THE HONOUR OF HIS
NAME
Preface and First Chapter.
THE title of this book - a quotation from the sixty-sixth Psalm
- indicates not only its subject, but its aim and purpose.
I have to thank my friend Miss A. R. Habershon for permitting me to use her
Concordance of the Lord's names and titles as an Appendix. While Bible students
will greatly value this Appendix, I fear it will be neglected by the ordinary
reader. And these pages need never have been written were it not that the New
Testament is commonly treated in a similar fashion, the Book of the Revelation
being regarded as a negligible Appendix to the Gospels and Epistles. But the
Patmos visions are divinely given to enable us by faith to behold what the
beloved disciple saw when "in the Spirit on the Lord's day."
That some among them had "no knowledge of God," was the reproach the
Apostle cast upon the Christians of Corinth. And were he with us today, might he
not charge us with having no knowledge of the Lord of glory? For the Christian
who accepts the opening vision of the Apocalypse as being a divine revelation of
the Lord Jesus Christ as now enthroned in heaven, will need neither warning nor
appeal to avoid all irreverent freedom in naming Him - to shun even the
appearance of forgetting "the honour of His name." R.A.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
A country-house incident-The contrast between primitive and modern practice in
naming the Lord-The disciples on the Emmaus road (Luke xxiv.)-The significance
of the title Kyrios
CHAPTER II
A railway-carriage conversation-Irreverent book.titles-The "Jesus" of
the Critics and the Christ of God . . 8
CHAPTER III
Who is a "Christian" 7-Harnack quoted-Who are sons of God I-Paul's
sermon at Athens-Meaning of "son" in Scripture-The Sonship of
Christ-Meaning of monogenės. 14
CHAPTER IV
The present-day importance of the subject-A Christmas sermon-The Virgin birth-Christianised
Rationalism and the "New Theology." 22
CHAPTER V
The Patristic writings contrasted with Holy Scripture -The divine authorship of
the Gospels accounts for the mode in which they name the Lord-Matthew and John
contrasted -The Gospels and the Epistles contrasted - vii
CHAPTER VI
The use of the name "Jesus" in Acts -The place and purpose of Acts in
the canon - The martyr Stephen's testimony -The Apostles' use of the name 36
CHAPTER VII
The use of the name " Jesus" in the Epistles-Various passages cited
and explained - Phil. ii. 10, and 1 Thess. iv. 13, expounded 42
CHAPTER VIII
The use of the name "Jesus" in the Revelation - The pas-sages in which
it occurs - The dispensational character and purpose of the Book 52
CHAPTER IX
The name "Jesus Christ" in Scripture - The unscriptural use of it by
Christians - Prof. Deissmann quoted - The difference between "Jesus
Christ" and "Christ Jesus"- The R.V. readings-" What would
Jesus do?' - The Lord's teaching in John v. 22, 23-1 Cor. i. 3-9 and 1 Peter
iii. 15 cited - a Victoria Institute lecture (foot-note) . . 58
CHAPTER X
False views about Christ: Renan quoted-" Lead, kindly Light "-Certain
hymns criticised-The training of children-"May we never call Him 'Jesus'?
"-The purpose of this book-Spiritual instincts-William Carey quoted- "Slovenlymindedness
"-The vision of glory of Revelation, chap. i. 10-18 67
APPENDIX
"THE HONOUR OF HIS
NAME"
CHAPTER I
IN the course of a country-house visit, some years ago, I was
asked for the names of men whom my friends might not only welcome to their home
as guests, but invite to conduct a Sunday evening service in their private
chapel. Great was my surprise at the reception given to the first name I put
before them. It was that of a clergyman who, I supposed, would be a persona
grata in both respects. But my friends informed me that he had already been
their guest; and though they themselves esteemed and liked him, he had given
offence to their young people by beginning to call them by their Christian names
the very first day of his visit. Happening, soon afterwards, to take up a book
recently issued by him, I found that throughout its pages the Lord of Glory was
habitually mentioned by the name of His humiliation. Knowing the man personally,
I felt greatly surprised at his lapse in the social sphere, but vastly more
surprised that in this higher sphere, a Christian so devout, and so reverent
withal, could be betrayed into a habit that would have grieved and shocked the
disciples of early times. I say this advisedly; for in New Testament days the
disciple always declared himself by the manner in which he named his Master. As
we all know, the name of "Jesus" occurs many hundreds of times in the
Gospels; but this fact lends great emphasis to the further fact that whenever
the narrative introduces words spoken by the disciples, whether addressed to the
Lord Himself, or to others about Him, He is invariably named with a title of
reverence.
In all the four Gospels only one exception to this rule can be found; and it is
an exception of peculiar import. I refer to the language of the disciples on the
Emmaus road, when questioned by the stranger who joined them on their way.
"Concerning Jesus of Nazareth" was the manner in which they designated
Him.1. "Jesus of Nazareth." The phrase as yet contained no element of
contempt. It was intended merely to distinguish Him from other men who bore the
not uncommon name of Jesus. But its use by these disciples had a most ominous
significance. Not even Peter's denials in the court of Caiaphas gave clearer
proof that the stern and terrible tragedy of the Passion had stamped out faith
in His Messiahship. "We hoped that it was He who should redeem Israel"
was their sad lament. They had hailed Him as the Christ, and had learned to
worship Him as the Son of God. But all was over, now. For they had seen Him
crucified as a common criminal; and three days had passed "since these
things were done." In these liberal-minded days of ours, cultured Jews
regard Him as one of the greatest of their Rabbis; and so these disciples still
cherished His memory as "a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and
all the people." But yet He was no more than man - He was only Jesus of
Nazareth! It was not in this fashion that they spoke of Him while He was alive
and present with them.
The significance of the narrative becomes intense if we realise that the writer
was himself the companion of Cleopas. And if questions of this kind were settled
upon grounds of evidence, this would be assumed. Put it this way. Suppose the
events recorded in the chapter had involved some violation of Roman law, would
not the Evangelist's accurate knowledge of its incidents have been deemed proof
of his guilt? The Christian, no doubt, might say with truth that the Divine
Spirit could inspire the record, even if the writer had no personal knowledge of
the facts. But the Christian recognises also that in this, as in other spheres,
God is wont "to make use of means." And in the absence of everything
to suggest a different conclusion, we may assume with confidence that the writer
was one who "had perfect understanding of the things" of which he
wrote.
And this explains a seeming difficulty. We would gladly barter many a page of
Holy Writ in exchange for the briefest epitome of the wonderful teaching of the
Emmaus road, when, "beginning at Moses and all the prophets, the Lord
expounded unto them in all the Scriptures the things concerning Himself."
And can we suppose that this was "wasted," as men would say, upon two
disciples, of whom the one, as we know, was of little note, and the other was,
ex hypothesi, so insignificant that not even his name is recorded? But if the
second disciple was the Evangelist, the suppression of the name needs no
explanation; and what is of vastly greater moment, we can understand the deep
import of the narrative. All its wonderful incidents stand out in clear relief
as a part of his training for the work he was destined to perform. For was he
not divinely chosen, not only to share. with the great Apostle of the Gentiles
the authorship of almost half of the New Testament Scriptures, but also to
become that Apostle's chief helper and companion in his many-sided ministry?
This digression has been suggested by the mode in which these disciples named
their Lord. Members of the royal household do not speak of the Sovereign by his
Christian name ; but we all speak in this way of kings who are dead and gone.
And if we analyse our thoughts we shall find, perhaps, that when we speak of
"Jesus" we are not thinking of our living Lord who hears our words,
and before whom we shall soon appear, but of the great Teacher who lived and
died nineteen centuries ago.
How far will this account for the extraordinary fact that although in the days
of His humiliation Christians never named Him without some title of reverence,
yet in this time of His exaltation and glory they do so habitually? It will
fully account for it in the case of merely nominal Christians, including the
whole tribe of Christianised Rationalists who contribute so largely to our
"Christian" literature. But some further explanation must be sought
for the fact that among devout Christians a practice prevails which has no
Scriptural warrant, and which, I repeat, would have shocked the disciples of New
Testament times.
The Rationalists may object, perhaps, that as a Jewish Rabbi was never called by
his personal name, and as the Greek word for "Lord" sometimes meant
little more than our English "Sir," it was a matter of course that
Christ should be called Master and Lord. But no Christian will tolerate the
figment that in the mouth of His disciples the use of these titles of reverence
expressed merely the conventional courtesy accorded to Him even by unbelieving
Jews. That would be indeed a trivial foundation for the teaching which, amid the
solemnities of the Last Supper, He based upon them.2 Nor would it account for
the words of warm approval with which He commended His disciples for using them.
True it is that, owing to the Jewish superstition which vetoed the use of the
sacred name "Jehovah," the Greek language has no distinctive
equivalent for our English word "Lord" as a title of deity. But there
can be no doubt what Kyrios meant with those who acclaimed Him as
"the Christ, the Son of the Living God 3 - a confession which distinguished
the disciple from the unbeliever. And as we study the writings of the Apostles
we must remember that throughout the Septuagint version of the Old Testament,
upon which the language of the New Testament is formed, this same word (Kyrios)
is used in every instance as the Greek equivalent of "Jehovah" in the
Hebrew Bible.
Chapter Two
A RAILWAY-CARRIAGE conversation, in a trip to Scotland many
years ago, turned my attention in a very special way to the subject of these
pages. I shared a compartment with a gentleman and his wife, both of whom were
strangers to me; and, after our English ways, not a word passed between us for
several hours. But when nearing the end of my journey, a chance incident not
only drew us into conversation, but led my companion to give me his name; and I
was interested to find that he was a well-known publisher. When we had disposed
of the matter which led him to address me, our conversation took a special turn,
and in the course of it he said some unpleasant things about Christians. He was
particularly bitter against them for their habit of using sacred names to make
their book-titles attractive. He cited a number of instances of this; and when I
pleaded that a title was meant to indicate the character and contents of a book,
he replied that from a bookseller's point of view it was a trade label, for use
across the counter. And he illustrated his words by telling me how, when
visiting the store-room of a certain London publishing firm, he heard one of the
lads calling out to another of the staff, who was sorting books on an upper
shelf, "Chuck me down a Blood of Jesus."
