The All-Sufficiency of Christ by Charles Henry Mackintosh
The All-Sufficiency of Christ by Charles Henry Mackintosh
The All-Sufficiency of Christ by Charles Henry Mackintosh
of Christ
By
WHAT IS IT?
Here we have remission, or forgiveness, of sins (the word is the same in the
three passages) preached in the name of Jesus, and possessed by those who
believed that preaching. A proclamation was sent to the Ephesians and
Colossians, as belonging to the "all nations," telling them of forgiveness of
sins, in the name of Jesus. They believed this proclamation, and entered on
the possession of the forgiveness of sins. Was this presumption on their
part? or would it have been piety and humility to doubt the forgiveness of
sins? True, they had been great sinners—"dead in trespasses and sins,"
"children of wrath," "aliens and foreigners," "enemies by wicked works."
Some of them had doubtless bowed the knee to Diana. They had lived in
gross idolatry and all manner of wickedness. But then, "forgiveness of sins"
had been preached to them in the name of Jesus. Was this preaching true,
or was it not? Was it for them, or was it not? Was it all a dream—a
shadow—a myth? Did it mean nothing? Was there nothing sure, nothing
certain, nothing solid about it?
These are plain questions, demanding a plain answer from those who assert
that no one can know for certain that his sins are forgiven. If, indeed, no one
can know it now, then how could any one have known it in apostolic times?
If it could be known in the first century, then why not in the nineteenth?
"David describeth the blessedness of the man unto whom God imputeth
righteousness without works, saying, Blessed are they whose iniquities are
forgiven, and whose sins are covered. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord
will not impute sin." (Rom. iv. 6-8.) Hezekiah could say, "Thou hast cast all
my sins behind Thy back." (Isaiah xxxviii. 17.) The Lord Jesus said to one, in
His day, "Son, be of good cheer; thy sins be forgiven thee." (Matt. ix. 2.)
Thus at all times forgiveness of sins was known with all the certainty which
the word of God could give. Any one of the cases aduced above is sufficient
to overthrow the teaching of those who assert that no one can know that his
sins are forgiven. If I find from Scripture that any one ever knew this
marvelously precious blessing, that is quite enough for me. Now, when I
open my Bible, I find persons who had been guilty of all manner of sins
brought to the knowledge of forgiveness; and I therefore argue that it is
possible for the very vilest sinner to know now, with divine certainty, that
his sins are forgiven. Was it presumption in Abraham, in David, in
Hezekiah, in the palsied man, and in numbers besides, to believe in the
forgiveness of sins? Would it have been a sign of humility and true piety in
them to doubt? It will perhaps be argued that these were all special and
extraordinary cases. Well, it matters not, so far as our present question is
concerned, whether they were ordinary or extraordinary. One thing is
plain—they completely disprove the assertion that no one can know that his
sins are forgiven. The word of God teaches me that numbers, subject to like
passions, like infirmities, like failures, and like sins as the writer and
reader, were brought to know and rejoice in the full forgiveness of sins; and
hence those who maintain that no one can be sure on this momentous
question have no scriptural foundation for their opinion.
But is it true that the cases recorded in the Holy Scriptures are so special
and extraordinary as not to afford any precedent for us? By no means. If any
case could be so regarded, it is surely that of Abraham, and yet of him we
read that "it was not written for his sake alone, that righteousness was
imputed to him: but for us also, to whom it shall be imputed, if we believe
on Him that raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead; who was delivered for
our offences, and was raised again for our justification." (Rom. iv. 23-25.)
Abraham "believed in the Lord; and He counted it to him for righteousness."
(Gen. xv. 6.) And the Holy Ghost declares that righteousness shall be
imputed to us also if we believe,—"Be it known unto you therefore, men and
brethren, that through this man is preached unto you the forgiveness of
sins; and by Him all that believe are justified from all things from which ye
could not be justified by the law of Moses" (Acts xiii. 38, 39.); "To Him give
all the prophets witness, that through His name whosoever believeth in Him
shall receive remission of sins." (Acts x. 43.)
