heart
that grace has mastered. But yet, as with the prisoner who struggles to his
window, and wipes out every stain, making it shine again, with a zeal no sense
of duty could arouse, his thought is only of the sunlight he is yearning for, so
is it with the soul that is alive to God. All true life leads to Him, and
holiness is eagerly pursued, only to be forgotten in the enjoyment of its end
and aim. Hence the exhortation and warning, "Follow holiness, without which
no man shall see the Lord."
X
RECONCILIATION.
"Happy art thou 0 Israel! who is like unto thee, 0 people
saved by Jehovah." Such were the last words of the blessing wherewith Moses
blessed the people ere he died. "Who is like unto thee, 0 people saved by
Jehovah "
But if God is the Saviour of His people, He has a purpose toward them in
salvation. "I bare you on eagles' wings and brought you to Myself,"
was His word to Israel, and such is the great end and aim of the work of Christ
to usward. God would have His people near Him. The death of Christ was "to
bring us unto God." By that blood we are "made nigh." Here then
is the climax of the gospel, and to stop short of this is to lose the highest
blessing by separating the Giver from His gifts.
I have already treated of the doctrine of the opening chapters of the Epistle to
the Romans. The great truth of righteousness by faith is there established,
every objection answered, every difficulty met; and when we reach the fifth
chapter, it no longer needs even to be asserted. That we are justified by faith
may now. be assumed as a truth beyond question, and a fact beyond doubt, and so
the apostle passes on to higher teaching still. And here the first word is
PEACE. "Being justified by faith, let us have peace with God." Our
justification is not itself our peace, nor yet the source of peace. 'It only
clears the way which leads to it. Righteousness once barred the door against us,
it now flings that door wide open. Then let us enter in. As we stood without, it
was "God the Justifier" we believed in; now we stand face to face with
"God the Reconciler." We are justified through redemption in Christ,
but our peace is not in redemption, but in Himself. It is not merely what He did
for us, overwhelming though the record of it be, but what He is for us, and what
He is to God. We have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.
And here, as we stand beneath a cloudless heaven, for Christ our peace is there,
we come to discern in its fulness that He Himself was the way by which we
entered. By Him it is that " we have access by faith into this grace
wherein we stand." This grace; not righteousness, that he has treated of,
and he has now passed beyond it, but reconciliation, peace. Being justified, we
have access through Christ into this sphere where the sunlight of God's presence
is unhindered; then let us not remain without, where all is dark and cold. We
have access, let us be eager to avail ourselves of it. It is not an inference
from what goes before, but an exhortation based upon it. And it is an
exhortation, moreover, than which none is more needed with those who have the
faith of the Reformation. For us the great doctrine of righteousness has been
rescued in a long and deadly struggle. It has come down to us through a bitter
and bloody controversy, and it is but natural that we should attach to it
exceptional importance. But let us take heed lest we exalt truth at the expense
of Him through whom our every blessing comes. To make one blessing a mere
consequence of another, treating peace as a result of justification, is little
better than pointing to a dead Christ upon a cross, and thence reasoning out
salvation as a necessary consequence.
Reconciliation is a step beyond redemption even in its fulness as including both
righteousness and holiness. Reconciliation is, as I have said, the fulfilment of
the purpose of redemption. It is a most superficial thought, from which a right
sense of what God is, or even of what we are, would save us, that forensic or
even moral fitness for the presence of God gives any title to approach Him. The
cross of Christ has obtained redemption for us, but more than this, it has made
peace. We are not only justified and sanctified, but, as a fuller and further
blessing, "we are made nigh by the blood of Christ, for He is our
peace." Not that we would tolerate the thought, more false and evil still,
that God required a victim in whose blood His wrath might quench itself. The
cross was Christ's work, but it was a work done for God. God is Himself the
Peace-maker. It is not that Christ has reconciled us to God, but that God has
reconciled us to Himself. And God has done this, and we have now access to it,
and stand in it. I insist on this, because there is scarcely any truth so little
known. It is not only that we are pardoned, and justified, and sanctified. All
this was true of saints before the cross, and it is not in virtue of these
blessings that we can come near to God, for if it were, there would have been
access, then, as now. But not even the priests could enter the divine presence;
not even Aaron, save when, once a year on the day of atonement, in virtue of his
typical office, he passed within the veil.
I do not speak here of the experience of the heart that learned of God, for
there is no experience higher than the Psalms. But what was then the attainment
of the few, is now the privilege of all; what was then a secret known only to
them that feared the Lord, is now a public revelation to the Church. It was,
then, a promise faith could grasp; it is now no longer a promise merely, but a
fact. And it is a fact for every saint who has ever lived; but it was postponed
for them of old, that they apart from us might not be made perfect. It is in
Christ that the believer is accepted, and in Him God is well pleased. The
believer may fail to enter into this, but it is none theless a fact; God has
reconciled us to Himself, let us then know the peace of it.
But not only has the ministry of reconciliation an aspect toward the believer,
and here it is too much neglected, but it is also the very essence of the
gospel. Mark the words, "we were reconciled by the death of His Son."
Righteousness is not spoken of thus. Justification is an act of God's grace
toward the sinner who believes. Reconciliation is a work accomplished on the
cross of Christ. It is a work done on Calvary for God and to God, apart from its
consequences to the sinner altogether; and the believer has access to it by
faith through Christ as now risen from the dead. "We were reconciled
through His death" but here is a further and higher blessing, "Through
Him we have now received the reconciliation. Righteousness is now the rock
beneath our feet The cloudless sky above is peace. Glory no longer threatens
wrath, but fills the sinner's breast with hope. And thus the purpose of creation
is accomplished through redemption, God can rejoice in the creature of His hand,
and the creature can rejoice in his God.
And let us not fritter away the truth by supposing this
reconciliation to mean a change in the sinner's heart to God. That is not
reconciiation but the present work of the Holy Spirit. The change is in the
attitude of God to men. Sin not only turned the creature's face from heaven, but
made the sinner the enemy of God. That there is enmity to God in the sinner's
breast is but too true, but it is not the truth here spoken of. It is impossible
that God can be indifferent to His creature;. He must be either for him or
against him; He must regard him either with a smile or with a frown; and sin
draws down a frown, and not a smile. Apart from the work of Christ, He cannot
but be against the sinner; He reckons him an enemy. But "when we were
enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son." "God was
reconciling the world to Himself in Christ." It is not a present work, but
a work past and finished. By that death we who were enemies were reconciled. The
appeal of the gospel is now that men would receive the reconciliation. "Be
reconciled to God," is not an entreaty to the sinner to forgive his God,
but an appeal to him to come within the reconciliation God has wrought.
And this is the free gift of the 5th of Romans.' It is not righteousness, it is
not life; though it is unto righteousness, and brings life to the sinner who
receives it. It has effects as widespread as the sin of Adam. "As through
one trespass the came unto all men to condemnation, even so through one act of
righteousness the free gift came unto men to justification of life." Not
that all men a in fact made righteous, but that such was the and tendency of the
grace. It is no question here of results to one sinner or another, but of what
the Cross is to God, even though never a child of Adam should be blessed because
of it. The sin of Adam turned the throne of God into a throne of judgment. The
Cross of Christ has changed that throne into a throne of grace The throne of God
cannot be be other than a throne of righteousness, but grace, now reigns through
righteousness. It is not that there is mercy for those who seek it, but that
God's attitude to this world of ours is grace. Apart from the cross of Christ,
righteousness could only deal forth death, and therefore sin was in fact supreme
Sin reigned - it made the very throne of God an agency for enforcing payment of
its wages. But now, sin is dethroned, and "grace reigns through
righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord."
To speak thus of the work of Christ as done to Godward, and as having an
importance infinitely beyond its results upon ourselves, may perhaps seem
strange to many; and yet a due appreciation of what sin is would prepare the
mind for such a truth. We are apt to think of sin only in connection with its
consequences to ourselves, just as those who live in crime come to estimate it
solely by its penalties. But if the effects of sin be indeed both sad and
terrible, these ought rather to turn our thoughts to the essential character of
sin itself. If the stream be deadly to its most distant limits, how dire must be
the source from which it springs! We do well to think upon the results of sin,
but let us not lose sight of what it is which leads to these. results. It makes
the sinner guilty and unholy, and calls down judgment and wrath from God. But
there is more in sin than this. In its essential character it is neither guilt,
nor yet defilement, though both these qualities pertain to it, but lawlessness.
"Sin is lawlessness," the assertion of the creature's independence,
the repudiation therefore of the Creator's supremacy, the denial of the Godhood
of his Maker. Sin has "brought death .into the world and all our
woes"; but more and infinitely worse than this, it has compromised the
sceptre and throne of God.
I might pause here to mark how every attribute of God has thus been called in
question; not righteousness and holiness alone, but wisdom, and power, and love.
Nor, for proof, should I need to pollute the page by citing what infidelity has
urged about the origin of evil. might appeal to thoughts as wicked, which, like
unclean birds of night, flit about dark corners of the Christian's heart, and
which only the sunlight of the gospel can drive forth. It is not that sin should
go unpunished, nor yet that hell can be a doom too terrible for sinners guilty
of the blood of Christ. But if sin must lead to consequences so terrible, why
was the tempter's whisper not restrained? why was not the mother of our race
protected from his wiles? Nay, to go still further back, why did Lucifer himself
turn Devil? why did a good and wise and mighty God. allow His noblest creature
thus to fall?
Such thoughts as these afford no proof of mental vigour or exceptional sagacity.
They are one of the sad fruits of sin itself, and are shared by every child of
Adam. The Christian looks off to Calvary,. and awaits with patient confidence
the day when all shall be made plain. But it is no mere flight of fancy, but
sober truth which every thoughtful person will endorse, that, were it not for
Calvary, the mystery must have remained unsolved for ever. Judgment fires might
have avenged the majesty of Heaven, but the fact of a lost creation would have
survived, an eternal proof that God had been thwarted in His work. Before Heaven
all sin is treason; and though rebellion be stamped out by force irresistible,
it must leave a stain behind. That sin should be punished and put down is a mere
matter of course with Almighty power; but if God were indeed a God to His
creatures, would He not have prevented sin altogether? We see then that sin has
effects reaching far beyond the ruin of the sinner, and gives rise to questions
which the judgment of the sinner cannot settle. The Godhood of God is
compromised.