The words cut me as with a knife. The author of the book in question was well
known to me as a devout and reverent Christian minister, and I had never
realised the gross profanity of such a title. But since that day all titles of
the kind have been abhorrent to me. "My people doth not consider," was
the divine lament in days of apostasy in Israel. And if Christians would only
"consider" they would avoid a practice which would have shocked the
disciples of early times. Most true it is that some with whom the use of the
sacred name of "Jesus" is habitual, are wholly free from any suspicion
of an irreverent intention,
"But evil is wrought by want of Thought, As well as want of Heart!"
The Rev. Dr. A. T. Pierson was one of the most intensely reverent of men. When
at the close of a lecture in old Exeter Hall he turned to greet me, I thanked
him heartily for the help his words had been to me, but I added, "There was
one fly in the pot of ointment: why do you name the Lord after the fashion of
the 'vagabond Jews' of Acts xix.?" "It is all the fault of my evil
theological training," he replied, "but keep on reminding me! "
Indeed theological training is much to blame for this deplorable habit. For not
only is the entire theology of Christendom influenced by the writings of the
Fathers, but very many of our modern theological works are leavened by German
scepticism. In fact our recent Bible "Dictionaries" and
"Encyclopedias" are essentially rationalistic, and the name of the
Lord Jesus Christ is rarely found in their pages. It is always "Jesus"
or "Jesus Christ." And this even with writers who are punctiliously
careful to prefix the name of an Apostle with the title of "Saint."
If the Apostles could revisit the earth, they would not appreciate an "honour"
conferred upon them by the Church of the butcher Popes who blessed the tortures
of the Inquisition and massacres such as that of St. Bartholomew; an "honour,"
moreover, which they share with these miscreants, but which is denied to the
holy martyrs of the Reformation. As the profanely familiar use of the Lord's
name is so common, it seems scarcely fair to single out any particular offender;
but to illustrate the evil, I venture to quote the following extract from a
recent "Publisher's Circular." The book to which it refers is not the
work of an infidel, but of an English clergyman, who is Examining Chaplain to an
English Bishop, and a Fellow of his College. The circular says
"It endeavours to answer the question, What kind of person did St. Mark, or
his informant, St. Peter, think Jesus to be? Under the heads of 'Jesus' family
and friends,' 'Jesus' way of life,' 'Jesus' mind,' 'Jesus' social outlook,'
'Jesus' morality,' and 'Jesus' religion,' it approaches the final subject of
'Jesus Himself.'
"Saint Mark" and "Saint Peter," but always
"Jesus"! Is it not evident that this "Jesus" is the dead
Buddha of the Rationalist? No one could write thus about our great God and
Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ, before whose judgment-seat we all must stand.
Surely the prevalence of rationalistic literature, falsely claiming to be
Christian, is a definite reason why a Christian writer should declare his faith
by the way he names the Lord. A glance through the pages of a book would then
enable the least instructed reader to judge whether its author be a believer in
the Lord Jesus Christ, or a follower of the "Jesus" of the Critics.
For the "Jesus" of the Critics is not the Christ of God. The Lord so
"emptied Himself" that He gave up His liberty even as man, and never
spoke except in God-given words. "Whatsoever I speak," He declared,
"even as the Father hath said unto Me, so I speak." Therefore was it
that He disclaimed knowledge of that whereof the Father had not spoken to Him.
Therefore was it that the words He did speak were eternal. "Heaven and
earth shall pass away, but My words shall not pass away" such was His
solemn declaration. And all who refuse His words shall be judged by them,
whether they be sinners of the market-place or the street, or sinners of the
pulpit or the Critic's chair.
Such was the Christ of God. But what of the Christ of the Critics? Here are
their own words:
"Both Christ and the Apostles and writers of the New Testament held the
current Jewish notions respecting the divine authority and revelation of the Old
Testament." In a word, the "Jesus" of this cult was an ignorant
enthusiast, the dupe of Jewish errors which he mistook for divine truth, and
which he forced upon the acceptance of his deluded followers in language of
awful solemnity. What is true of criminals is no less true of heretics; they are
apt, through some oversight or other, to give themselves away. And the kenosis
theory of the Critics reminds us of the artifices by which law-breakers try to
deceive the police! For these rationalistic Professors and pundits ignore what
even a Sunday-school child ought to know, that after the Resurrection, when the
Lord stood free from all the limitations of His humiliation, He adopted and
repeated His previous teaching about the Old Testament. And the record adds,
"Then opened He their mind that they should understand the
Scriptures." And in the New Testament that teaching is unfolded under the
guidance of the Divine Spirit. But the Critics have detected and exposed its
falseness! No wonder then that the Buddha of their cult is only
"Jesus" the Rabbi, who, though admittedly far above them both morally
and spiritually, was neither as intelligent nor as well informed!
Note - This is not the only point on which the Critics display their
ignorance. Even a child might be expected to notice that in Mark xiii. 32 (the
text to which they appeal in support of their kenosis theory) it is not
as man that the Lord disclaims knowledge of the time of His great public Advent,
but as Son of God. The contrast is not between man and God, but between the Son
and the Father.
Chapter Three
ARE we then to maintain, as the preceding chapters would
suggest, that a Christian is one who believes in the Lord Jesus Christ? A most
startling conclusion this, for it outrages "the spirit of the age";
and at a single stroke it puts outside the pale, not only the mass of those
"who profess and call themselves Christians," but also a very large
and daily increasing minority of the occupants of professedly Christian pulpits.
For mark the words, "who believe in the Lord Jesus Christ": not
"the historic Jesus," the Buddha of nineteen centuries ago, but our
living Lord, who died for our sins, and now reigns in heaven, and is coming
again in glory.
It is important, Professor Harnack writes in one of his best-known works, to
"remind mankind that a man of the name of Jesus Christ once stood in their
midst." But this is an anachronism. For the blind and stupid infidelity
which refused belief in "the historic Jesus" belonged to a less
enlightened age than ours. Today, the infidel appeals, quite as confidently as
the Christian, to the lesson of that matchless life.
The Lord Jesus declared with great solemnity that all who believed in Him had
everlasting life. When He spoke these words, standing as a man in the midst of
men, He was not trying to convince His hearers that He was not a phantom or a
"ghost"! His purpose was to teach that lie was the Son of God, the
Messiah, "of whom Moses in the law, and the prophets, did write."
Among those who participated in the awful crime of Calvary, there were some who,
like Nicodemus, believed in Him as "a teacher come from God." But they
crucified Him for blasphemy because, being a man, He claimed to be the Christ,
the Son of God. And His disciples' acceptance of this claim betokened a
God-given faith. Therefore it was that Peter's confession drew from Him the
words, "flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but My Father which
is in heaven." And this explains the statements of the Apostle John:
"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?"
But all this, I repeat, offends "the spirit of the age." To say that
divine grace is needed to enable us to believe, is an insult to the dignity of
human nature! And are we not all the Sons of God? Folly characterises every
heresy. Poetic license warrants our describing ourselves as children of Adam,
for we are his remote descendants. But, save in a purely figurative acceptation
of the word, not even Adam was God's son. He was his creature. And the race has
sprung, not from the Adam of Eden innocence, but from Adam the fallen outcast.
What sense is there, then, in pretending that this constitutes us children of
God?
But did not the Apostle tell the pagans of Athens that they were children of
God? No, most certainly not. To wean them from their idolatry, he quoted the
words of their own poets in hymns written in praise of Jupiter, "For we are
his offspring" his genos. And the question is not what a biased mind
can read into this, but what the speaker meant, and the hearers understood by
it. Did any one of them imagine that he was Jupiter's child? And if the
Apostle's object was to teach them that they were children of the God who made
heaven and earth, would he have based the teaching on a pagan hymn to a heathen
deity? His appeal to their own classic literature was in order to shame them
into acknowledging that God had nothing in common with their lifeless idols,
"graven by art and man's device." His argument would have been as
valid had he pointed them to the lower creation. The God whose creatures have
life must be a living God.
Each one of us is the child of the parent who begat him, and he cannot be the
child of any one else. And the believer in the Lord Jesus Christ is a child of
God because he has been begotten of God, "For as many as received Him, to
them gave He the right to become children of God." Who were begotten of
God, the verse which follows adds. The Christian is a twice-born being. He is
born of the flesh as a child of his natural father, and he is born of the Spirit
as a child of God. And Scripture is explicit and emphatic that these births are
altogether distinct. As the Lord Himself declared, "That which is born of
the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit."
"Ye are of your father the devil" were His awful words to the Jews who
were compassing His death. And if any one pretends that even this is not
conclusive, we may point him to the statement that "they who are the
children of the flesh, these are not the children of God." Could language
more definitely veto the delusion that men are children of God by nature? The
bearing of this upon the main subject of these pages will be apparent to the
thoughtful. We begin by so lowering the relationship of "child of God"
that it ceases to have any meaning. And then by taking "sons of God"
as merely a synonym for "children of God," we are betrayed into
accepting the "brotherhood of Jesus" cult. And thus we supply the
infidel with a colourable pretext for dragging down the Lord of Glory to the
level of our common humanity - a blasphemy that reaches its climax in the
statement, - "Jesus was God, but so are we."
In infinite grace the Son of God is "not ashamed" to call us brethren.