Now, the question is, What did the apostles Peter and Paul mean when they
so unreservedly preached the forgiveness of sins to those who listened to
them? Did they really mean to convey to their hearers the idea that no one
could be sure that he possessed this forgiveness of sins? When in the
synagogue of Antioch, Paul said to his audience, "We declare unto you glad
tidings," did he entertain the notion that no one could be sure that his sins
were forgiven? How could the gospel ever be called "glad tidings" if its only
effect were to leave the soul in doubt and anxiety? If indeed it be true that
no one can enjoy the assurance of pardon, then the whole style of apostolic
preaching should be reversed. We might then expect to find Paul saying to
his hearers, Be it known unto you therefore, men and brethren, that no one
can ever know, in this life, whether his sins are forgiven or not. Is there
aught like this in the entire range of apostolic preaching and teaching? Do
not the apostles everywhere set forth, in the fullest and clearest manner,
remission of sins as the necessary result of believing in a crucified and risen
Saviour? Is there the most remote hint of that which is so much insisted
upon by some modern teachers, namely, that it is a dangerous presumption
to believe in the full forgiveness of all our sins, and that it argues a pious
and humble frame of soul to live in perpetual doubt? Is there no possibility
of ever enjoying, in this world, the comfortable certainty of our eternal
security in Christ? Can we not rely upon God's word, or commit our souls to
the sacrifice of Christ? Can it be possible that the only effect of God's glad
tidings is to leave the soul in hopeless perplexity? Christ has put away sin;
but I cannot know it! God has spoken; but I cannot be sure! The Holy Ghost
has come down; but I cannot rely upon His testimony! It is piety and
humility to doubt God's word, to dishonor the atonement of Christ, and to
refuse the faith of the heart to the record of the Holy Ghost! Alas! alas! if this
is the gospel, then adieu to peace and joy in believing. If this is Christianity,
then in vain has "the dayspring from on high visited us, to give the
knowledge of salvation through the remission of our sins." (Luke i.) If no one
can have this "knowledge of salvation," then to what end has it been given?
And let my reader bear in mind that the question before us is not whether a
person may not deceive himself and others. This would be at once conceded.
Thousands, alas! have deceived themselves, and thousands more have
deceived others; but is that any reason why I cannot possess the absolute
certainty that what God has said is true, and that the work of Christ has
availed to put away all my sins?
And, let me ask, is it not due to God's faithful Word and Christ's finished
work, that the soul confiding therein should enjoy the fullest assurance?
True, it is by faith that any one can so confide, and this faith is wrought in
the heart by the Holy Ghost. But all this in nowise affects our present
question. What I desire is, that my reader should rise from the study of this
paper with a full and firm conviction that it is possible for him to possess
the present assurance that he is as safe as Christ can make him. If any
sinner ever enjoyed this assurance, then why may not my reader now enjoy
it? Is Christ's work finished? Is God's Word true? Yes, verily. Then, if I
simply trust therein, I am pardoned, justified and accepted. All my sins were
laid on Jesus when He was nailed to the cursed tree. Jehovah made them all
meet on Him. He bore them and put them away, and now He is up in heaven
without them. This is enough for me. If the One who stood charged with all
my guilt is now at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens, then,
clearly, there is nothing against me. All that divine justice had against me
was laid on the Sin-bearer, and He endured the wrath of a sin-hating God
that I might be freely and forever pardoned and accepted in a risen and
glorified Saviour.
These are glad tidings. Does my reader believe them? Say, beloved, dost
thou heartily believe in a dead and risen Christ? Hast thou come to Him as
a lost sinner, and put thy heart's full confidence in Him? Does thou believe
that "He died for our sins according to the Scripture, and that He was buried
and rose again the third day according to the Scriptures"? If so, thou art
saved, justified, accepted, complete in Christ. True, thou art, in thyself, a
poor feeble creature, having an evil nature to contend with every moment;
but Christ is thy life, and He is thy wisdom, and thy righteousness, thy
sanctification, thy redemption, thy all. He ever lives for thee up in heaven.
He died to make thee clean. He lives to keep thee clean. Thou art made as
clean as His death can make thee, and thou art kept as clean as His life can
keep thee. He made Himself responsible for thee. God sees thee to be what
Christ has made thee to be. He sees thee in Christ and as Christ. Wherefore,
then, I pray thee, tread no more those gloomy corridors of legalism, pietism,
and false theology, which have resounded for ages with the sighs and groans
of poor sin-burdened and misguided souls; but, seeing the fullness of thy
portion, and the completeness of thy standing in a risen and victorious
Christ, rejoice in Him all thy days upon earth, and live in the hope of being
with Him forever in His own mansions of heavenly glory.
Having thus sought to establish the fact that it is possible for one to know,
upon divine authority, that his sins are forgiven, we shall now, in
dependence upon the teaching of the Spirit of God, proceed to consider the
subject of forgiveness of sins, as unfolded in the Word, and, in doing so, we
shall present it under the three following heads; namely,
Thirdly, the style in which He forgives sins. There is value in this threefold
presentation, as it gives clearness, fullness and precision to our
apprehension of the subject as a whole. The more clearly we understand the
ground of divine forgiveness, the more shall we appreciate the extent, and
admire the style thereof.