And as far as ever sin has reached, Christ has followed it and triumphed over
it: It is but natural that our mean and selfish hearts should slight the work of
Christ, save in so far as it brings blessing to ourselves; but its highest
character and its greatest glory depend, not on what it accomplishes for men,
but on what it is to God. It is no mere remedy for the ruin of our race; it is
God's answer to every question to which sin has given rise. Blessed be His name
it has brought salvation to lost and guilty men; but it has a purpose and a
scope as wide as creation itself.
This gospel of the reconciliation "was preached in the whole creation under
heaven." Mankind alone can intelligently hear it, and of mankind they alone
who hearken shall be blessed thereby. But in its range and compass the benefit
has got no limits, and the day is coming when all this sin-cursed world shall
share it. "The whole creation groans," but it shall one day be
delivered from this bondage into the glorious liberty of the sons of God. Then
shall all things indeed look up and put their trust in Him, and be satisfied
from the fulness of His goodness. There shall be nothing more to hurt or to
destroy. God will again become indeed a God to every creature He has made.
But if the reconciliation be for all, how is judgment possible? I answer,
judgment is based upon this very truth. Sin is not an offence against law
merely, it is an outrage upon grace. Light came into the world, but men quenched
it. God has now set it on high, beyond the reach of wicked hands, and though men
may hate or despise it, it shines none the less. The difficulty springs from
that false view of the gospel I have already noticed, which connects the
sinner's blessings with the death of Christ in such a sense as to exclude the
present action of the grace of God. His death has made it a righteous thing to
justify ungodly sinners, and but for that death it were impossible ; and yet
when the blessing reaches us, it comes direct from the hand and heart of God,
and depends absolutely on sovereign grace, and on what Christ is to God as now
risen from the dead.
The great end and aim of the work of Christ from first to last is to restore to
God the place from which sin has struggled to dethrone Him. Its glory is that it
has enabled Him to be gracious to whom He will, and to show mercy upon whom He
will. It has set grace free, but it has not brought righteousness into bondage.
It was first of all a work done to God-ward, and for God; and here is at once
the secret of the Christian's confidence and of his highest joy, while it is the
power of the gospel to bring peace to the sinner in his sins. It is because of
what God has found in Christ and in His cross, that the lost sinner may be
saved, and the saved sinner may rejoice in hope of glory, and exult in God
Himself. Adam walked in Eden beneath an open heaven, but sin called up black
clouds that covered from horizon to horizon, leaving the world in darkness.
Promises and covenants, and blessing upon blessing, pierced the gloom; and, like
the Hebrew huts in Egypt, faithful hearts were filled with light from heaven
while darkness reigned around. And the clouds that shut out heaven were
merciful. If the sunlight cannot bless and gladden, it must only scorch and
wither. Judgment will be in flaming fire, with unshrouded glory, but judgment
was not yet; and God, who could not smile upon a world of sin, in mercy hid His
face. Nor was judgment His purpose toward the sinner. Wrath is but a last
resource with power, and judgment must wait on grace. Before God will declare
Himself to be the Judge, He must reveal Himself as RECONCILER.
Judgment is still to come; but reconciliation is accomplished. Now, God need
hide His face no longer. An opened heaven will disclose a throne of grace, where
the guiltiest sinner may draw nigh. The work of Christ has banished every cloud,
and swept our sky as clear as when Adam walked in innocence with God. The light
of this glorious gospel now shines unhindered upon earth. Blind eyes may shut it
out, but they cannot quench or lessen it. Impenitent hearts may heap up wrath
against the day of wrath, but they cannot darken this day of mercy or mar the
glory of the reign of grace.
But though we have reached the summit of this vast and glorious truth in its
bearings upon Adam and his world, the Scripture points us higher still. And yet
we may not follow. The height is too stupendous; and if we gaze with reverence
and awe, it is that thereby we may shake free from the little-nesses of our poor
and niggard hearts, and gain truer thoughts of our glorious Lord. The words I
have quoted from the Epistle to the Colossians are the sequel to a passage which
is one of the most sublime in Holy Writ. The Gnostic philosophy, which made such
havoc in the early Church, was gaining ground among the Christians of Colosse.
Oriental theories of the creation of the world, the origin of evil, and the
intrinsic corruptness of everything corporeal, were undermining the faith of
Christ. The Son was thus degraded to the position of a creature, while yet the
reality of "the body of His flesh" was set aside. Inferior beings were
made the agents in our creation, thus gaining a title to our homage, and the
Godhood of God was practically denied. But He who can "bring meat out of
the eater, and honey out of the strong," has made these evils and errors
the occasion, of the fullest and most glorious revelation to the Church, of Him
before whom we bow as Lord.
Christ as, indeed, the First-born of all creation, yet not because He has His
place within it. If He holds this title of dignity and precedence relatively to
the universe, it is because it exists as His creature. The whole universe,-
things in the heavens, and things in the earth, things visible and invisible,
whether thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers,- all things have
been created by Him, and for Him. He was the One who called them into being, and
He is the end and aim of their existence. And He Himself exists before all
things, and it is in virtue of His power that the universe subsists. And He is
the Head of the body, the Church, in that He is the beginning, the First-born
from among the dead, that He may become in all things pre-eminent. And God was
pleased that the whole fulness should dwell in Him. And He was pleased by Him to
reconcile again the universe to Himself, having made peace by the blood of His
cross; by Him, whether the things on the earth or the things in the heavens -
the creation of God in every part and to its utmost limits.
'A valued and revered friend, to whose judgment these latter chapters have
been submitted, suggests to me that Revelation xxi. gives the complete
fulfilment of the reconciliation spoken of in Colossians i. The thought is full
of interest. It is certain that millennial blessedness and glory will be a
direct result and proof of the preciousness of the cross of Christ to God; but
it is no less certain that an eternity of glory and blessedness, still to
follow, will depend upon that cross as really and immediately. In our view,
creation limits itself to our own race and sphere, but with God the universe is
one great whole, of which the Adamic world is but a part. And as sin has
disturbed the harmony of Creation in this its widest sense, God's answer and
remedy are the cross of Christ and a new creation. It is not merely the kingdoms
of this world that are given up to Christ, but the throne of the universe of
God. And when "the end" shall come, and God shall again assume the
sceptre He will hold it in virtue of Calvary. If one could dare to speak thus of
God, we might say that His moral right to make all things new depends on that
blood. And the word is 'I make ALL THINGS new.' The promise is not of a new
earth only, but of new heavens too. And why "new heavens,' if sin and the
cross concern only earth? "It is finished" was the cry that rose amid
the agonies of Calvary: "Behold I make all things new" is the response
from the glory. The "It is finished" of the cross, shall still vibrate
until it is lost in the "It is done" of the throne. (Rev. xxi. 5, 6.)
In the presence of words so plain and simple, faith will not dare to question or
to doubt; and in view of truth so immeasurably vast and deep, no worshipping
heart will venture upon argument or inference. "Secret things belong to the
Lord our God," and it is not given us to know what the death of Christ may
bring to other worlds than ours. But "things which are revealed belong to
us and to our children," and this at least is plain as God can make it,
that that death shall bring either eternal life, or judgment, to every child of
Adam to whom the gospel testimony comes. Men may reason of the Fatherhood of
God, and idly dream of universal blessing, or at least of the annihilation of
the lost; and none would rejoice as would the Christian, if such might be the
end of wicked men. But to construe Scripture thus is in fact to slip the anchor
of our hope of life eternal ; for it is in the very words which promise blessing
that God has warned of wrath. "These shall go away into everlasting
punishment, but the righteous into everlasting life."
The day is near in which God Himself shall be the only mystery unsolved; when
faith and hope shall merge in the completeness of our knowledge, and the
realisation of every promise that has cheered us here. But faith and hope are
now the guide and beacon of our life, and we hail this unfathomable mystery of
reconciliation as placing yet another crown upon our Saviour's brow. Upon His
head are many crowns, but His pierced hand now holds the only sceptre, for the
Father has given Him the kingdom, and all things are placed beneath His feet.
The outcast of the earth now fills the throne of God. "We see not yet all
things put under Him," for a long-suffering God still waits, and grace must
spend itself ere judgment can sweep back on those whom grace has failed to win.
But we do see Jesus, the rejected and despised of men, now crowned with glory.
He is the mighty God, the Father of Eternity, the Prince of Peace, and the
government is on His shoulder, and all power is His in heaven and on earth. And
He it is who is our Saviour, and through Him the weakest and the worst of men
may gain deliverance from judgment and from sin. Willing knees now bow before
Him, and willing hearts confess His name; but the day is hastening on when every
knee, in heaven, earth, and hell, shall bow, and every tongue shall own Him
Lord.I may add that every objection of any weight which has been urged against
eternal punishment, applies as really, though not to the same extent, to
punishment for a millennium or a century. And if the Christian be wrong, no one
will suffer from his error; but if he is right, how terrible must be the
discovery for those who trade upon the hope that he is wrong! In my "Human
Destiny" I have dealt with this whole subject, discussing and refuting both
the heresy of annihilation and that of universal restoration.
The day is near in which God Himself shall be the only mystery unsolved; when
faith and hope shall merge in the completeness of our knowledge, and the
realisation of every promise that has cheered us here. But faith and hope are
now the guide and beacon of our life, and we hail this unfathomable mystery of
reconciliation as placing yet another crown upon our Saviour's brow. Upon His
head are many crowns, but His pierced hand now holds the only sceptre, for the
Father has given Him the kingdom, and all things are placed beneath His feet.
The outcast of the earth now fills the throne of God. "We see not yet all
things put under Him," for a long-suffering God still waits, and grace must
spend itself ere judgment can sweep back on those whom grace has failed to win.
But we do see Jesus, the rejected and despised of men, now crowned with glory.
He is the mighty God, the Father of Eternity, the Prince of Peace, and the
government is on His shoulder, and all power is His in heaven and on earth. And
He it is who is our Saviour, and through Him the weakest and the worst of men
may gain deliverance from judgment and from sin. Willing knees now bow before
Him, and willing hearts confess His name; but the day is hastening on when every
knee, in heaven, earth, and hell, shall bow, and every tongue shall own Him
Lord. "And then THE END, When He shall have delivered up the kingdom to
God, even the Father; when He shall have put down all rule and all authority and
power. For He must reign, till He hath put all enemies under His feet. And when
all things shall be subdued unto Him, then shall the Son also Himself be subject
unto Him that put all things under Him, that God may be all in all."' Such
then is the Christian's faith, and such his hope: no day-dream of weak minds, no
fable cunningly devised, but a hope both sure and steadfast, and a most holy
faith. A vain philosophy rnay reason of the past, and dream about the future,
but, in the calm confidence of faith, the Christian can look back to a past
eternity, when, before all time, and ere there was a creature made, "IN THE
BEGINNING" the Word was alone with God; and on through the ages of ages to
"THE END," when, time having run its course, in the midst of His
creation, God shall be all in all: and in adoration he exclaims," From
everlasting to everlasting Thou art God!