But the "us" is not the race of Adam, but "they who are
sanctified" - and the response of every heart that grace has won is to call
Him Lord. We have the same Father and the same God; but in the very words by
which He teaches the nearness of the relationship, He forbids the inference
which the unspiritual would draw from it. "Go" - He said -"to My
brethren, and say unto them, I ascend (not "unto our Father and God,"
but) unto My Father and your Father, and My God and your God."
In English the word "son" means no more than "male child":
and of course it is sometimes used in this sense in the New Testament; as for
example when we read that James and John were sons of Zebedee. But in Scripture,
as with orientals generally, it has a far deeper significance; as for example
when the Lord surnamed James and John "the sons of thunder." So again
Joses was renamed "a son of consolation," and the unconverted are
called "sons of disobedience." In these and numberless other passages
the word connotes character and nature, without any thought whatever of
"begetting."
But our translators have ignored the distinction between "son" and
"child," and in the various passages where these words occur a
reference to the Greek, or even to our Revised Version, will prove both
interesting and instructive. It will lead, for example, to the somewhat
startling discovery that, in Scripture, Christians as such are never called sons
of God. "To as many as received Him, to them He gave power to become
children of God;" but "as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they
are the sons of God." But, as every Christian knows, the Sonship of the
Lord Jesus Christ is altogether unique, being essential and eternal. The
rendering of John iii. 16 and kindred passages, in both our English Versions,
suggests a double error. It implicitly denies the truth that every believer is
begotten of God; and it implicitly asserts the error that the Sonship of Christ
depends upon an act of "begetting." If that were so the Son must have
had a beginning in time; and therefore, not being eternal, He could have no
claim to Deity. This was the argument of Anus, and the logic of it is
inexorable.
But while the Greek word here employed (monogenes) has its etymological
counterpart in "only-begotten," that is not its meaning. In five of
its nine occurrences in the New Testament it is used of Christ. In three it
means an only child (Luke vii. 12; viii. 42; ix. 38). And in the ninth (Heb. xi.
17) it is used of Isaac. Isaac was not an only-begotten son, but he was his
father's darling. And it is noteworthy that this word "darling" is
used of Christ by our translators in Psalms xxii. 20 and xxxv. 17, where in the
Greek Bible monogenes represents a Hebrew term of endearment. In six of
the twelve occurrences of that word in the Hebrew Bible, the Greek Version reads
"Beloved" - the very word by which the Lord Jesus was hailed from
heaven at His baptism, and again on the Holy Mount. And in these passages,
"only" is our translators' rendering of it.
It is a fact of vital moment that the word "begotten" is never used of
the Lord save in relation to the Resurrection. Neither His title of Son of God,
nor yet His title of Son of Man, depends upon the Virgin birth. Just as by
"Son of Man" He claimed to be man in the highest and most absolute
sense, so by "Son of God" He laid claim to Deity. This was the meaning
given to it by those who heard His teaching. His disciples understood it thus,
and they worshipped Him as Divine. And those who refused to believe in Him
understood it thus, and they crucified Him as a blasphemer.
Note - The above paragraphs are based upon the chapter of The
Lord from Heaven (Nisbet) in which this whole subject is discussed in its
various aspects, and the Scriptures relating to it are cited and considered,
including the passages in which the word "firstborn" is used of
Christ.
Chapter Four
IT is the peculiar circumstances of our own times that give both
point and urgency to the appeal and protest of the present volume. And this
consideration may weigh with any who might well resent our seeming to cast a
slur upon the writings of devout and spiritual men in days when infidelity stood
far apart from the Christian camp. An infidel paper lately boasted that
everything for which Tom Paine was persecuted is openly preached today in
Christian pulpits by the descendants of the men who persecuted him. It is all
too true. And the coarse profanity of the "New Theology" is not so
dangerous as the promulgation of its blasphemies by men of culture and
gentlemanly feeling.
To illustrate my words I give the following extracts from a sermon preached on
Christmas Day in one of the most prominent of our London churches. And I do so,
not to pillory a particular ecclesiastic, but to indicate what is now being
taught in some of our theological colleges, and preached from numberless pulpits
throughout the land.
'The birth narratives, which were included in the First and Third of the
Synoptic Gospels, did not appear to belong to the oldest tradition about our
Saviour. . . . The gospel which the Apostles preached did not include any story
of the birth of Jesus. These birth narratives stood apart with no clearly
perceptible relation to the rest of the New Testament. . . The Christians of the
second century were not capable of applying to the mingled traditions which they
had received from the Apostolic age those laws of evidence which had now
received the adhesion of historical students the divineness of Jesus did not at
the first, and need not now, consist of a dogma as to His miraculous
birth."
This will suffice to indicate the import of the sermon, namely the denial of
'the virgin birth.' The objection that the Apostles' preaching did not include
that truth is extraordinary. The Resurrection was a public fact to which the
Apostles could appeal, and of which they were the accredited witnesses But to
most of us the suggestion that they should in the same way have given their
personal testimony to the virginity of Mary is grotesquely absurd. If, as is
implicitly asserted in the sermon, that basal fact-a fact from which the truth
of the Incarnation is inseparable-be not fact at all, but fiction, the Nazarene
may still claim our homage as the best and noblest of men, but to worship him as
divine is to brand ourselves as idolaters and fools. In support of his heresy
the preacher appealed to "the laws of evidence." The laws of evidence
had better be left to those who have practical experience of them. Unless the
Gospel narratives be utterly unreliable and worthless even as human records, it
is as certain as human testimony can make it that Mary's firstborn was not her
husband's child. And that this was a matter of common knowledge with the Jews,
witness the taunt by which they met the Lord's refusal to acknowledge them as
being true children of Abraham. If therefore the Nazarene was not the Son of God
in the sense which the Christian faith maintains, he was an outcast of that
wretched class to whom the divine law denied the right of citizenship in the
Commonwealth of Israel. And if the story of the "virgin birth" be
fiction, the infidel may reasonably hold that it was invented to screen the
shameful circumstances of his origin.
And if the Nazarene was not the Son of God, the Lord of Glory, what becomes of
the Atonement? Well may we exclaim-
"The tree of knowledge now
Yields its last ripest fruit!
The blind now lead the blind,
Man has become as God!
The Cross is growing old,
And the great Sepulchre
Is but a Hebrew tomb!
The Christ has died in vain!
The Christ of ages past
Is now the Christ no more!
Altar and fire are gone,
The Victim but a dream!"
"The Lord of Glory"- it is one of His divinely given
titles. As the inspired Apostle writes, the world leaders, being ignorant of the
hidden wisdom of God, "crucified the Lord of Glory." But if the
Christianised sceptic be right, the man they crucified was the son of a Jew, who
profanely claimed Divine honour. And in putting him to death they were obeying
one of the plainest commands of the Divine law.
What then, I repeat, becomes of the Atonement? The thorough-going infidel faces
the question boldly, and demands, "What has the death of Jesus effected in
the unseen, so as to make it possible for God to forgive us?" And here is
his answer: "Nothing whatever, and nothing was ever needed." For
"Jesus was the child of Joseph and Mary;" and "there is no such
thing as punishment, no far-off Judgment Day, no great white throne, and no
Judge external to ourselves."'
This is both consistent and intelligible. For no one whose mind is not blinded
and warped by religious superstitions would tolerate the figment that the death
of a Jewish mechanic's son could influence in any way our present relations with
God, or our future destiny. The infidel stands by human reason. The Christian's
faith rests upon a divine revelation. The one position is effectually as
unassailable as the other. But
"With too much knowledge for the sceptic's side, With too much weakness for
the stoic's pride,"
the Christianised sceptic "hangs between."
In quoting this Christmas sermon I have no wish to attack an individual. The
preacher is an exceptionally distinguished representative of a large and daily
growing class of accredited religious teachers who are using Christian pulpits
to spread infidelity broadcast throughout the land. And therefore it is that I
have cited him, my object being to strengthen the appeal I make to all spiritual
Christians that, in face of the rapidly developing apostasy of the day, it
behoves them to shun the prevailing habit of speaking of the Lord of Glory with
a familiarity unwarranted by Scripture, and thus in their every mention of Him
to give proof that they are of the number of those who own Him as LORD, and who
"think upon His Name."
Having regard to the solemn declaration of unfeigned belief in Holy Scripture,
required of every candidate for ordination, to the language of the Creed which a
clergyman repeats continually, and to the doctrinal standards to which he
publicly assents when entering on a benefice, sermons such as that above quoted
seem to indicate that clerical morality is different from that which governs the
conduct of honourable men in the City and the Clubs. Half a century ago such a
sermon would have raised a wild storm of indignation; today it passes without
notice.
CHAPTER FIVE
EARLY in my Christian life I enjoyed the friendship of an eminent theologian of
the time, and I once appealed to him to explain on what ground we could draw a
clear line of demarcation between the Epistles of the New Testament and the
writings of the Fathers. He was usually patient in dealing with my difficulties,
and I expected an elaborate reply. But after a pause he asked me abruptly
whether I had ever studied Patristic theology; and on my replying in the
negative, he added, "If you will read some of the best of their works, I
will then discuss the matter with you" I took up the task he set me, and as
the result I had no need to trouble him further in the matter. "The best of
their works" are indeed a priceless heritage, but a gulf separates them
from the inspired Scriptures.
Bearing in mind that within two years of the Exodus "the Jewish
Church" apostatised from God, we need not wonder that "the Christian
Church" had seriously lapsed from the faith within two centuries of
Pentecost. And when the hard discipline of persecution ceased, the downward
lapse became more marked. Indeed the errors we deplore in the fully developed
apostasy of Christendom are the fruit of seed that is scattered freely
throughout the Patristic writings. And when we read "The Fathers" in
the light of the Epistles we cannot fail to see to what an extent the
"Jesus" of "the Christian religion" was already supplanting
the living Lord of the pristine faith.' And the "Christian
religionist" who regards the Patristic Church as a Court of Appeal in all
questions of faith and practice, will find sufficient warrant for naming the
Lord Jesus Christ in the fashion common with Christians today. But Christians
whose only standard is the Holy Scriptures will all welcome a warning and a
protest against a practice which was unknown in New Testament times.
(Note - An illustrative instance will explain my meaning. The Gospels record
that at the Last Supper "Jesus took bread"; but in 1 Cor. xi. it is
"The Lord Jesus took bread." And mark the Apostle's statement that he
received this formula from the Lord Himself (1 Cor. xi. 23).)
"The modern familiar use of the simple name 'Jesus' has little authority in
Apostolic usage." If we substitute no for "little" in this
sentence, it will accurately express the truth. For an examination of the
various passages where "the simple name" occurs in the Epistles will
make it plain that the "modern use" has no Apostolic authority
whatever. And a glance at the Concordance will indicate that the task is by no
means a laborious one. For though in the Gospels the occurrences of "the
simple name" are to be reckoned by hundreds, the passages where it is used
in the Epistles scarcely exceed a score.
And here another striking fact claims notice. In the Gospels the narratival
mention of Christ is always by the name of His humiliation, but never in the
Epistles. How is this to be accounted for? If the chronological order of the New
Testament writings were different, and a gap of many years separated the
Epistles from the Gospels, an obvious explanation of it would suggest itself;
but in view of the known facts, we must seek a solution of another kind. And if
the following solution be rejected, the enigma must remain inexplicable. With
all who worship the Man of Bethlehem and Nazareth as being the Son of God, it
must surely seem incredible that God should not have made provision for our
possessing an accurate record of the Lord's earthly mission and ministry. And
the sort of guidance we attribute to what is called "Providence "
would be wholly inadequate to account for the Gospels. Full proof of this would
need a lengthy treatise, but even a few sentences may be sufficient here. Let
us, for example, compare the First and Fourth Gospels. Their authors had shared
the same teaching; and their close companionship throughout the years of the
Ministry had continued after the Resurrection. How then can we account for the
extraordinary differences which characterise their Gospels - differences to
which the Rationalist points in proof that they are hopelessly conflicting.
Matthew opens with the Lord's pedigree as son of Abraham and son of David - the
recipients of Israel's great covenants of blessing and of earthly sovereignty -
and then proceeds to give particulars respecting His birth and infancy. And in
keeping with this opening, the burden of the Book from first to last is the
presentation of Christ as Israel's Messiah. In the strongest possible contrast
with this, the Fourth Gospel opens by declaring that "In the beginning the
Word was with God, and the Word was God." And instead of an account of the
Saviour's birth, we read, "The Word was made flesh and dwelt among
us." And the only express reference to the Lord's special mission to Israel
is found in the words, "He came unto His own and His own received Him
not."
It was not that the Apostle John lacked knowledge of the details given us in the
first two chapters of Matthew - on the contrary, he must have had far fuller
knowledge of them than any of the other Evangelists. For with him it was that
after the Crucifixion the mother of our Lord found a home. From her lips he must
have heard, again and again repeated, all that a mother's heart would remember
of the sacred birth in Bethlehem, and the no less sacred life at Nazareth. But
not a single word of it all does this Gospel give us. Yet again: though he was
the only one of the Evangelists who witnessed the Transfiguration, his is the
only Gospel that contains no record of it. Nor are these the only instances of a
silence that is so extraordinary, but these will suffice for our present
purpose. What explanation can be given of them?
"Put yourself in his place" is a challenge we may fairly offer to
those who scoff at inspiration. Could any man possessed of such special
knowledge on a subject of such overwhelming interest, write a treatise relating
to it without the slightest mention of extremely important details peculiarly
his own? An inspiration so limited that it means no more than human reason
working under providential guidance, is here of no avail. Unless the Gospels are
"God-breathed" in the fullest sense, they present psychological
phenomena that have no parallel in all the literature of the world, whether
modern or ancient.
To the intelligent and thoughtful Christian the divine authorship of Scripture
is as plainly manifest as is that human authorship which all men recognise.
Therefore it is that each of the Four Gospels gives us a portrait of Christ so
distinctively characteristic. Therefore is it that, as the beloved disciple was
commissioned to write of Him as the Son of God, the Divine Spirit held him
strictly to that golden path, and checked all his natural craving to tell of the
Lord's human birth in Bethlehem, and of the vision of the Holy Mount, which
manifested His glory as the Son of Man.
Here then is the solution of the problem. It is God Himself who has given us the
records of that "Coming" which was the burden of all the Scriptures,
from the Eden promise of the woman's seed down to the latest word of the last of
the Hebrew prophets. And therefore it is that throughout the Gospels the Son of
God is always "Jesus," for it is His Father who has given us the story
of His life.
To foretell His coming, He had used the lips of prophets to utter God-breathed
words, as they were moved by the Holy Ghost. And He guided the pens of Apostles
and Evangelists to frame, in words as God-breathed, the records of His Advent.
But some one will exclaim, Are not the Epistles also inspired of God? Most
assuredly they are. But their purpose is wholly different; and in no respect
does this appear more plainly than by the way the several writers of them name
the Lord. Not that the change is due to the idiosyncrasies of the human authors.
Indeed it is nowhere so noticeable as in the writings of the Apostle John. For
though in his Gospel "the simple name" is used narratively more than
two hundred times, never once does he use it thus in his Epistles. In each of
its four occurrences it is used with a doctrinal meaning, and in conjunction
with a title connoting Deity. No one can fail to see that there is something
here of exceptional interest, and worthy of our closest attention.
And the more we investigate it, the plainer will the proof appear, that while
throughout the Gospels the Lord is habitually called "Jesus,"
"the simple name" is never used in the Epistles, save with some
peculiar significance either of doctrine or of emphasis. The Apostle Peter never
uses it even once. And in no single instance does "James the Lord's
brother" ever name the Lord without some title of Deity. And in the
passages already quoted from the First Epistle of John, "the simple
name" is used with an obvious significance. To speak of believing that
Christ is the Christ, or that the Son of God is Son of God, would be quite
unmeaning. But to believe that Jesus - the Man of Nazareth, "the crucified
Jew," is the Christ, the Son of God - this is a faith that overcomes the
world, for it betokens a new birth by the Spirit of God.'
Chapter Six
IN considering the use of the simple name in the Acts of the
Apostles, the place and purpose of that book in the sacred Canon claims
attention. And this is a matter of far-reaching importance. For no one who
understands the ground-plan of the Bible can miss what Pusey calls its
"hidden harmony." And knowledge of this will give complete immunity
from the attacks of the sham Higher Criticism.
The Bible has both an outward and a spiritual aspect. Christ is the burden of
its esoteric teaching, while on its outward side it relates mainly to the
covenant people. A brief preface of eleven chapters contains all that it gives
us about the world's history for thousands of years before the call of Abraham;
and the story of Abraham's descendants monopolises the rest of the Old
Testament. For it is only in relation to Israel that Gentile Powers ever come
upon the scene.
To Abraham was given the promise of earthly blessing, and to David the promise
of earthly sovereignty; the Mosaic revelation being the unfolding and the
complement of the Abrahamic covenant. And the New Testament opens with the birth
of Christ as son of David and Son of Abraham - of Him with whom rests the
fulfilment of all the Old Testament promises and covenants. The Gospels tell the
story of His life and death - His Ministry, and His rejection by the favoured
people. And the Acts gives the records of a dispensation during which that
people, notwithstanding their apostasy and guilt, received the offer of Divine
pardon on the ground of grace. We are apt to misread the book if we fail to
recognise the special mission and ministry to the children of Israel, which were
committed to the Apostle Paul. And because of that commission it was that he
gave his testimony first to the Jews, in every place he visited, not excepting
Rome, although a Christian Church had already been gathered there. And this
explains why it is that the Book of Acts ends abruptly by recording the
rejection of the gospel by the Jews of Rome, the last two verses containing all
that is told us of his two years' ministry in the Imperial city. It explains
also why not a word is added about his ministry after his release from his first
imprisonment. For the book is not the early history of Christianity, but the
history, divinely given, of the Pentecostal dispensation, during which Israel
enjoyed a priority in the proclamation of the gospel.
And when we recognise both the purpose and the historical character of Acts, we
are prepared to find that here, as in the Gospels, the Lord is named in the
narrative by His personal name. And yet such occurrences are limited to seven.
The first is in the opening sentence of the book. The second is in verse 14, and
the third is found in the concluding words of verse 16, which clearly belong to
the parenthesis that ends with the 19th verse. The supposition is grotesque,
that when the Apostle Peter mentioned Judas, in addressing his brethren a few
days after the Crucifixion, he needed to explain that the Judas to whom he
referred was the traitor of that name!
The other passages in Acts where the Lord is narratively named as
"Jesus" will be found in chapters vii. 55; viii. 35; xviii. 18; and
xxviii. 23. Chapter ix. 27 should perhaps be included in the list. And if we
follow the Revisers, we shall.add the 20th verse of that chapter, and also
chapter xviii. 25. It is noteworthy that the Lord was thus named by the heavenly
messengers who appeared to the disciples after the Ascension (i. 11). Far more
noteworthy is it, that in every instance where the record contains words spoken
by unbelievers, the Lord is only "Jesus."