CHAPTER Xl. JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH.
JUSTIFICATION by faith is a divine truth; and yet every
thoughtful person revolts against the idea that eternal blessedness depends upon
apprehending aright a formula or creed respecting Christ, or upon assenting to
certain facts concerning Him. No one represents this to be the doctrine of Holy
Scripture, save those who do so in order to discredit it. But there are many
who, though in a sense lovers of truth, suppose this to be the view of
evangelical Christians, and who, in rejecting it, reject also the teaching of
Scripture respecting faith. To such, therefore, a plain statement is due of what
in fact we deem to be the truth in this matter. And I venture to think,
moreover, that among Christians generally there exists a great deal of confusion
of thought, and somewhat of error too, with respect to it. 'The gospel will bear
the test of the severest metaphysical inquiry, but it is addressed to plain
people, and not to metaphysicians; and we may be certain that the doctrine of
faith is not a subtle difficulty, but a truth within the reach of all. Now, as I
have sought to show, the attempt to solve the question by declaring trust to be
the true and only faith recognised by God is utterly wrong. Trust is a fruit of
faith in its simplest phase, but not necessarily a part of it. Suppose in a
money panic I am in fear of ruin, and I receive a letter telling me that the
bank in which my fortune is invested is absolutely safe, it is faith of the
simplest kind to believe that testimony; and, simply believing it, I dismiss my
fears. But, it will be answered, such faith, simple though it be, depends
entirely on the confidence I repose in my informant. Undoubtedly it does. The
words of the letter, as it lies before me, are like counters that may stand for
anything or nothing. These counters become gold in my estimation, because I
import into them the element of pre-existing trust in the writer. It is clear
then that, between man and man, faith, apart from proof, assumes trust, and is
inseparable from it.
But is this true also as between God and the sinner? Believing the Bible as a
book merely, or even as a book recognised as true, is no doubt governed by the
same principle. But when God speaks to the soul, His message is a living word, a
word of power, and that quite independently of evidences, or of the condition of
the hearer, It finds the sinner morally incapable of trust in God, for the
essence of his nature is distrust of Him - "the carnal mind is enmity
against God." And spiritually he is no less incapable of trust, for he is
spiritually dead. But the gospel itself brings life to the dead soul, and
masters the enmity of the carnal heart. It brought forth fruit among the
Colossians; "from the day they heard it." By nature man is fallen and
apostate, and the gospel is itself the instrument for his recovery and
conversion; in no sense, therefore, and in no degree, does it rely for its
acceptance upon any preexisting quality or condition of heart.
In speaking thus, however, we must guard against the folly of supposing that any
set of words in Greek or Hebrew, or their more or less accurate counterparts in
English, have inherent power or virtue to bring salvation to the person who
believes them. And if the words themselves can work no charm, the belief of them
will not help the matter. Nor can we consent to fall back upon distinctions
between " faith about Christ'' and "faith in (or on) Christ," as
is sometimes done - distinctions which pertain either to language or to
metaphysics. The one question is interesting, and I will deal with it for any
who have leisure and inclination to follow me; but the metaphysical inquiry I
must decline to enter on here, For, as I have said, the gospel is for those who
are incapable of such a study; and, moreover, the distinction is based upon the
assumption that, of the various "sorts of faith" (to use a popular
expression), one is efficacious, and the other not ; thus attaching merit to
faith itself, and coming under the almost ironical remonstrance of the Apostle
James, (can faith save?)
If by "faith about Christ " be meant the belief of facts concerning
Him, to say that in Scripture this is not connected with salvation is a
statement so glaringly false as to need no answer. It is certainly inadequate as
a definition of the true faith of the gospel, as I will presently explain ; but
changing the preposition will in no way supply the defect. The distinction
assumes that the form of words translated in the Authorised Version "to
believe in" (or on) implies trust in the person who is the object of the
faith. But this is quite untenable. In saying I believe in any one, I may mean
that I thoroughly rely upon him, or I may merely intend that I acknowledge him
to be the person he claims to be. Every one will admit that the expression has
this elasticity of meaning in our own language; and it needs no scholarship to
ascertain for oneself that it has equal scope in Greek, and notably in the
writings of the Apostle John.
Having thus cleared the ground of difficulties and distinctions which are both
irrelevant and unworthy of the subject, I fall back upon the main inquiry, What
is the element which connects faith with salvation? It is not owing to any
virtue or charm in the text of the message received, nor does it depend on any
merit or vitality in faith, in what sense soever faith be understood. Still less
is it to be accounted for by some fitness or worth in the recipient. If then it
depends neither upon the message, nor yet upon the faith, nor upon the character
of the faith, nor upon the condition of him who exercises the faith, there is
but one more alternative remaining. And here, as the result of a circuitous
inquiry, we reach once more a conclusion which every true believer will
enthusiastically accept. It is not that the sinner believes, nor yet that he
believes the gospel, but that he believes GOD. The belief of the facts of
Christianity, however great and true, or even of the inspired record of them,
can never bring life to a dead soul, or change a sinner's destiny. But that
which makes the gospel a word of power and life to some, and links blessing with
the faith of it, is that to such it comes as a divine voice by the Holy Ghost
now present upon earth to that end. "Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing
by the Word of God"; not by the Bible as a volume purchased at a book shop,
but by those sacred words when through them a present God speaks to the soul.
If it be objected that this is transcendentalism, the ready answer is that it is
Christianity. Grace is boundless, but it is sovereign; and if God has brought
salvation within the reach of all, it is not by making men independent of
Himself, but by giving the Holy Ghost to bear witness to the finished work and
glorified person of a Saviour. In apostolic days, the gospel was preached
"with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven," and this is still its
only power. It is not as a true record merely, but as a living word from God,
that it is indeed "the power of God unto salvation to every one that
believeth."
XII
JUSTIFICATION BY WORKS.
"WAS not Abraham our father justified by works when he had
offered Isaac his son upon the altar? Thou seest how faith wrought with his
works, and by works faith was made perfect. "And so," says many a one,
closing the book, "we see how the Scripture which says "Abraham
believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness, is guarded and
explained." "And so," continues the Apostle James, "the
Scripture was fulfilled, which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was imputed
unto him for righteousness, and he was called the friend of God."
Justification by works, as an article of man's religion, is opposed to
justification by faith, and therefore it denies the grace of God, and dishonours
the blood of Christ. Justification by works, according to the Epistle of James,
is the complement, so to speak, of justification by faith. It owns grace, and
does homage to the blood.
But "it is of faith that it may be by grace" and grace puts works, and
merit in every phase of it, out of court altogether. What then if a man regard
his faith as a meritorious thing? He thereby denies grace entirely. He makes a
saviour of his own faith; and "can faith save him?" It is no longer a
question between God's grace on the one side, and the sinner's merit on the
other ; but merely a rivalry between faith and works. The Epistle to the Romans
is essentially doctrinal, and the practical is based upon the doctrine. The
Epistle to the twelve tribes scattered abroad," is essentially practical,
the doctrinal element being purely incidental. Paul's Epistle unfolds the mind
and purposes of God, revealing His righteousness and wrath. The Epistle of James
addresses men upon their own ground. The one deals with justification as between
the sinner and God, the other as between man and man. In the one, therefore, the
word is, To him that worketh not, but believeth." In the other it is,
"What is the profit if a man say he hath faith, and have not works?"
Not "If a man have faith," but "If a man say he hath faith"
proving that, in the case supposed, the individual is not dealing with God, but
arguing the matter with his brethren. God, who searches the heart, does not need
to judge by works, which are but the outward manifestation of faith within; but
man. can judge only by appearances.
Faith identifies a sinner with a Saviour God. But it is nothing in itself. A man
cannot show another his faith, any more than he can show him his charity. One
who says he has faith, but whose conduct is not that of a believer, is like a
man who says he has charity, but does no charitable actions who dismisses a
starving beggar with kind words and nothing more. "Even so," says the
Epistle. just in the same sense, "faith, if it hath not works, is dead,
being alone." You believe in one God. Well, quite right so do the devils ;
and what comes of it? They tremble, and so ought you. Believing cannot,
therefore, be in itself a meritorious thing. But if it be indeed, to use a
favourite metaphor, a laying hold of God, it will declare itself by results.
Abraham's case is an instance. He believed God, and it was imputed unto him for
righteousness. That is, Abraham believed and God blessed him, "He was
holden for righteous, in virtue of faith." Well, the result was that
Abraham acted God discerned the faith; man judged of the acts. He believed, and
God declared he was righteous. He acted, and man acknowledged he was righteous.
He was justified by faith when judged by God, for God knows the heart. He was
justified by works when judged by his fellow-men;, for man can only read the
life. And just as faith is made perfect, or fulfilled, by works, so the
Scripture which says "He was justified by faith," is made perfect, or
fulfilled, by the declaration, "He was justified by works."
So then, though in onc sense a man is justified by faith without works, in
another sense we see "how by works a man is justified, and not by faith
only." Justified by faith before God ; justified by works before men. This
is not mere assertion nor is it a plausible piece of sophistry. It is not only
that these Scriptures admit of no other explanation, but that this explanation
is thoroughly in keeping with the respective characters of the two epistles.
And, moreover, just as in the 23rd verse, the Apostle James guards the truth of
justification by faith; so, in the Epistle to the Romans, the Apostle Paul
alludes to the, aspect of the truth here insisted on- "If Abraham were
justified by works," he declares, "he hath whereof to glory, but not
before God."
Chapter Thirteen JUSTIFICATION BY BLOOD.
JUDICIAL righteousness is theoretically possible in either of
two ways. The law-keeper is righteous as such; the law-breaker may become
righteous through redemption. The law-keeper fulfils the demands of the law by
his obedience; the law-breaker may fulfil the demands of the law by enduring to
the full its penalties in the person of Christ. Righteousness on the first
ground is shown to be in fact impossible, and it is set aside altogether. The
sinner is therefore shut up to "justification by blood." Vicarious
obedience is an idea wholly beyond reason; how could a God of righteousness and
truth reckon a law-breaker to have kept the law, because some one else has kept
it? The thief is not declared to be honest because his neighbour or his kinsman
is a good citizen. Punishment may be remitted on this ground, but that is not
justification. The merits of ten righteous men would have saved Sodom, but God
would not therefore have called Sodom righteous.