The narrative of Stephen's martyrdom has a unique interest. "Being full of
the Holy Ghost, he looked up stedfastly into heaven, and saw the glory of God,
and Jesus standing on the right hand of God, and said, Behold, I see the heavens
opened, and the Son of Man standing on the right hand of God." Here only is
the title "Son of Man" used of the Lord by human lips. "And why
here?" Dean Alford asks; and the following is the answer he gives:
"Stephen, full of the Holy Ghost, and speaking not of himself at all, but
entirely by the utterance of the Spirit, repeats the very words in which (the
Lord) Jesus Himself, before this same Council, had foretold His
glorification" (Matt. xxvi. 64). Christians are apt to treat this phrase as
merely an orientalism for "man." But, as the Book of Daniel teaches
us, it was a Divine title. And that the Jews so regarded it is clear; for the
Lord's assumption of it when before the Council led - them all to exclaim,
"Art thou then the Son of God?" (Luke xxii. 69, 70). It is never used
in Scripture in connection with the Incarnation. As man He was born in
Bethlehem; but as Son of Man He "descended out of heaven."
One word more: that Stephen saw "Jesus" at the right hand of God, the
divine narrative records. But "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit" was his
dying prayer. "0 Jesus" would presumably be the language of not a few
of our hymn writers.
Chapter Seven
In considering the use of "the simple name" in the passages in
Acts where the Apostles Peter and Paul are reported to have used it, admits of
the same explanation as its use in the Epistle to the Hebrews. Their purpose was
to emphasise the Lord's humiliation and rejection. Very clearly does this appear
in chapter xiii. 33 - the only occasion when the Lord was thus named by the
Apostle Paul. The intelligent reader can see that if, in addressing Jews, he had
used any other name or title, his words would have lost all their special force.
And this is equally clear in Peter's use of it, as recorded in chapter ii. 32,
36, and v. 30. Following the R.V. reading, we exclude four texts which in the
A.V. seem to fall within the same category, namely, chapters iii. 13, 26; and
iv. 27, 30. For the holy Servant of Jehovah is one of the Lord's Old Testament
titles, connoting Deity. And it is a striking fact that this aspect of the
ministry of Christ characterises the Gospel of Mark, with which the Apostle
Peter is believed to have been in a special way associated.
Though the use of the name by the Lord Himself has no bearing on the subject
here in view, we must not pass it by unnoticed. The name of "Jesus the
Crucified" it was that fired the hate of Paul the persecutor, and that was
the name he heard from the blinding glory of the heavenly vision by which he was
arrested on his evil mission to Damascus: "I am Jesus whom thou persecutest."
And from that hour the truth was burned into his soul that they had
"crucified the Lord of Glory!
IN the thirteen Epistles which are acknowledged to be the writings of the
Apostle of the Gentiles, there are but eight passages in which "the simple
name" occurs; and eight times he uses it in the Epistle to the Hebrews.
This branch of our inquiry is of exceptional interest, for the Apostle Paul's
use of the name is pregnant with doctrinal teaching. Hebrews is written in the
language of Old Testament typology; and to appreciate the significance of
"the simple name" in that Epistle we need to understand this.
But to introduce a treatise on that great subject here would be impracticable '
and the following sentence from the passage already quoted from Ellicott's
Commentary must suffice: "In the Epistle to the Hebrews, where, in
accordance with one main purpose of the Epistle, this usage is least rare (see
chaps. ii. 9; vi. 20; vii. 22; xii. 2, 24; xiii. 12), it will be found that in
all cases either special stress is laid on the lowly and suffering humanity of
the Lord, or the historic facts of His Ministry on earth are referred to."
What has been already said of the use of the name in the First Epistle of John1
applies equally to such passages as Romans iii. 26. And in chapter viii. 11, the
only other passage in Romans where "the simple name" occurs, its
significance is equally plain. "If the Spirit of Him who raised up Jesus
from the dead dwell in you, He that raised up (the) Christ from the dead shall
also quicken your mortal bodies." To quote Ellicott's Commentary again,
"the 'raising up of Jesus is the historical resurrection of Jesus of
Nazareth: the 'raising up of the Christ' points to the mysterious effect of that
resurrection on those for whom He is the Mediator."
A similar explanation suggests itself in regard to the use of the name in the
fourth chapter of 2 Corinthians. The intelligent reader will not fail to mark
the emphatic contrast between "Jesus" and "the Lord Jesus"
in the passage. "The life of Jesus" would mean the life which the Lord
lived on earth, whereas the vital principle which He shares with His people
would, in Scriptural language, be "the life of Christ."
The Revisers' reading of Galatians vi. 17 exemplifies the interest and
importance of the present inquiry. Their devotion to the three oldest MSS. - the
layman's usual blunder of giving undue weight to "direct" evidence -
has led them to destroy the meaning of the text. "The stigmata of
Jesus" would mean that (as in the case of the fabled miracle of St. Francis
of Assisi) the Apostle's body was marked by wound-prints identical with those
which the Lord bore after His crucifixion. Is it credible that the Apostle could
have made such a statement? The meaning of the words he actually used is not
doubtful. It was a practice with slave-owners to brand their slaves, and the
scars of his wounds received in his ministry for Christ were to him "the
stigmata of the Lord Jesus "-the brandmarks by which his divine Master
claimed him as His devoted slave. In the Apostle Paul's six later Epistles,
written during his Roman imprisonments, the name occurs but twice; and apart
altogether from our present purpose the passages are full of interest. I refer
to Ephesians iv. 21 and Philippians ii. 10.
To the Ephesians he wrote, "Ye did not so learn Christ; if so be that ye
heard Him and were taught in Him, even as truth is in Jesus." "The
truth as it is in Jesus" is a popular but unscriptural synonym for
"Evangelical truth." In Scriptural language that would be called
"the truth of Christ." But the exhortation here relates not to
doctrine but to practice. It is that the Christian life should be the reflex of
the truth as manifested by the life of our divine Lord in the days of His
humiliation. Hence the words "as truth is in Jesus." Some would tell
us that in Phiippians ii. 10, "Jesus" is the name of the Lord's
exaltation. And in proof of this they appeal to the Angel's words in announcing
it as the divinely chosen name of His humiliation. But this is quite untenable,
and it destroys not only the force, but the meaning, of the passage.
"Jesus" was His birth name; for even in His humilation He was the
Saviour. But here we have the name which was given to Him in His glory, and
because of His death upon the Cross. And it is not in relation to His work as
the Saviour of sinners that the Cross is mentioned here; but, incidentally as
the crowning display of the world's contemptuous rejection of Him, and chiefly
and emphatically as the climax of His humiliation. And it is because of His
self-surrender, His self-abasement, if we may venture to use the word, that God
has highly exalted Him and given Him "the name that is above every
name."
And what can that name be but "the awful name" Jehovah.' But it is in
the name of Jesus that every knee shall bow. It is a matter of course that all
shall fall prostrate in the presence of that glory before which even the beloved
disciple fell as dead. But, as this passage tells us, their homage shall be
rendered with the realisation that the God whom they are worshipping is the
"Jesus" whose deity the unbeliever now denies, or acknowledges only
with feigned words in the recital of a creed. It is not, as the Christianised
rationalists profanely teach, that He has supplanted Israel's "cruel
Jehovah," but that He is the manifestation of the God of the Old Testament.
And being "the effulgence of His glory and the express image of His
substance," He is the only God the world shall ever know.
And every tongue shall then confess that He is Lord, a confession by which the
disciple declared himself in the days of His humiliation, and which ought to
characterise the Christian in this time of His absence. Hence we read in the
tenth chapter of Romans that, in contrast with "the righteousness of the
law," which consisted in doing, "the righteousness which is of faith
speaketh on this wise. . . . that if thou shalt confess with thy mouth Jesus as
Lord, and shalt believe in thine heart that God raised Him from the dead, thou
shalt be saved."
And this again reminds us of yet another striking passage of similar import. In
1 Corinthians xii. 3 the Apostle "gives us to understand "-how few
there are who do understand it !-" that no one can say 'Lord Jesus' save by
the Holy Spirit." Any one, of course, can pronounce the words-a parrot
could be taught to do so-but do we ever hear them from the lips of the
unconverted? With them He is "Jesus" or "the Saviour" or
"Jesus Christ" (for that is too often used as merely "a double
name") but never "the Lord Jesus," or "the Lord Jesus
Christ."
The fourth chapter of 1 Thessalonians claims special notice in this connection.
"Words are the index of thoughts," Dean Alford writes, "and where
an unusual construction is found, it points to some special reason in the mind
of the writer for using it." But in the closing verses of this chapter our
translators give us what they suppose the Apostle meant, and not what he
actually wrote. And thus they make the words of verse 14, translated "those
which sleep in Jesus," to be merely a poetical equivalent for "the
dead in Christ" of the 16th verse. The phrase "sleeping in Jesus"
is so enshrined in Christian thought that to call it unscriptural seems almost
to savour of sacrilege. And yet it robs us of the deep and important teaching of
this wonderful passage. A strictly accurate rendering of the Apostle's words
would be, "those who have been put to sleep by (or through) Jesus will God
bring with Him." And the explanation of this seemingly strange statement is
to be found in the circumstances which led the Apostle to write this letter. Who
are these sleeping ones? And what was it that caused their death? In the answer
to these questions will be found the explanation of the passage; and that answer
may be gleaned from the middle chapters of the Epistle.
We learn from Acts xvii. that very shortly after the Apostle reached Berea from
Thessalonica, the persecuting Jews drove him out, and he fled to Athens. His
stay in Athens was still more brief than in Berea; and yet before leaving for
Corinth he received tidings which raised fears lest his labour in Thessalonica
had been in vain (ch. iii. 5). Thereupon be commissioned Timothy to return at
once to Thessalonica, and Timothy's report, which reached him in Corinth, led
him to write the present Epistle. That in the few months since the Apostle had
been with them, there should have been a number of deaths in such a small
community as the Thessalonian converts, would have been strange; but it is
incredible that any deaths from natural causes should have shaken the faith of
Christians of the type described in chapter i. It is clear that what tried their
faith was not the fact of these deaths, but the manner of them, and the
circumstances in which they occurred.
And the Epistle plainly indicates that they were the result of a storm of
persecution that had burst upon them. In a word, some of their leaders had been
martyred. But had they not been told that the Lord had "all power in heaven
and on earth," and would never forsake His people? How was it then that
they were left a prey to their enemies? Either the teaching was erroneous, or
else their lost ones had fallen under divine displeasure. And so they were
sorrowing "even as others that have no hope." Accordingly they are
reminded that the Lord Jesus had Himself been killed by their common enemy (ch.
ii. 15), and that the Apostle, when with them, had warned them to expect
tribulations such as they were then suffering (ch. iii. 4). And finally he gives
them a definite message of hope, received directly from the Lord for their
comfort. This, he declares, "we are saying to you in the word of the
Lord." It is one of those specially definite revelations (like 1 Cor. xi.
23 and xv. 3) which the Apostle received in some peculiarly distinctive manner.
"The dead in Christ" of the 16th verse are the holy dead in general;
but "the sleeping ones" of verses 13 and 14 are the particular
individuals whose death they were mourning. And as it was for His name's sake
that they had suffered, the Lord speaks of them as having been put to sleep by
Himself. It is as though He said, "True, I was the cause of their death,
but yet I have not failed them. Was not I Myself put to death? And as surely as
I died and rose again they too shall rise, and God will bring them with Me at My
Coming." And the infinite tenderness and grace of this are intensified by
the fact that the message of comfort and hope is given in the name of His
humiliation - the name under which He Himself was crucified and slain! It is His
first recorded message to His suffering saints on earth, after His Ascension.
And in that same name He gave His final message - we have it on the closing page
of Holy Scripture:-" I JESUS am the bright and morning star. . . . Surely I
am coming quickly." And let us make the response which the Divine Spirit
puts into our lips, "Even so, come, Lord Jesus." He addresses His
people in the name of His humiliation, but He expects them to respond by
according Him the name of His glory.
Chapter Eight
CHAPTER VIII To complete this brief review of Scripture
passages, it remains to notice the closing book of the sacred Canon. The Gospels
are linked so closely with the Hebrew Scriptures and the people of the Covenant,
that if the Book of Acts had been lost, the transi-tion to Epistles to Gentile
communities would have seemed a strange enigma. And if the Book of Revelation
had disappeared, that enigma would have been insoluble. Indeed a mutilated Bible
such as that would have supplied some justification for the infidel's profane
sneer, that God has been thwarted in His attempts to realise His declared
purposes for earth, and so He now intends to trans-plant His people to heaven,
and to wind up the affairs of earth by a bonfire!
But the Revelation is the great stock-taking book of all the outstanding
promises of God; and in its pages all the dropped threads of history and type
and prophecy and promise, that lie scattered through-out the earlier Scriptures,
are gathered up and traced to their appointed consummation. And having regard to
the nature and solemnity of the book, the appearance of the "simple
name" in every chapter of it would afford no excuse for the familiar use of
that name so habitual to-day. As a matter of fact, however, its occurrences are
few, being limited to its use by the Lord Himself, and to certain passages where
it is employed in the following phrases
"The kingdom and patience of Jesus" (ch. i. 9, R.V.).
"The testimony of Jesus" (chaps. i. 9, RX. ; xii. 1~ xix. 10; and xx.
4.
"The faith of Jesus" (ch. xiv. 12).
"The martyrs of Jesus" (ch. xvii. 6).
No Christian will attribute these striking phrases to the caprice of the
Apostolic writer, albeit they are found nowhere else in Scripture. The character
and purpose of the Apocalypse will perhaps supply a clew to their significance.
That the present "Christian dispensation" is the climax and fulfilment
of all divine purposes of blessing to earth, is a heresy by which the Latin
Fathers prepared the way for the Romish apostasy that calls itself the
"Holy Catholic Church." This heresy has so permeated the theology of
Christendom that in the editorially added headlines to the latter portion of
Isaiah, in our English Bible, all the j udg-inents and woes are assigned to the
~Jews, and the visions of earthly blessing are treated as rhapsodies about the
spiritual triumphs of "the Church."
So far from the present dispensation being the fulfilment of the prophecies of
earthly blessing, it marks in the most definite way the postponement of their
fulfilment. God's revealed purposes for earth are connected with His earthly
people, and their realisation awaits the close of "the times of the
Gentiles," during which earthly power, transferred from Jerusalem to
Babylon twenty-five centuries ago, remains in Gentile hands. Not until "the
times of the Gentiles" have run their course will the Kingdom be
established upon earth. The Pente-costal dispensation would have led up to that
great event. But owing to Israel's obdurate apostasy, that dispensation was
interrupted. The murder of Stephen was the answer given by their accredited
leaders-the ecclesiastical Jewish government-to the inspired Apostle's
proclamation of a divine amnesty.1 Stephen was the messenger sent after the king
to say, "We will not have this man to reign over us." Then the Apostle
of the Gentiles received his commission, and through him were revealed the great
"mystery" truths of the present dispensation. Truths, that is, which
till then had remained secret; for nothing of them was disclosed in the Old
Testament Scriptures. They are the "mystery" of the reign of Grace,
which is obviously incompatible with divine government in righteousness openly
declared; the" mystery" of the Church, the body of Christ- a heavenly
relationship with a heavenly glory; and the "mystery" of that special
phase of the Lord's "Coming" which will bring the present dispensation
to a close.
And at its close the interrupted Pentecostal dis-pensation will be resumed. Its
initial stage will include the fulfilment of Joel's prophecy to which the
Apostle referred in Acts ii. 16 ff~., and its course will be marked by
persecutions more terrible than the people of God on earth have ever known.
The sacred Canon is closed, and lloiy Scripture is the Word of God for His
people upon earth to the end of time. It contains teaching, as we know, that has
proved definitely applicable to the varying circumstances of the children of
faith in ages past, and it has special messages for us to-day. Is it credible
then that it has no messages of warning and comfort for the awful days that are
yet to come? And where shall we look for such messages if not here? The visions
of the Revelation, though limited to no one age, will have a special voice for
the people of God in the coming days of unpre-cedented trial-days of suffering
and peril, when, as the Lord Himself declared, there shall be "great
tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world, no, nor ever
shall be." And with divine tenderness and grace "the elect" of
those awful days are linked with the Lord Himself by the name of His
humiliation-a name so redolent of memories of His suffering and sorrow. They are
called "the martyrs of Jesus"
-His own in a peculiar sense. And they have "the faith of Jesus "-the
faith that sustained Him on all the path that ended with the Cross. And theirs
is "the testimony of Jesus "-of Him who gave His testimony before
Pontius Pilate, when by a few qualifying words He might have won His freedom,
and enlisted the power of Imperial Rome to protect Him from His enemies. And in
keeping with all this, it is not as the Apostle of the Lord that the Seer
writes, but as "your brother and partaker with you in the tribulation and
kingdom and patience (which are) in Jesus."'
Rev. 1. 9. By the words "which are in Jesus" the Revisers try to give
the force of the untranslatable Greek preposition. (The marginal note, "Gr.
in," so frequent in the R.V., is most mis-leading: witness the fact that in
Grimm's Lexicon the statement of its many meanings and uses fills between seven
and eight columns.) Here, as in kindred passages, the en is
"characteristic." The Lord is here presented, not in His glory, but as
still suffering, because His people are suffering; and with patience waiting,
even as they are waiting. Surely it is legitimate to trace a connection between
the words of 1 Tim. vi. 13 and "the testimony of Jesus" in these
passages. The verb used in Timothy is martu'reo, and here the noun is marturia.
And surely both clauses of the sentence "the commandments of God and the
testimony of Jesus" (ch. xii. 17) must be read in the same way-" God's
commandments and Jesus' testimony." And so also "the commandments of
God and the faith of Jesus" (ch. xiv. 12), "God's commandments and
Jesus' faith."
Chapter Eleven
No one who, with open mind, has followed this in-quiry respecting the use of the
Lord's personal name in the New Testament, can resist the conclusion to which it
leads. "The modern familiar use of the simple name 'Jesus' has NO authority
in Apostolic usage." Some Christians who recognise that the common practice
is unscriptural and wrong, adopt what may be described as the compromise of
always adding "Christ" to 'the simple name." Their motive is most
praiseworthy, but we do well t. consider not merely what depth of meaning
"Jesus Christ" may have with those who use it thus, but what it means
to the vast majority of people who hear or read their words. The infidel uses it
as freely as the Christian. And even with ordinary Christians, hallowed though
it be, and redolent of holy memories, it is re-garded (like "Jesus")
as merely a personal name; and it points, not upward to the Lord of Glory on the
eternal throne, but back to "the historic Jesus." 1 Some theologians
indeed would have us believe that, even in the New Testament, "Christ"
is some-times used merely as a proper name-a figment which indicates how
entirely Gentile exegesis may be out of harmony with Jewish thought; for with
the devout Jew, as with the Hebrew Christian, it was a divine title of great
solemnity. We shall better realise its purport in Scripture if for
"Christ" we read "Messiah," and for "Jesus
Christ," "Jesus the Messiah." But it meant nothing in~Gentile
ears, and Gentile converts needed to be taught its sacred significance.
The majority of Christians who offend in this matter may plead that their error
is due to evil training or thoughtlessness; but when once atten-tion is directed
to the subject they would do well to be guided by primitive practice and the
teach-ing of Scripture. The researches of Dr. Adolf Deissmann have established
that in the Apostolic age, speaking of Christ as "the Lord" was a full
and definite acknowledgment of His Deity. "In the time of St. Paul,"
he tells us, "'Lord' was throughout the whole Eastern world a universally
understood religious conception. The Apostle's con-fession of his Master as 'our
Lord Jesus Christ' . . was at once intelligible in all the fulness of its mean-ing
to every one in the Greek Orient." And under the persecuting Emperors, as
the same writer tells us again, this confession "led to Christian
martyrdoms." If speaking of Christ as "the Lord" were fraught
with similar perils to-day, Christians could scarcely be more careful to avoid
the practice than now they seem to be!