But is not the thought of vicarious judgment as much beyond reason as vicarious
obedience? Possibly it is. But to accept what is above our reason is the very
highest exercise of reason if revelation testifies to it - otherwise it is mere
superstition; whereas the bearing of judgment in the person of a substitute is a
foundation truth of Christianity. Obedience by a substitute is a mere theory,
and one of the strangest in the entire range of human thought. It is the
Protestant version of the Roman Catholic heresy of the imputation of the merits
of the saints; and both versions deny the great truth of Christianity, that the
believing sinner is justified through redemption, apart from law altogether. One
poem may not constitute a man a poet, but one murder makes a man a murderer, one
sin makes a sinner. Nothing but the gallows can expiate a murder; death alone
can atone for sin. The law is a standard, so to speak, to which man is subjected
- not his acts merely, but himself. If he comes up to it, he is thereby
justified, justified by law. If he fails, he is thereby condemned, and law can
never justify him; for a law that could justify an offender would be an immoral
and corrupt law. The law has pronounced its sentence, and nothing remains but
the fulfilment of that sentence. This is the natural state of the sinner under
law. But here God reveals himself a Saviour. He gives up His Only-begotten Son
to take the place of the condemned sinner, and die in his stead. He now points
to that death as satisfying the righteous demand of law against the sinner, and
on that ground He justifies him. Not that by virtue of His sovereignty, or by a
legal fiction, as we say, He reckons the believer to be righteous while leaving
his condition in fact unchanged, but that He justifies him. The believer is
"justified from all things from which he could not be justified by the law
of Moses." God imputes the death of Christ to the believer.
If it be demanded, How can this be? I answer it depends upon the fact that God
imputed the sin of the believer to Christ, and that He died under sin and for
sin. Not that the guiltless died as guiltless for the guilty, which would be
horrible but that the guiltless passed into the position of the guilty, and as
guilty died to expiate the guilt imputed to Him : "He who knew no sin was
made sin for us." If the inquiry be still further pressed, and the question
be insisted on, How could sin be so imputed to the sinless as to make a
vicarious death justifiable? men may seek to reason out the answer, but, as
Bishop Butler says, "All conjectures about it must be, if not evidently
absurd, yet at least uncertain." " Nor," he adds, "has he
any reason to complain from want of further information, unless he can show his
claim to it." Here it is that God retreats upon His own sovereignty, and
the believer is satisfied with the divine " It is written." Reason
bows before the God of reason, and the reasoner becomes a disciple and a
worshipper.
Moreover, though the revelation of the death of Christ as a sin-bearer is indeed
a great mystery, it is by no means so incredible as would be the story of His
death apart from sin. The thorough infidel is consistent in his unbelief, and
the true Christian in his faith ; but the most utterly unreasonable person in
the world is the man who accepts the fact of the death of Christ the Lord of
life and glory. and yet doubts whether it was a death for sin. That Jesus of
Nazareth died upon a cross is mere matter of history; that He who did so die was
the Christ the Son of God is entirely a matter of revelation. And the seeming
impossibility of the gospel is the stupendous fact that Christ has died, not
that that death was because of sin, nor yet that the sinner can be blessed in
virtue of it.
The 18th and 19th verses of the 5th of Romans are sometimes quoted in support of
the doctrine of vicarious obedience, but wrongly so. The word in verse i8 is not
" the righteousness of one," as given in the Authorised Version, but -
"By means of one righteous act the death of Christ viewed as the acme of
His obedience. See Philippians ii. 8." I quote from Dean Alford, who
rightly explains "the obedience of one" in verse 19 upon the same
principle. Christ was obedient unto death, and by means of that obedience we are
justified -"justified by His blood," as the apostle had already
asserted in the 9th verse, and explained in the earlier chapters of the Epistle.
Chapter Fourteen
HOLINESS AND SANCTIFICATION.
WORDS mean exactly what they pass current for, and with the
English Bible before us it is idle to insist on a distinction between
"holiness" and "sanctification." But an examination of the
various passages where the Greek correlatives of these terms occur will help
much toward accuracy of thought and a clear grasp of the truth upon this
subject.
The meaning of (hagiazein) in Scripture (and I am not aware that it ever has any
other meaning), is to separate, or set apart, for God, or to some sacred
purpose; and (hagiasmos) means either the act of consecration, or the condition
into which that act introduces the subject of it. There is no question of any
change of essential qualities. The subject may be (a) intrinsically holy
already, or (b) it may be, and continue to be, intrinsically unholy, or (c) it
may be incapable of moral qualities altogether. For example (a) Christ was
sanctified by the Father,1 (b) the sinner is sanctified on believing; and an
unconverted husband or wife is sanctified in virtue of marriage with a holy
person; and (c) the vessels of the temple were sanctified, as also the creatures
we use for food are "sanctified by the word of God and prayer."
The word means, therefore, to make a person or thing holy, in the sense in which
to justify a person is to make that person righteous. His condition is changed,
but not necessarily his character. In the Appendix I give a list of all the
passages where the word occurs, and a careful perusal of them will show that in
one case only does the word seem to bear a different meaning. I allude to the
prayer of I Thessalonians v. 23. "The God of peace sanctify you
wholly." But a consideration of the context will show that
"wholly" refers not to progressive sanctification of the whole man
regarded as a unit, but to the absolute sanctification of every part of the man
considered as a complex being, made up of body, soul, and spirit. In John xvii.
it is quite unjustifiable to put a different meaning on the word
"sanctify," when the Lord uses it of Himself, and when He applies it
to His disciples. And Ephesians v. 26 teaches that He gave Himself for the
Church "that He might sanctify it, cleansing it by the washing of water by
the Word."
It will be observed that we are said to be sanctified by God the Father,
sanctified by the Spirit, sanctified in the name of the Lord Jesus, sanctified
in Christ Jesus, and sanctified by blood. These all refer to one and the same
sanctification. God is the Author, the Spirit the Agent, and the blood the
means, of our sanctification, and it is in Christ that all this is ours. The
attempt of some commentators to cut up verse eleven of 1st Corinthians vi., and
to make "justified" refer to Christ, and "sanctified" to the
Spirit, is mere special pleading. The believer is sanctified absolutely and for
ever, even as he is justified; and of necessity it is by the Spirit, for through
Him it is that every blessing flows to us.
All this is confirmed by a careful study of the passages where (hagiasmos) is
used. It is very remarkable that when sanctification is spoken of as by the
Spirit it is connected with election, and precedes faith. And the reason of this
seems to be that, though chronologically faith and sanctification are
simultaneous, there is nevertheless a moral order, varying according as we view
the subject from our own standpoint, or from that of the sovereignty of God. In
the former case, faith comes first, and sanctification follows as a consequence;
but when election comes in, we see our faith to be the result of othe divine
decree which set us apart to eternal life.
It is further remarkable that, save as above noticed, sanctification is never
spoken of as being specially the work of the Spirit. But the reason of this is
clear ; the truth is too obvious to need even to be stated. It is only by the
help of the Holy Spirit that a believer can stand for a moment. Truth is
emphasised in Scripture, not, as in a creed, according to its doctrinal
importance relatively to other truths, but according to the practical need which
exists for enforcing it upon the believer.
Holiness means, as we have seen, not merely the state of being sanctified, but
also the moral character akin to that state. And here the Greek, a language rich
in such distinctions, is not confined to a single word. The quality or attribute
of holiness is expressed by (hagiosunee), a word, which, strange to say, is used
but thrice, namely, Romans i. 4, "the Spirit of holiness"; not the
Holy Ghost, but the Spirit of Christ, in contrast with the flesh mentioned in
the preceding verse; 2 Corinthians vii. i. upon which I have already commented
and 2 Thessalonians iii. 13, "unblameable in holiness," a very solemn
and significant word, especially in the connection where it occurs. The kindred
word (hagotees) is found only in Hebrews xii. 10, "That we might be
partakers of His holiness." And (hosiotecs) in Luke i. 75 ; and Ephesians
iv. 24.
A comparison of Ephesians iv. 24 with I Corinthians i. 30, will give an insight
into the difference between this last word and (hagiasmos). Israel's
sanctification, and indeed their entire position as a redeemed people, was
maintained by the "middle wall of partition" which separated them from
other nations. But Christ Himself is to His people, now, what the " middle
wall of partition" was to the Jew He is our sanctification. The words are
plain and simple "But of Him are ye in Christ Jesus who was made unto us
wisdom from God, and both righteousness and sanctification, even
redemption." It is often in virtue of what Christ has done for us that we
gain the place we hold in redemption it is entire in virtue of what Christ now
is to us that we can be maintained in that place.
But in Ephesians iv. 24, it is not a questioned what Christ is to us, but of the
essential qualities the new creation of which He is the Head, and of what we
ourselves ought to be in practical conformity therewith. The new man is created
in holiness. To ignore the truth that Christ is made unto us sanctification and
that therefore the believer is holy, independently of his life on earth, is to
abandon or deny the true position of the Christian but to suppose that Christ is
made unto us holiness in this further sense also, would lead to the still deeper
error of supposing that holy living is of no account.
CHAPTER 15
CLEANSING BY BLOOD.
CLEANSING with blood is a common expression in the book of Leviticus, but in the
New Testament it is found only in the 9th chapter of Hebrews, and the beginning
of the First Epistle of John. Of Hebrews I have already spoken; but the other
passage claims notice, not only because of its connection with the present
subject, but also on account of the difficulties that seem to surround it
:-" If we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship one
with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all
sin."
It is a canon of interpretation that whenever the benefits or results of the
death of Christ are ascribed to His blood, the figure thus implied is borrowed
from the types. It behoves us, therefore, to turn back to the Old Testament, and
there to seek out the particular key-picture to which it is intended to direct
our minds. In i Peter i., for example, the second verse will naturally turn our
thoughts to the only occasion on which blood was sprinkled on the people of
Israel (Exodus xxiv.); while verse 19 brings us back to their one great
redemption sacrifice of the passover in Egypt.
Here then we have a certain clew to the meaning of the text before us: "
The blood of Jesus cleanseth us from all sin." The particular type in the
light which we are to understand the word must be th of some offering which was
for sin; and one moreover which was for the people generally, as distinguished
from those which were for individuals and further, it must, be a sacrifice of
which th benefits were abiding. This at once excludes the offerings of the first
fifteen chapters of Leviticus and it will confine our consideration to the great
day of expiation, prescribed in the i6th chapter "For on that day"
(was the word to Moses) "he shall make an atonement for you to cleanse you,
that ye may be clean from all your sins before the Lord."
We can picture to ourselves some devout Israelite telling of his God to a
heathen stranger, recounting to him the proofs of Jehovah's goodness and
faithfulness to His people, and going on to speak of His holiness, His
terribleness - how He was "of purer eyes than to behold iniquity," and
how, for acts in which his guest would fail to see sin at all, He had visited
them with signal judgments. And we can conceive that, in amazement, the stranger
might demand whether the people were free from the weaknesses and wickedness of
other men. And, On his hearing an eager repudiation of all such pretensions,
with what deepening wonder and awe he would exclaim, "How then can you live
before a God so great and terrible?"
And here the heathen stranger within the gates of the Israelite, would have
reached a point analogous to that to which the opening verses of John's Epistle
lead us. Eternal life has been manifested, and life is the only ground of
fellowship with God. But "God is light," and it is only in the light,
as the sphere of its enjoyment, that such fellowship is possible. The light of
God, how can sinners bear it? Is it by attaining sinlessness? The thought is
proof of self-deception and utter absence of the truth (v. 8). But just as the
question of his guest would turn the thoughts of the Israelite to his great day
of expiation, and call to his lips the words, "It is the cleansing blood
which alone enables us to live before Jehovah," so the Christian turns to
the great Sin-offering, and his faith finds utterance in the words, "The
blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin."
"Washing with blood" is an expression wholly unknown to the law,
and it conveys an idea which is quite at variance with its teaching. It has no
scriptural warrant. For the correct reading of Rev i. 5, as given in R.V. is
"Unto Him that loveth us and loosed us from our sins by His own
blood." Ps. II. 7, must of course be explained by the law; and the student
of Scripture will naturally turn to the 19th of Numbers, or to Leviticus xiv.
6-9, to seek its meaning. A like remark applies to other similar passages in the
Old Testament. Overlooking this, Cowper derived his extraordinary idea of a
fowntain of blood from the i3th of Zechariah, construed in connection with the
received reading of Rev. i. 5. The fact is that though cleansing with water was
one of the most frequent and characteristic of the typical ordinances, it has
been almost entirely forgotten in our creeds. “In that day there shal1 be a
fountain opened to the house of David and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, for
sin and for separation for uncleanness.” (Zech. xiii. i, see marginal reading,
and compare Num. xix. 9.) “In that day “—the epoch referred to in verses
9—14 of the preceding chapter —Israel shall be admitted to the full benefits
of the great sin- offering typified in the 19th of Numbers. (See also Rom. Xl.
25—29) The washing of garments in blood is likewise wholly unscriptural. save
in poetical language—-as e g Genesis xlix i i The meaning of Revelation vii.
14 is too often frittered away thus as though it were a merely poetical
expression. But the figures used are typical, not poetical: “These are they
that come out of the great tribulation [compare Matt Xxiv 21] and they washed
their robes [compare Rev. xix. 8], and made them white by the blood of the
Lamb" Their lives were purified practically from the defilements that
surrounded them, and purged in a still deeper sense by the blood. In Rev. xxii.
14, also, the true reading is “Blessed are they that wash their robes.”
It is not "has cleansed," nor yet "will cleanse," but "cleanseth."
it is not the statement of a fact merely, but of a truth, and truths are greater
and deeper even than facts.
But how "cleanseth"?' Just as the blood of the sin-offering cleansed
the Israelite. It was not by any renewal of its application to him, but by the
continuance of its efficacy. With Israel its virtue continued throughout the
year; with us it is forever. It is not mere acts of sin that are in question.
here, but the deeper problem of our condition as sinners (compare v. 10 with v.
8). And neither the difficulty, nor yet the answer to it, is the same. In.
regard to the one the Israelite turned to the day of atonement, and said
"the blood cleanseth"; but in case of his committing some act of sin,
he had to bring his sin-offering, according to the 4th or 5th or 6th chapter of
Leviticus. But the need of these special offerings depended on "the
weakness and unprofitableness" of the sacrifices of the old Covenant. And i
John i. 7,9, seems clearly to teach that all our need is met by the twofold
cleansing - typified by the blood of the great sin-offering of Leviticus xvi.,
and the water of the great rite of Numbers xix. For the believer who sins
against God.to dismiss the matter by "the blood cleanseth," is the
levity and daring of antinomianism. For such the word is, ‘If we confess our
sins": no flippant acknowledgment with the lip, but a solemn and real
dealing with God; and thus he obtains again and again a renewal of the benefits
of the death of Christ. "He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and
to cleanse us from all unrighteousness."
And this, no doubt, is the truth intended by the popular expression "coming
back to blood." The Israelite "came back to blood" by seeking a
fresh sacrifice; but had he attempted to "come back to blood" in the
sense of preserving the blood of the sin-offering in order to avail himself of
it for future cleansing, he would have been cut off without mercy for
presumptuous sin. The most superficial knowledge either of the precepts or the
principles of the book of Leviticus, will make us avoid a form of words so
utterly opposed to both. With one great exception the blood of every
sin-offering was poured round the altar of burnt-offering, and thus consumed;
and that exception was the sacrifice of the i9th of Numbers, so often referred
to in these pages. The red heifer was the sin-offering in that aspect of it in
which the sinner can come back to it to obtain cleansing. And here the whole
beast and its blood was burnt to ashes outside the camp, and the unclean person
was cleansed by being sprinkled with water which had touched those ashes. But to
confound the cleansing by blood - the 16th of Leviticus aspect of the sin-oflering,
with the cleansing by water - the i9th of Numbers aspect of it - betrays
ignorance of Scripture. The one is a continuously enduring agency; the other a
continually repeated act.
There is no question, observe, as to whether the benefit depends on the death of
Christ. But with some, perhaps, it is a question merely of giving up the
"form of sound words"; with others, the far more solemn one of
depreciating the sacrifice of Christ and denying to it an efficacy which even
the typical sin-offering possessed for Israel. Christ has died and risen and
gone up to God, and now the blood cleanses from all sin. It is not that it
avails to accomplish a succession of acts of cleansing, for the believer, but
that its efficacy remains to cleanse him continuously. It is not in order that
it may thus cleanse him, that the believer confesses his sin: his only right to
the place he holds, even as he confesses, depends on. the fact that it does thus
cleanse him. It was only in virtue of the place he had through the blood of the
lamb that the Israelite could avail himself of the ashes of the red heifer. And
our life, our hope, our destiny, depend entirely upon the enduring efficacy of
the blood of Christ, that, whether in bright days of fellowship with God, or in
hours of wilderness failure, "the blood cleanseth from all sin" : here
it is a question only of the preciousness of that blood, and of the faithfulness
and power of Him in Whom we trust.
CHAPTER XVI.
THE PRIESTHOOD OF CHRIST.
THE writer of the Hebrews found the truth of the priesthood of
the Lord Jesus "hard to be uttered"; and the reason is obvious,
namely, that with the Jew the idea of offering sacrifices for sins was
inseparable from priesthood. The fact of the priesthood of Christ thus reacted
on the Jewish mind to cast discredit on the sufficiency of the great sacrifice
of Calvary; whereas the teaching of Scripture is unequivocal, that the
priesthood of the Son of God is based on eternal redemption accomplished. In a
preceding chapter I have dealt with the doctrine of priesthood, but so much
confusion of thought exists on this subject, that I may be pardoned perhaps for
going into it more closely, even though it should involve some repetition.
‘At Professor Sanday’s Oxford Conference on this subject, the Rev. Mr.
Puller of the "Cowley Fathers" was the only member who seemed to grasp
the elementary truth that the work of priesthood began after the sacrifice had
been killed, and that the priesthood of Christ dates from His ascension.
"On earth He would not be a priest at all" (Heb. viii. 4, R.V.).
The R.V. of Heb. v. i makes havoc of the truth. It tells us that every high
priest is taken from among men, and is appointed to offer sacrifices for sins.
The teaching of the verse is correctly given in A.V., that every high priest
taken from among men (i.e., every Aaronic priest) is appointed for that purpose.
But our High Priest is the Son of God"(iv. x4); and His priesthood is based
upon the Sacrifice which has for ever put away sin, so that now "there is
no more offering for sin"
Sin, we as have seen, has a relation both to righteousness and to holiness, but,
essentially, it is lawlessness : lawlessness and sin are. synonymous terms. The
answer to the guilt of sin is justification, and to its defilement,
sanctification. In virtue of the blood we are both justified and sanctified. But
the fact that for the believer guilt is not imputed in no respect changes the
essential character of sin. On the contrary, it intensifies the heinousness of
it. This, moreover, is the clew to the true character of the Christian life,
which is too often lost sight of. Sin against grace is far more heinous than sin
against law. It is a greater outrage upon God ; and if, as with.the Christian,
there be a real desire to avoid it, it is a greater proof of weakness. Here then
it is that we learn the power and value of Christ’s priestly work. It is not
to justify, nor yet to sanctify. These blessings are secured to us in Him in
virtue of Calvary. But if we have right thoughts of God and of ourselves, and of
the nature of sin, we must know that all the blessings with which grace has
crowned us would not avail to maintain us for one hour in the place they give us
before God, were it not for what Christ is to us, and for us, in heaven now. In
regard to our position under God’s moral government we know Him as a Saviour,
-"we shall be saved from wrath through Him." In view of fellowship in
the Father’s house we have a Paraclete; and for the sanctuary and the
wilderness journey we rejoice to own Him as a great High Priest.
It is with sin then in this its deepest character that priesthood has to do. For
the believer, law has no penalties and the glory of the mercy-seat no terrors.
The blood has for ever purged his conscience, arid there is no question now of
guilt; and he stands in indissoluble relationship with God. But it would indeed
be strange levity to suppose because of this that sin could fail to cause
estrangement. Just in proportion to his knowledge of God, and to his
appreciation of the blessings grace has given him, will be his sense of the
moral distance between himself and God. The truth that his sin is purged, that
he is a child of God, and that he is "accepted in the Beloved," can
only serve to make his sin seem blacker. How then can he approach with
confidence, and have a heart at rest ? Here it is that the word comes home to
him, "Seeing that we have a great High Priest, Jesus the Son of God, let us
come boldly unto the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy."
The answer to the guilt of sin is righteousness, I repeat, and to its
defilement, sanctification. And both depend on the blood - the blood shed, ahd
the blood sprinkled. But the answer to the practical estrangement sin produces
is reconciliation ; and this is the present work of priesthood. "to make
reconciliation (or atonement) for the sins of the people."