And Dr. Deissmann's researches may enable us better to understand the narrative
of The Acts. "That God hath made this same Jesus whom ye crucified both
Lord and Christ" was the Apostle Peter's proclamation at Pentecost.
"Both Lord and Christ"; but whereas the special testimony to the Jew
was that He was the Christ, to the Gentile the emphasis rested on the truth that
He was Lord. Accordingly we read that in Jerusalem the Apostles "preached
Jesus as the Christ" (Acts v. 42, R.V.). But when, after the disciples were
driven out by the Stephen persecution, they came into contact with Gentiles,
"they preached the Lord Jesus" (Acts xi. 20). And to the Corinthians
the Apostle Paul declared with emphasis, "We preach Christ Jesus as
Lord" (2 Cor. iv. 5, R.V.). 1 The writings of the Apostle Peter exemplify
how this consideration influenced him in naming the Lord. In his First Epistle,
addressed expressly to Hebrew Christians-" the elect who are sojourners of
the Dispersion," the Lord is eight times named as "Jesus Christ";
whereas in his Second Epistle, addressed to Gentile believers-" to them who
have obtained like precious faith with us" (i.e. with us Hebrews)-that name
is never used once, save in the Apostolic formula of the opening words. And in
that same sentence the Lord is designated "Our God and Saviour Jesus
Christ," and again, "Jesus our Lord." Three times we find
"our Lord Jesus Christ," and three times "our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ."
In studying the Epistles in this connection we need to take account of the
Revised Text; for in very many occurrences of "Jesus Christ" in our
A.V. the reading of the R.V. is "Christ Jesus." And in not a few
passages where the Revisers have retained "Jesus Christ," MS.
authority is conflicting. Dean Alford's version, for example, reads
"Christ" in 2 Cor. iv. 6, and "Christ Jesus" in Phil. i. 6,
and so elsewhere. In fact the right reading is doubtful in nearly half the
passages where "Jesus Christ" occurs in our Authorised Version. The
distinction has a doctrinal significance. For "Jesus Christ" speaks to
us of the Lord as a person, whereas "Christ Jesus" is what some
writers term "the official Christ "-the Christ in His relationships
with His people.' Compare, for example, "the man Jesus Christ" in
Romans v. 15, with "baptized into Christ Jesus," 2 ~ ch. vi. 3. So
again in 2 Cor. xiii. 5, if the text adopted in both our versions be accepted,3
it must be rendered "that Jesus Christ is among you," just as in 1 Cor.
xiv. 25 the Apostle speaks of God being among them. Scripture does not speak of
a Christian being in Jesus Christ4 nor of Jesus Christ being in a Christian,
whereas "in Christ," or "in Christ Jesus," represents truth
which is as clear as it is precious.
Many Bible students might find results which would surprise them in studying the
use of the name "Jesus Christ" in the New Testament. For instance, in
all the Four Gospels it occurs only five times,8 including its use by the Lord
Himself in John xvii. 3. And it is used but seven, times in Acts, and never once
in the incidental or the narra tival fashion so common with us to-day. As
regards the Epistles, on account of the element of different readings, above
noticed, a complete analysis of the passages where it is used' would involve too
serious a digression. Suffice it then to say, first, that in the Apostolic
writings, the use of one or another of the Lord's names or titles has always
some definite significance, and it is not, as with us, due merely to euphony or
caprice. And secondly, all who believe in the divine inspiration of Holy
Scripture must recognise that even the most formal and solemn of mere human
utterances are upon a different and lower plane. And therefore in a matter such
as this it behoves us, not to copy the language of the Word of God, but to be
governed by its precepts, and by the example of those whose ways and words were
con-trolled by the Lord's personal presence and teaching.
"What would Jesus do ~"is the deplorably irreve-rent formula by which
some people would have us settle every question. Some years ago, if the
news-papers may be trusted, the servants in the house of a certain English peer,
where Socialism had found a lodgment, were encouraged to speak of their noble
master by his Christian name. But surely, even in the degradation of such a
home, the language of the servants' hail would not be, "What would George
do?" but "What would he have us to do?"
And in this matter we have not merely the example of the early saints: we have
words of definite guidance from the Lord Himself. "Ye call Me Master and
Lord, and ye do well," has been already quoted; and surely this ought to be
enough for all who either love or fear Him. But we need to be reminded also of
His words recorded in John v. 22, 23-most explicit and solemn words, bearing
directly on the question here before us. They are usually read as though they
meant no more than that we should honour not only the Father but the Son also.
But language could not be more definite and clear. The divine prerogative of
judgment has been delegated to Him in order that He, the Son, may receive the
same honour that is rendered to the Father.' His words can have no other
meaning. And every one of us must settle it with his conscience, in view of the
judgment-seat of Christ, whether this is compatible with the manner in which He
is commonly named to-day, not only in ordinary conversation, but in Christian
pulpits and Christian literature.
The fact so definitely noticed in preceding pages, that throughout the Epistles
the Lord is named occasionally as "Jesus," or "Jesus
Christ," is seized upon by many as an excuse for carelessness and
indifference in this matter. It is not for such that this appeal is intended;
and yet even such as they would do well to study the opening verses of 1
Corinthians, as illustrative of Apostolic thought and usage in this respect. I
quote from the R.V. The Apostle addresses the Corinthians as "sanctified in
Christ Jesus, called to be saints, with all that call upon the name of our Lord
Jesus Christ." Then, following the "salutation" from the Lord
Jesus Christ, he thanks God for the grace given them in Christ Jesus, "even
as the testimony of Christ was confirmed in you: so that ye come behind in no
gift; waiting for the revelation of our Lord Jesus Christ; who shall also
confirm you unto the end, that ye be unreprovable in the day of our Lord Jesus
Christ. God is faithful, through whom ye were called into the fellowship of His
Son Jesus Christ our Lord." And then the practical teaching of the Epistle
opens with an appeal to them in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. In many a
Christian book of two hundred pages that title of glory will not be found as
often as here it occurs in less than. tlvo hundred words!
This chapter may fitly close by calling attention to a precept which the Revised
Text has recovered for us: "Sanctify Christ in your heart as Lord."
Some Christians who are eager to confess Him before men are often restrained by
fear of giving offence. Here then is a mode of confessing Him which is both
effective and inoffensive. And if they accustom themselves to name Him, only and
always, with the reverence which is His due, the habitual con-fession of the
lips will help them to sanctify Him as Lord in the heart, and to own Him as Lord
in daily life.'
1 A document that has reached me since this chapter was written supplies a
striking commentary upon my words on page 58. A paper read before the Victoria
Institute by one of the, most eminent of the Irish Bishops gives the following
inswer to the question, Where is the basis of truth to be found 7- "We must
find it, not in the mere book, but in the revelation which the book contains.
All along the ages the source of power has been, not the mere letter of certain
documents, but the person-ality and influence of Jesus Christ. . . . The
wonderful character of our Lord . . . it is this which makes Jesus Christ the
most vivid personality in history or in literature."
Such thoughts as these are expressed with far more enthusiasm by Renan the
infidel. But is not this what the Apostle meant by "knowing Christ after
the flesh?" A vivid personality in history and literature may possibly be a
permanent basis for "the Christian religion," but not for the faith of
Christ. It will not bring peace to a conscience awakened to the dread realities
of sin and judgment to come. Christianity is based upon the revelation of the
Christ who lived and died, but is now enthroned in glory-a revelation which
comes to us, not in "a mere book," but in holy writings, God-breathed
by the Divine Spirit. No clear and fearless thinker can find any intelligent
compromise between this "simple faith" and sheer agnosticism.
Chapter Ten
"EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY deism," says Renan, "and a
certain kind of Protestantism, have accustomed us to think of the founder of the
Christian faith only as a great moralist, a benefactor of mankind." Such is
the "Jesus" of the rationalist - the "Jesus" of many a
"Christian" book, and of many a "Christian" pulpit. But
Rationalism is only one of "the three R's" by which Christianity is
undermined. Romanism and a certain phase of Revivalism, though opposed to
Rationalism and to one another, tend in varying degrees to produce similar
results. The authority of the Church is the labarvism of the one; sentiment is a
characteristic of them both. Under the Roman delusion we find a very great
scholar and thinker stultifying himself by the superstitions of religion, and
then appealing to some "kindly light" to lead him "amid the
encircling gloom "-a gloom due to his closing his eyes to both reason and
Revelation. And this "kindly light" leads him to worship a mythical
"mother of God," who excels even "the Man of Sorrows" in
tenderness and pity. Archbishop Whately taught that the errors of Rome have
their roots in human nature. And the same tendency that leads the Roman Catholic
to create a mythical Virgin Mary, leads the Protestant to impersonate her
womanly qualities in the mythical "Jesus" of certain popular books of
piety and some of our popular hymns.
Hymnology is a delicate subject to deal with; and yet so great is the influence
of hymns that Christians do well to give intelligent thought to what they sing.
I will not speak here of mawkish and irreverent hymns that no spiritual
Christian should tolerate; but a verse of a familiar hymn of a much less
objectionable kind may illustrate my meaning.
" Safe in the arms of Jesus,
Safe on His gentle breast,
There by His love o'ershaded,
Sweetly my soul shall rest.
Hark 'tis the voice of angels
Borne in a song to me,
Over the fields of glory,
Over the jasper sea."