But this "reconciliation" must not be confounded with the
reconciliation treated of in a previous chapter. The latter is a finished work
accomplished by the death of Christ, and the sinner enters into the benefit of
it by faith; whereas the reconciliation I am now speaking of is the present work
of priesthood. They have this in common, however, that both relate to sin in its
essential character. Reconciliation for the sinner who believes, is a result of
the death of Christ: reconciliation for the believer who sins, depends upon His
priesthood. it is akin to the twofold aspect of forgiveness. We have the
forgiveness of our sins in virtue of redemption ; but yet, in another sense,
forgiveness depends upon confession.
And by reason of this it is that, even as sinners, we can come boldly to the
throne of grace, confident that we shall find compassion; not as an
encouragement to sin again, but allied with grace to help in time of need. It is
because of Him who is sitting at the right hand of God that the throne of
"the Majesty on high" is a throne of grace.
I will not enter on the consideration of Christ’s priestly functions in
relation to worship, for that lies beyond my subject. But apart from worship,
His priestly work, according to the Hebrews, is confined to making
reconciliation and intercession. Everything beyond this is mere Judaism or
Popery.
Putting aside special teaching, such as the cleansing of the leper, and the
consecration of the priests, four of the great types - viz., the Passover, the
inauguration of the covenant, and the two principal sin-offerings of the great
day of atonement, and of Numbers xix., may be taken as giving a complete view of
what the death of Christ is to us. As already shown, the two first were not
priestly sacrifices. In the third, it was a priest doubtless who led the victim
forth, and sprinkled its blood before the tabernacle; but observe, it was not
Aaron. The act was typical of the work of Christ, but no.t of His high-priestly
work. A like remark applies to the great day of atonement, when Aaron himself
officiated. The ordinance consisted of two distinct parts - first, the sacrifice
of sin-offerings, and afterwards of burnt-offerings. Both these were in the
highest sense typical of the work of Christ; but mark the difference in
Aaron’s position respecting them. For the sin-offering he divested himself of
all his high-priestly robes, and put on the holy linen garments; from which we
learn that though his action here was typical of what our High-Priest would do
for us, this would not be accomplished by Him in His priestly character. The
sin-offering concluded in all its parts, Aaron came out in high-priestly
splendour, arrayed in his "garments of glory and beauty," and offered
the burnt-offerings.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
AT-ONE-MENT.
A WEED has been beautifully described as a plant out of place,
and many a heresy is but a perverted truth. The remark is suggested by current
theology respecting the Atonement.
The controversy is embarrassed by the ambiguity of the term round which it
wages. For the word "atonement" has gradually changed its meaning.
"When our translation was made it signified, as innumerable examples prove,
reconciliation, or the making up of a foregoing enmity; all its uses in our
early literature justifying the etymology now sometimes called into question,
that ‘atonement’ is ‘at-one-ment.’ But now the word has come to be
accepted as equivalent to "propitiatory sacrifice," and this use is so
established that no one may challenge it. Indeed it is occasionally used in that
sense in the preceding pages. Here, however, with a view to clearness and
accuracy of statement, I will employ it only in its primary meaning, and
according to its Biblical usage. In this chapter "atonenment" means
always and only " at-one-ment."
The real question after all is not as to the use or meaning of an English word,
but as to the doctrinal significance of the language of Scripture. And no one
who will be at the pains to study, with the help of a Concordance, the passages
in which the Hebrew verb occurs which our translators have commonly rendered
"to make atonement," can fail to recognise that under the Mosaic law
the at-one-ment was not the sacrifice itself, but a result of sacrifice,
depending upon the work of priesthood.
The English reader can judge of this for himself by the use of the word in the
book of Leviticus, where it occurs no less than forty-eight times. Its
root-meaning may be gleaned from the passage where it first occurs in Scripture.
Noah was commanded to cover the ark with pitch. From this the transition is easy
to its meaning in the second passage where it is used: "I will appease him
with the present," Jacob said in planning a reconciliation with his
brother. To this end he prepared a present; but the at-one-ment was not the gift
itself, neither was it made by preparing the gift; it was the change to be
produced by means of it in Esau’s mind toward him. So, also, in Leviticus, the
atonement was not the sin-offering, neither was it accomplished by killing the
sacrifice; it depended upon the fulfilment of the prescribed ritual by which
persons and things were brought within the benefits of a death already
accomplished.
As the New Testament is in great measure written in the language of the Greek
version of the Old, we naturally turn to the Epistle to the Hebrews to seek
there, in connection with the priesthood of Christ, the word commonly adopted by
the LXX. in their rendering of Leviticus. But the significance of the passage
where it occurs is obscured or lost by the extraordinary figment that our
blessed Lord officiated as a priest at. His own. death on Calvary. As already
shown, the death of Christ was not a priestly sacrifice. The teaching of the New
Testament is clear, that it was not till after His ascension that He entered on
His priestly office. When, under the old covenant, redemption was accomplished,
and Moses, the Mediator of that covenant, had made purification for sins, he
went up to God; and then, and. not till then, the high priest was appointed. So
also is it with the great antitype. The doctrine of Hebrews is not that
Christ’s priesthood while on earth was not of the Aaronic order, but that
"on earth He would not be a priest at all,"
Priesthood has nothing. to do with obtaining redemption. The 12th chapter of
Exodus records the deliverance of Israel both from the doom of Egypt and from
the power of Egypt. In the 24th chapter the work was completed by Israel’s
being brought into covenant relationship with God, and sanctified by the blood
with which the covenant was dedicated. Till then, the Divine Majesty forbade the
sinner to approach. To touch even the base of Sinai was certain and relentless
death. But now that redemption in its fulness was an accomplished fact, the very
men who till then had been forbidden to "come nigh," were made nigh.
"They saw the God of Israel"; and in token that they were at rest in
the divine presence, it is added, "they did eat and drink." Then
immediately follows the command, "Let them make Me a sanctuary that I may
dwell among them."
Without a place of worship there could be no need for priesthood; a place of
worship was impossible save for a holy people in covenant with God; and the
covenant was based upon redemption accomplished. It is at this point also, and
that, too, in connection with the priesthood; that we first read in Scripture of
making atonement for sin I have already cited the two earlier passages in which
the Hebrew word occurs; we next find it here, in prescribing Aaron’s duties.
The priest was "appointed for men in things pertaining to God," and
one of his chief functions was "to make an atonement for the children of
Israel, for all their sins."
With all this before us, we are in a position to - understand the teaching of
Hebrews ii. 17. "In all things it behoved Him to be made like unto His
brethren, that He might become a merciful and faithful High Priest in things
pertaining to God to make atonement for the sins of the people." This is
not redemption for a lost world, but atonement for the sins of a redeemed
people. It is not the Adamic race that is in question, but if the seed of
Abraham "the Israel of God (verse i6). The fact is, that in our theology
the special truth of atonement has been so confounded with the general truth of
redemption, that it is in danger of becoming wholly lost. And prevailing views
of sin are so inadequate or false, that Christians are becoming unconscious of
the need which the priestly work of Christ alone can satisfy. What Archbishop
Trench has written as to Reconciliation, applies here with equal force : the
views now current, views which are leavening all. sections of the Church, "
rest not on an unprejudiced exegesis, but on a foregone determination to get rid
of the reality of God’s anger against sin."
And here is the explanation of the seeming paradox of the bloodless
sin-offering. The Bible is not a motley compilation of unconnected treatises.
The book of Leviticus is based upon the book of Exodus. The offerings it
prescribes are for a people who stand in the liberty and joy of redemption. What
then if the Israelite, redeemed by the Paschal lamb, and standing within the
covenant which secures to him the efficacy of the blood upon the mercy-seat,
should be too poor to bring the appointed sacrifice for his trespass? Divine
compassion will reach him in his poverty; his meat-offering shall be accepted
for a sin-offering, and his "sin that he hath sinned shall be forgiven
him." The one offering was as definitely typical of Christ as was the
other, and no one may dare to set a limit to the infinite grace of God in His
dealings with a sinner who thus turns to Him.
The sinner’s sense of sin, and his appreciation of the Sin-bearer, may be so
utterly inadequate and poor, that men may set him down as spiritually bankrupt
and yet if Christ be the ground on which he comes to God, divine grace will
reach him. But divine grace is no excuse for human presumption, and this special
type only brings into more prominent relief the great truth that, "without
shedding of blood there is no remission." As for those who teach a
bloodless redemption, the brand of Cain is upon them, for they are murderers of
men’s souls.
Christ, I repeat, is the antitype of the meat offering of Leviticus. And, there
are not many Christ.s, but only ONE, and He is the Christ of Calvary. But it
needs many types and many different images to set forth the immeasurable,
fullness of Him that He is to the sinner. In the preceding pages I have touched
upon other aspects of this great truth. Here I will only allude to two. The
death of Christ is not merely the sin-offering, but first, and before all, it is
the great Redemption sacrifice: "Christ our PASSOVER has been
sacrificed." "We have redemption through His blood. But redemption, as
I have shown, was wholly, independent of priesthood, and the priestly work of
atonement was based upon the sin-offering completed and accepted as complete.
The blood carried within the veil was not the completion of the sin-offering,
but the memorial of a sin- offering completed.
But what is the blood? "The life of the flesh is in the blood: and I have
given it to you upon the altar to make an atonement for your souls." From
this it is argued that the blood represents not death but life. If this meant
merely that all our blessings depend upon a living Christ, the doctrine would be
right, though, wrongly expressed, and based on a wrong text. That Christ made
propitiation for our sins is the language of theology: that Christ is the
propitiation for our sins is the teaching of Scripture. Our Saviour is not a
dead Christ upon a cross, but a living Christ upon the throne. But His right and
title to be a Saviour depends upon the cross. He "died for our sins,
according to the Scriptures, and was buried and rose again the third day,
according to the, Scriptures;" Such is "the Gospel by which we are
saved." There is not a word about His "offering Himself to the Father
" in resurrection.
But did not Christ enter heaven with His own. blood? And, if blood be life, must
not this mean that He entered there in virtue of the life which He carried
through death, and presented in resurrection as an offering to God? This theory
is based upon a superficial study of the types, and it is in a fuller knowledge
of the types that the refutation of it will be found. Some there are who need to
be reminded that when Scripture speaks of Christ’s entering heaven with His
own blood, the language is purely figurative. But the figure is typical, not
fanciful. And every. figure has a reality of which it is but the shadow; every
type has its antitype. It is forgotten, moreever, that Aaron’s entering within
the veil is not the only type of the ascension; and it is to a wholly different
type that prominence is given in the 9th chapter of Hebrews. The i3th verse
brackets together the two principal sin-offerings of Leviticus xvi. and Numbers
xix.; but in the 12th verse the reference is not to the sin-offering at all, but
to the great sacrifice of Exodus xxiv. which completed their redemption.
"Neither by the blood of goats and calves [compare verse 19], but by His
own blood He entered in once for all into the holy place [not, "to make
atonement," but] having obtained eternal redemption." it is not the
Priest going in, to finish an unfinished work, but the Mediator going in on the
ground of a work finished and complete.
Aaron passing within the veil was the correlative of Moses going up into the
mount. This latter type, which is the key-note to the Epistle to the Hebrews
(see chapter i. 3), is, as above noticed, taken up in the 12th verse and resumed
in the passage beginning at the i9th verse. But the two types are so blended
together throughout that the superficial reader entirely fails to notice the
emphatic reference to the Mediator. In the one, Moses entered the divine
presence by the blood of the redemption sacrifices; in the other, Aaron entered
the divine presence by the blood of the sin-offering. Whatever the blood means
in the one case it means also in the other; and by its meaning in these grouped
and blended types, we must interpret the language when thus applied to Christ.
But the teaching of Hebrews is clear and unequivocal, that the blood of the
Covenant represented death. Moses, therefore, ascended the Mount and stood in
the presence of the thrice holy God, not on the ground of life, but on the
ground of a death accomplished.
If Christ has entered heaven on the ground of life, He is there on a ground
which hopelessly excludes a creature who is under the death-sentence pronounced
on sin. Therefore it is that such emphasis rests upon the blood The cross is His
title to the throne, and this title He can share with sinners who by faith
become one with Him in the death He died to sin.
"The life of the flesh is in the blood" that is, in "the warm and
living blood" which animates it Therefore it is that when the organism is
destroyed by the pouring out of that which energised it the blood now cold and
still represents life laid down and lost. In a word it represents death. Take
yet another type When the death-sentence fell upon "all the firstborn in
the land of Egypt" the Israelite escaped because the appointed sacrifice
had been slain, and the blood was on the lintel and the door-posts of his home.
Was it the victim’s "warm and living blood" that turned away the
angelof death? Was it (to borrow a phrase from this heresy) the "living
life" of the Paschal lamb ? The question needs only to be clothed in words
in order to make the answer clear. The destroying angel was turned aside from
the blood-stained house because the judgment had already fallen there.
Death was already past, and the sprinkled blood -was the memorial of that death.
And this too was the significance of the sprinkled blood within the veil, which
had continuing efficacy to cleanse from sin. How can any one picture to himself
those foul, black stains upon the golden mercy-seat, and yet imagine that they
represented life in its activities, presented in joyful service to God! If such
were the teaching, is it possible to conceive any symbolism more inapt? Imagine
a bereaved mother or wife bedaubing her home with the blood of a dead child or
husband in order to keep fresh in her heart the great fact and truth of life!
The sight of a room thus stained will not easily fade from my memory. It was the
scene of the last and most fiendish of the crimes known as the "Whitechapel
murders" in London. Blood was on the furniture, blood was on the floor,
blood was on the walls, blood was everywhere. Did this speak to me of life? Yes,
but of life gone, of life destroyed, and, therefore, of that which is the very
antithesis of life. Every blood-stain in that horrid room spoke of death.
And here I ask the question, If God intended to teach the truth that the sinner
could approach Him. only on the ground of death, could divine wisdom find a
fitter symbol than that the priest should carry with him into His presence the
blood of the Vicarious sacrifice? If, on the other hand, any one seeks thus to
enforce the doctrine which these teachers would connect with it, we may well
exclaim, Could perverted ingenuity suggest an imagery more incongruous and
false! To teach that poured out, putrefying blood represents not death but life,
is not only a departure from the truth of Scripture, but an outrage upon the
commonest instincts of mankind.
CHAPTER XVIII
THE GODHOOD OF GOD.
It is matter for reflection whether the want of such a word as
"Godhood" has not helped to let the thought it signifies die out.
Whether men believe it or not, Jehovah is GOD. This is a fact absolute and
certain. But is He my God? The Psalmist could say, "0 God, Thou art my
God!" Does this mean no more than that He was God? He was the God of
Israel; but if any one imagines that He was the God of Pharaoh, or of the
Philistines, or of the kings of Canaan, he must have strange ideas of what it is
to have a God. Because He was the God of Israel, He destroyed the power of
Pharaoh in order to deliver them. If the sea barred their way, He made a highway
through it. If they hungered, the heaven rained bread; if they thirsted, the
rock gave forth water in the midst of the desert And the tribes of the
wilderness and the nations of the land, as they heard that battle-shout from the
puny armies of Israel, "The Lord of Hosts is with us, the God of Jacob is
our refuge" could have taught the Christians of today what it means to have
Jehovah for our God. God was not their God, but He was the God of Israel.
And can any thoughtful man look abroad upon the world, and imagine for a moment
that God is a God to creation now? "The whole creation groans." The
children of Israel groaned in Egyptian bondage, but when, their deliverance
complete, they stood around their glorious king in their glorious city, it was
no longer a groan that rose to heaven, but shouts of praise and the worship of
full hearts. And when God becomes once again a God to all His creatures, their
groans will no more be heard. The creation shall then be " delivered from
the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of
God." Then "shall the Lord rejoice in His works," and from His
opened hand the desire of every living thing shall be satisfied. Men delight to
speak of the Fatherhood of God, (see App.) because they think it gives
them claims on Him. And doubtless they who are indeed His children have real
claims upon God in virtue of the tie. Though even here there is need to remember
that a relationship cannot be wholly on one side: "If I am a Father, where
is mine honour?" God may well demand. But what is usually meant by the
Fatherhood of God is really His Godhood. And if God was the God of Israel there
were mutual obligations involved in the relationship. And so it must ever be.
But men speak as though the fact of their being His creatures gave them claims
on God, while they utterly forget that sin is a repudiation of His claims on
them - a denial of the very relationship on which they insist so strongly when
their own interests are concerned.
Moreover, as we have seen, by the rejection of Christ man forfeits every claim
of every kind on God; while, in.the gospel, the grace of God presents Christ as
the fulfilment of every blessing which a loving God can bestow. God has far
different thoughts toward the "Canaanite" and the
"Philistine" of today than were expressed by the sword of Israel. It
is not that the human heart is changed, still less the heart of God; but that
the work of Christ has enabled God to assume a new attitude toward men. "In
Christ He was reconciling the world unto Himself"; "The God of our
Lord Jesus Christ" can now become a God to all, because, I repeat once
more, RECONCILIATION is accomplished.
But if men reject Christ, and refuse the reconciliation, how can there possibly
be mercy for them? In past dispensations man’s sin and failure have always
drawn out some better thing from God’s great goodness and wisdom and power;
but, now, the climax has been reached. His best gift has been given; His
masterwork has been achieved; heaven is flung wide open, and sinful men are
called to fellowship with Christ in His glory. Divine love and grace are now
exhausted, and the only possible alternative and sequel is VENGEANCE. If men
insist on defying God and maintaining the place of adversaries, there can be
nothing for them but "judgment and fiery indignation which shall devour the
adversaries."
By Godhood then I mean the relationship existing between God and His creatures
in virtue of His Godhead. That relationship was outraged and set aside by sin,
and even the lower creation shared the blight which fell upon our world because
of it. But "by the blood of the cross" God has reconciled all things
to Himself. The enjoyment .of this benefit is postponed for "the creation
until the "manifestation of the sons of God," a and it will be lost
for ever by impenitent men. But the reconciliation is a fact and a truth for the
believer, here and now, and he has access to it, and ought to be in the joy of
it. But the Godhood of God toward the believer is. true only to faith. The
Christian's God is "the God of our Lord Jesus Christ," for even such a
one as He had a God; and yet the Lord Jesus knew what it was to be in want. The
universe was His creature, and by a word He could make bread for starving
thousands,. or crown the provision for a feast with richest wine; but when it
was Himself who hungered or was athirst, He looked up and trusted in His God. He
had a God, and yet He had not where to lay His head. And as it was with the
Leader of Faith, so has it been, with the sons of Faith in every age. In the
11th chapter of Hebrews we read of some "who through faith subdued
kingdoms, wrought righteousness, obtained promises, stopped the mouths of lions,
quenched the violence of fire, escaped the edge of the sword, out of weakness
were made strong, waxed valiant in fight, turned to flight the armies of the
aliens." But we read of others who, none the less through faith, "were
tortured, not accepting deliverance," and of others again who "had
trial of cruel mockings and scourgings, yea, moreover, of bonds and
imprisonment. They were stoned, they were sawn asunder, were tempted, were slain
with the sword; they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins, being
destitute, afflicted, tormented." And to these it is that the divine
epitaph belongs, "Of whom the world was not worthy."
The faith that bears and suffers, is greater than the faith that triumphs. How
many there are who, through ignorance of this mystery of faith, have made
shipwreck of their hopes, and are sunk under trial and disappointment. Faith
must be prepared for a refusal. Faith trusts for safety, but never fails when
perils come. Faith looks, for food and shelter, but never falters when
"hunger, and thirst, and cold, and nakedness" become its portion. The
faith that cries with the Psalmist, "At midnight I will rise to give thanks
unto Thee," is truer and greater than the faith that could bid the sun
stand still upon Gibeon; and the sufferings of Paul denote a higher faith than
the mightiest acts of Elijah. "In deaths oft. Of the Jews five times
received I forty stripes save one. Thrice was I beaten with rods; once was I
stoned; thrice I suffered shipwreck; a night and a day I have been in the deep.
. . . In weariness and painfulness, in watchings often, in hunger and thirst, in
fastings often, in cold and nakedness;"
"A night and a day have I been in the deep!" Paul - the beloved child
and saint of God, the faithful and honoured servant, the chosen vessel to bear
His name before the world, the foremost of the apostles - clinging to some frail
plank upon the wild lone sea hour after hour for a whole sun's round; in hunger,
and thirst, and cold; the sport of every wave; lost to earth, and seemingly
unknown to heaven; and yet he had a God who could have delivered him by a word!
And though deliverance came not, he kept his heart and eye fixed upon unseen
realities, and reckoned the present sufferings unworthy to be compared with the
coming glory.
Even in the midst of sorrow and trial, happiness is the Christian's lot.