Here we have the motherly arms and the gentle breast." As
for "the voice of angels," fields of glory," and "the jasper
sea "- it is all the merest sentiment. How different from "the words
and thoughts of other days, the martyr-words and thoughts . . of mighty men
"- the men who won our freedom and won back our Bible for us! How different
from the words and thoughts of the Apostles of the Lord Can any one imagine the
beloved disciple singing such words as these! He held a place of peculiar
nearness to the Lord, and at the Supper he leaned upon His breast; and yet he
fell at His feet, when he saw Him in His heavenly glory.
There are other hymns in which thoughts that ought to rise in praise expend
themselves in sentiment. And some of these might easily be raised to a high
level. The hymn beginning "Come unto Me, ye weary" may serve as an
example. It would be a really fine hymn if, from being an ode about
"Jesus," it were changed as follows into a hymn of faith and adoration
of the Lord
" Come unto Me, ye weary,
And I will give you rest."
Thy blessed voice, Lord Jesus,
That comes to hearts opprest!
It tells of benediction,
Of pardon, grace and peace;
Of joy that hath no ending,
Of love that cannot cease.
I give this merely as a specimen. Many hymns may be similarly treated.
"Come unto Me, ye wand'rers,
And I will give you light."
Thy loving voice, Lord Jesus,
That comes to cheer the night!
Our hearts were filled with sadness,
And we had lost our way;
But Thou hast brought us gladness,
And songs at break of day.
"Come unto Me, ye fainting,
And I will give you life."
Thy cheering voice, Lord Jesus,
That comes to end our strife!
The foe is stern and eager,
The fight is fierce and long;
But Thou hast made us mighty
And stronger than the strong.
"And whosoever cometh,
I will not cast him out."
Thy welcome voice, Lord Jesus,
That drives away our doubt;
That calls us - very sinners,
Unworthy though we be
Of love so free and boundless-
To come, 0 Lord, to Thee!
The exigencies of rhythm and rhyme have much to answer for in our hymnology. But without even this excuse some of our best hymns are marred by this will be found in the first stanza of that noble hymn
"For all the saints who from their labours rest,
Who Thee by faith before the world confessed,
Thy Name, 0 Jesus, be for ever blest, Hallelujah."
Even as a poem this hymn would be improved by substituting the
Christian confession, "Lord Jesus," for the unchristian "0
Jesus" in the third line. If some member of the Royal Household were to
address his Majesty as "0 George," the indignant amazement of the
Palace would not be greater than would have been caused in early days if some
Minister, in leading the prayers or praises of the Church, had addressed the
Lord of Glory as "0 Jesus" And what is to be said of "children's
hymns"? Many books for the young are a special grief. The idea prevails
that in the case of little children it is necessary to resort to what the cynic
would describe as "drivelling." God is kept in the background to check
or scare them when they are what is called "naughty"; and "
Jesus" is represented as a gentle kindly being who will befriend them when
they are "good." It is taken for granted that they would be repelled
by truth such as that which moulded the character and guided the early life of
Samuel and David, of John the Baptist and Timothy.
Was there ever such a blunder! No "goody-goody" book is so fascinating
to a child as Bunyan's great allegory. Nor will an irreverent hymn attract and
charm them like the Psalms of David. Children find no element of sadness in what
is awe-inspiring; and to them what is mawkish and familiar is more harmful even
than to persons of maturer years. If we are to "sanctify Christ in our
hearts as Lord," it is in early life that the habit can most easily be
formed. And yet in many a Christian home the babies are taught to speak of the
Lord of Glory much in the way that some children are allowed to talk about the
pet uncle of the family 1' What wonder is it if the children of Christians need
to be converted! Conversion is the turning to God of one who is consciously on a
wrong path; but a parent who "brings them up in the nurture and admonition
of the Lord," may trust the Lord to fulfil His promise that a child who is
trained in that path "will not depart from it."
But may we never call Him "Jesus" or "Jesus Christ?" The
inquiry comes from a home that is noted, not only for refinement and culture,
but for a high Christian tone. Is it not extraordinary that such people, instead
of seeking opportunities to confess Him as Lord, should wish to find occasion to
deny Him the reverence and honour which He claims from all who know Him!
These pages have already exceeded the limits originally contemplated. And yet I
cannot close without disclaiming with emphasis the intention or the wish to lay
down rules for the guidance of others in this matter. My purpose has been to
awaken an intelligent interest in the subject, and to urge upon Christians the
importance of seeking guidance from Scripture respecting it, and the importance,
too, of obeying that spiritual instinct to which the Apostle John appeals when
he says, "As for you, the anointing which ye received of Him abideth in
you, and ye need not that any one teach you." As the context indicates, it
is not that the Apostle credits the disciples with "understanding all
mysteries and all knowledge," but that he is appealing to their spiritual
instincts to make them intolerant of everything that touches the honour of the
Lord.
In the letters of William Carey, the working cobbler who became not only a
pioneer and prince among missionaries but the adviser and friend of three great
Indian Viceroys, will be found the following pregnant sentence: "A
gentleman is the next best character to a Christian, and the Christian includes
the gentleman." In the spirit of these words I would suggest that, apart
even from spiritual instincts, if well-conditioned people would follow their
natural sense of what is right and fitting, they would shrink from the
impropriety of naming the Lord Jesus Christ as though He were a dead hero or an
equal.
The character of a gentleman is not formed by the study of a "book of
manners." It is by an instinct of courtesy that our words and acts are
regulated. But if Socialism had prevailed in this land even for a generation,
and, by daily intercourse with its degraded votaries, we had forgotten that
unwritten code which Edmund Burke describes as "the unbought grace of
life," we might need not a little schooling today in the social sphere. Is
it strange then that, after so many centuries of "Christendom
religion," we should need to have our spiritual instincts quickened and
trained by close and habitual contact with Holy Scripture?
"Gird up the loins of your mind" is a precept than which none is more
needed, and none more neglected. For in the sphere of Christian truth
"slovenly-mindedness" is all too common. In no other sphere would it
be tolerated. In literature, in art, in science, accuracy and care in the
terminology of every subject is deemed essential; but in this sacred sphere,
accredited teachers display utter indifference, and ignorance of Scripture
terminology.
And "slovenly-mindedness" influences conduct. It tends to make us
forget "the fear of the Lord" and the solemnities of "the
judgment-seat of Christ." Hence it is that some from whom better things
might be expected "hold fellowship" with men who not only defame the
Lord, and pour contempt upon His Holy Word, but by falsely claiming to be His
Ministers, commit the Judas sin of betraying Him with a kiss. En these days of
apostasy it behoves us to seek the Master's approval by both testing, and
showing intolerance of, such evil men.' Not the sinners of the streets-for such
He has no stint of pity-but these sinners of the synagogue, for whom He has only
warnings of woe, and stern de-nunciation.2 The Reformation rescued for us the
doctrine of salvation by faith; but salvation by grace has been the great truth
of the evangelical revival. That truth flashed out, like an April sun, in the
writings of the Reformers; but, like an April sun, it be-came veiled again by
gathering clouds. It was soon forgotten that the grace which brings salvation
teaches the saved to "live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present
world;" and the Christian was relegated to the school of law. We have now
re-gained "the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free"; but all
the more do we need to be reminded that the distinctive Christian truth of grace
in no way abrogates the preceding revelation of a God of infinite holiness and
majesty. For not a little of the preaching and teaching of the day suggests,
that the Christ of the Gospels has supplanted "the great and terrible
God" of the Old Covenant. But the "Jesus" of that kind of
teaching is a myth. "He who was manifested in the flesh" is no other
than the God of Sinai: "our God is a consuming fire." In presence of
the Sinai glory, Moses said, "I exceedingly fear and quake"; but when
the beloved disciple beheld the glory of Him upon whose breast he leaned on the
betrayal night, he "fell at His feet as dead."
Among those who proclaim most loudly that "all Scripture is
God-breathed," how few there are to whom the first chapter of Revelation is
as really the Word of God as is "the Nicodemus sermon" of the third of
John! The Apocalypse is treated as a negligible appendix to the New Testament, a
book to be studied by people of learning and leisure. And yet there is no Book
more needed in these days of ours. And to a mind enlightened by the vision of
its opening chapter, every detail in the narratives of the humiliation has a
fuller meaning, and glows in a heavenlier light.
Here is the record of that vision: "I saw . . . One like unto the Son of
Man . . . His head and His hairs were white like wool, as white as snow; and His
eyes were as a flame of fire; and His feet like unto fine brass, as if they
burned in a furnace; and His voice as the sound of many waters. And He had in
His right hand seven stars; and out of His mouth. went a sharp two-edged sword:
and His countenance was as the sun shineth in his strength. And when I saw Him,
I fell at His feet as dead. And He laid His right hand upon me, saying unto me,
Fear not; I am the first and the last: I am He that liveth, and I was dead; and
behold, I am alive for evermore, Amen; and I have the keys of hell and of
death."
In presence of that awful glory a peace that depends on "the religion of
the crucifix," or on the gospel of a Jesus who is the image of man, would
vanish like mist before the sun. But "the gospel of the glory of Christ who
is the image of God" brings a peace that is eternal and can never fail. Not
that we would give up one jot or tittle of the record of His earthly life; but
that our faith rests upon our risen and glorified and coming Lord; and reaching
back from the Christ of the glory to the Christ of the humiliation, the "It
is finished" of the Cross is crowned by the "Fear not" of the
Throne.
And if the "eyes of our heart " be filled with the vision of His
glory, instead of asking "May we never call Him Jesus?" it will be our
deepest longing and unceasing aim to "serve Him with reverence and godly
fear,"' and thus to win a place in that book of remembrance written before
Him for them that fear Him, and that think npon His Name.
Missing Appendix?