Happiness: not the flippant gaiety of a careless heart (for if, even in the
world, such happiness is contemptible - the uncoveted monopoly of fools - how
utterly unworthy is it of those who have been called to fellowship with the
sufferings of Christ!) but happiness in the truer and deeper sense in which
alone the Scripture speaks of it. The highest type of existence is not the
butterfly, but "The Man of Sorrows " - He of the marred visage and the
melted heart.
Such then is the Christian's happiness. Through all circumstances, and in spite
of them, he is a prosperous man, a blessed man. He may indeed have care and
trial and sorrow; but his is the God who, while He could leave His child to be a
solitary and outcast wanderer, with no pillow but a stone, and no companion but
a staff, could yet turn that stone into a memorial pillar of thanksgiving and.
praise, and make that loneliness the very gate of heaven! "Happy is he that
has the God of Jacob for his help! ". "Happy the people whose God is
Jehovah! "
"SAFE."
Safe in Jehovah's keeping,
Led by His glorious arm,
God is Himself my refuge,
A present help from harm.
Fears may at times distress me,
Griefs may my soul annoy;
God is my strength and portion,
God my exceeding joy.
Safe in Jehovah's keeping,
Safe in temptation's hour,
Safe in the midst of perils,
Kept by Almighty power.
Safe when the tempest rages,
Safe though the night be long;
E'en when my sky is darkest,
God is my strength and song.
Sure is Jehovah's promise,
Nought can my hope assail;
Here is my soul's sure anchor.
Entered within the veil.
Blest in His love eternal,
What can I want beside!
Safe through the blood that cleanseth
Safe in the Christ that died.
APPENDIX.
NOTE I - P. 50. MIRACLES.
THE subject of miracles, and of "evidences" in
general, is too large to treat of here; but yet the reference I have made to
them compels me to add a few remarks.
1st. The mere fact of miracles is no proof of divine intervention. A
miracle is such an interference with the course of nature as is beyond our own
power. Any creature, - therefore, entirely superior to us can perform what we
deem a miracle. The miracles worked by Satan in the temptation of our Lord (Luke
iv. 5) are far more wonderful (I do not say "greater ") than all the
miracles of all the apostles combined; and Scripture testifies that the devil
will again exert miraculous power on earth.
2nd. Miracles are never appealed to in Scripture as ". an
evidence," save in connection with a preceding revelation tct which they
are referred. The gospel of Christ was not "the beginning of the oracles of
God" ; it was another chapter in a long-continued revelation. But it had a
two-fold aspect. He came to a people whose every hope, for earth and heaven
centred in a Messiah promised to their fathers, and He came, moreover, to a
world that was ruined and lost. His mission, therefore, had a two-fold character
and purpose. He was the Messiah to the Jew; He was the bread of God to give life
to the world. It was with the former that the miracles had specially to do The
knowledge of His higher mission and character was not an inference from
miracles. It was the subject of a special revelation to John the Baptist, and
through him to those who afterwards became the first disciples of the Lord (John
1. 33—34). These all belonged to the little company spoken of in Luke ii. 38
as waiting for the redemption of Israel. They followed Him because they were
already God's people, and yet even these needed a word from God to enable them
to know Him.
3rd. If this be so, we shall expect to find that it was to Jews that the
testimony was based on miracles, and that when the kingdom gospel, or special
national testimony, ceased, miracles became of secondary importance. Both these
points are plain upon the face of Scripture. As soon as the Sanhedrin decreed
the destruction of Christ, He sought to keep His miracles secret (Matt. Xii. 14
- 16). He could not be face to face with need and refuse to meet it, but He no
longer wished the fame of His power to go forth. And when, after His final
rejection, the gospel became a purely spiritual testimony, miracles were never
appealed to in confirmation of it. The national testimony which the apostles had
been sent forth to render at the first was based on miracles (Matt. x. 7, 8).
The gospel of Pentecost was a living power, independent of all extrinsic proof;
it was itself the means of the conversion of 3000 souls (Acts ii. 41). "To
the Jew first," is characteristic of the Acts, and of the transitional
period the book embraces. After the conversion of Cornelius, the public
testimony was no longer confined to the Jew, but the Jew retained the right to
priority in the offer of grace (see ex. gr. Acts xiii. 46). The miracles
therefore continued, though without their former prominence. And when Paul went
forth preaching to Gentiles, miracles seem to have been divorced from his
testimony. His miracle at Lystra was in response to the faith of the man who was
the subject of it (Acts xiv, 9) and the effect it had upon those who witnessed
it was that, they owned the apostles as gods, as was natural with heathens, and
prepared to sacrifice to them. So was it also at Melita (Acts xxviii. 6).
That miraculous power existed in Gentile Churches the 12th chapter of 1st
Corinthians establishes; but the question is, Did the gospel which produced
those Churches appeal to miracles to confirm it? Can any one read the first four
chapters of that very Epistle, and retain a doubt as to the answer? The great
question here involved resolves itself, sooner or later, into this: When God
speaks to man's heart through the gospel, does He speak in such wise that the
word carries with it the certainty that it is from Him? To say that God cannot
do this is to deny that He is supreme; and to deny a Supreme Being is sheer
Atheism. To say that He does not is to remove the truth of revelation out of the
region of certainty altogether. For the genuineness of miracles must, of course,
depend on evidence; and if, as Paley declares, the reality of a revelation must
be proved by miracles, it is only by weighing evidences that we can determine
what is revealed; and that form of proof can never, in such matters, reach
higher than probability; indeed, no accurate or astute thinker has ever claimed
more for it. The degree of conviction thus attainable is, doubtless, an
overwhelming condemnation of the infidel, but it is a poor substitute for the
faith of the Christian. According to Paley, the value of the Christian
revelation is determined by the miracles. According to Scripture, the value of
the miracles was determined by the revelation. it was not that miracles were
wrought. but that the miracles of the ministry were precisely what Isaiah
prophesied the Messiah would accomplish. The whole system is false, and must
drive simple-minded folk to Rome; for the many are quite incapable of reasoning
out Christianity from evidences, and, if that be our only foundation, they must
trust the Church. With what a sense of relief we turn to a word like this,
"I thank Thee, 0 Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because Thou hast hid
these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes."
I have dealt with this subject in The
Silence 0f God, Chapters III., IV.. and V.
NOTE 11.—P. i6g.
Matt. vi. g.—" Hallowed be Thy name" (and Luke xi. 2).
Matt. xxiii. 17, 19.—The temple that sanctifieth the gold: the altar that
sanctifieth the gift.
John x. 36.—Say ye of Him whom the Father hath sanctified.
John xvii. i7, 19.—Sanctify them through Thy truth. For their sakes I sanctify
myself, that they also might be sanctified through the truth.
Acts xx. 32.—.Inheritance among all them that are sanctified (and xxvi. i8).
Rom. xv. x6.—That the offenng up of the Gentiles might be acceptable, being
sanctified by the Holy Ghost.
iCor. i. 2.—Sanctified in Christ Jesus.
i Cor. vi. xi.—But ye are sanctified. . . by the Spirit of our God.
i Cor. vii. 14.—The unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife, and the
unbelieving wife is sanctified by the husband.
Eph. v. 26.—That He might sanctify it (the Church). iThess. v. 23.—God of
peace sanctify you wholly.
i Tim. iv. (Every creature) is sanctified by the Word of God and prayer.
3 APPENDIX.
2 Tim. ii. 21.—A vessel sanctified and meet for the Master's use.
Heb. ii. ri—He that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified. Heb. ix. 13.—If
blood . .. sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh.
Heb. x. 10.—By which will we are sanctified.
Heb. x. 14.—flath perfected them that are sanctified. Beb. x. 29.—Blood . .
. wherewith he was sanctified.
Heb. Xiii. 12.—That He ‘might sancti/y the people.
i Pet. iii. 15.—Sanctify in your hearts Christ as Lord (R.V.). Jude i.—To
them that are sanctified by God the Father (the Revised reading is beloved in
God the Father).
Rev. xxii. ir.—Let him be holy still (literally, let him be sanctified still).
Rom. vi. 19.—Yield your members servants to righteousness unto holiness.
Rom. vi. 22.—Ye have your fruit unto holiness.
i Cor. i. 30.—Christ is made unto us . . . sanctification.
1 Thess. iv. 3.—This is the will of God, even your sanctifica tion, that ye
should abstain from fornication.
1 Thess. iv. 4.—Possess his vessel in sanctification.
1Thess. iv. 7.—God hath not called us to uncleanness, but to holiness.
2 Thess. 12 13.—Salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of
the truth.
i Tim. ii. 15.—Saved in childbearing if they continue in holiness.
Heb. xii. 14.—Follow. . . holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord.
iPet. i. 2.—Elect . . . through sanctification of the Spirit unto, etc.
NOTE IV.—P. 197.
THE FATHERHOOD OF GOD.
The figment of the universal Fatherhood of God is one of the most popular of
heresies. With those who hold that man is the product of evolution the claim is
obviously fanciful. Nor is it much better in the case of those who accept the
truth of Scripture. For we are not the children of Adam as he came from the hand
of God, but the remote descendants of the sinful and fallen outcast of Eden. And
were it not that in the sphere of religion people seem to take leave not only of
their Bibles but of their brains, they would recognise that this cannot
constitute us children of God in the Scriptural sense.
True it is that in order to expose the error and folly of thinking "that
the Godhead is like unto gold or silver or stone, graven by art and man's
device," the Apostle Paul when addressing a heathen audience adopted the
words of a heathen poet," For we are also His offspring" (Acts xvii.
28, 29). But no doctrine of sonship can be based on this. The word here used
(genos) is one of wide significance ; and the argument founded upon it would be
equally valid if the lower creation were intended.
Heb. ii i4 is also appealed to in support of this figment. But the words of
verse x6 are explicit :" He taketh hold of the seed of Abraham."
"We must not here understand mankind, as some have done," is Dean
Alford's obvious comment. The "children" of verse 14 are not the seed
of Adam but "the seed of Abraham"; that is, the children of faith. We
become children of God, not by descent from Adam, but by faith in Christ. The
teaching of Scripture here is definite and clear: "As many as received Him,
to them gave He the right to become children of God, even to them that believe
in His name, which were born . . . of God" (John i. 12, 13). This is the
test. The relationship depends on birth. "Except a man be born again he
cannot see the kingdom of God" (John iii. 3).
Most certain it is, therefore, that he cannot be a child of God. Still more
terribly explicit were the Lord's words to the religious leaders who rejected
Him. Said He: "Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your
father it is your will to do" (John viii. 44) This heresy teaches that we
are by nature children of God: the Scripture declares that we are" by
nature children of wrath" (Eph. ii. 3).
THE END