May God the Spirit now be our guide while we ponder, for a little,
THE GROUND OF DIVINE FORGIVENESS
It is of the very last importance that the anxious reader should understand
this cardinal point. It is quite impossible that a divinely convicted
conscience can enjoy true repose until the ground of forgiveness is clearly
seen. There may be certain vague thoughts respecting the mercy and
goodness of God, His readiness to receive sinners and pardon their sins, His
unwillingness to enter the place of judgment, and His promptness to enter
the place of mercy,—all this there may be; but until the convicted soul is led
to see how God can be just and yet the Justifier—how He can be a just God
and yet a Saviour-God—how He has been glorified with respect to sin—how
all the divine attributes have been harmonized, it must be a stranger to the
peace of God which truly passeth all understanding. A conscience on which
the light of divine truth has poured itself in convicting power, feels and owns
that sin can never enter into the presence of God—that sin, wherever it is
found, can only be met by the just judgment of a sin-hating God. Hence,
until the divine method of dealing with sin is understood and believed, there
must be intense anxiety. Sin is a reality, God's holiness is a reality,
conscience is a reality, judgment to come is a reality. All these things must
be looked at and duly considered. Justice must be satisfied; conscience,
purged; Satan, silenced. How is all this to be done? Only by the cross of
Jesus.
Here, then, we have the true ground of divine forgiveness. The precious
atonement of Christ forms the base of that platform on which a just God
and a justified sinner meet in sweet communion. In that atonement I see sin
condemned, justice satisfied, the law magnified, the sinner saved, the
adversary confounded. Creation never exhibited aught like this. There, the
creature enjoyed the manifestation of power, wisdom and goodness; but the
fairest fields of the old creation presented nothing like "grace reigning
through righteousness"—nothing like a glorious combination of
"righteousness and peace, mercy and truth." It was reserved for Calvary to
display all this. There, that grand and all-important question, How can God
be just and the Justifier? received a glorious reply. The death of Christ
furnishes the answer. A just God dealt with sin at the cross, in order that a
justifying God might deal with the sinner on the new and everlasting ground
of resurrection. God could not tolerate or pass over a single jot or tittle of
sin; but He could put it away. He has condemned sin. He has poured out
His righteous wrath upon sin, in order that He might pour the everlasting
beams of His favor upon the believing sinner.
Precious record! may every anxious sinner read it with the eye of faith. It is a
record which must impart settled peace to the heart. God has been satisfied
as to sin. This is enough for me. Here my guilty, troubled conscience finds
sweet repose. I have seen my sins rising like a dark mountain before me,
threatening me with eternal wrath; but the blood of Jesus has blotted them
all out from God's view. They are gone, and gone forever—sunk as lead into
the mighty waters of divine forgetfulness, and I am free—as free as the One
who was nailed to the cross for my sins, but who is now on the throne
without them.
Such, then, is the ground of divine forgiveness. What a solid ground! Who or
what can touch it? Justice has owned it. The troubled conscience may rest
in it. Satan must acknowledge it. God has revealed Himself as a Justifier,
and faith walks in the light and power of that revelation. Nothing can be
simpler, nothing clearer, nothing more satisfactory. If God reveals Himself as
a Justifier, then I am justified through faith in the revelation. When the
moral glories of the cross shine upon the sinner, he sees and knows,
believes and owns, that the One who has judged his sins in death, has
justified him in resurrection.
Anxious reader, see, I beseech thee, that thou apprehendest the true ground
of the forgiveness of sins. There is no use in our proceeding to consider the
extent and style until thy poor troubled conscience has been led to rest
upon the imperishable ground of forgiveness. Let me reason with thee. What
is to hinder thee, from this very moment, resting on the foundation of
accomplished atonement? Say, does thy conscience need something more to
satisfy it than that which satisfied the inflexible justice of God? Is not the
ground on which God reveals Himself as a righteous Justifier sufficiently
strong for thee to stand upon as a justified sinner? What sayest thou,
friend? Art thou satisfied? Is Christ sufficient for thee? Art thou still
searching for something in thyself, thy ways, thy works, thy thoughts, thy
feelings? If so, give up the search as utterly vain. Thou wilt never find any
thing. And even though thou couldst find something, it would only be an
encumbrance, a loss, a hindrance. Christ is sufficient for God, let Him be
sufficient for thee likewise. Then—but not until then—wilt thou be truly
happy.
May God the Holy Ghost cause thee to rest, this moment, upon an all-
sufficient sacrifice, as the only ground of divine forgiveness, so that thou
mayest be able to enter, with real intelligence and interest, upon the
examination of the second point in our subject, namely,—
THE EXTENT OF DIVINE FORGIVENESS
Very many are perplexed as to this. They do not see the fullness of the
atonement; they do not grasp the emancipating fact of its application to all
their sins; they do not enter into the full force of those lines, which perhaps
they often sing,—
They seem to be under the impression that Christ only bore some of their
sins, namely, their sins up to the time of their conversion. They are troubled
as to the question of their daily sins, as if these were to be disposed of upon
a different ground from their past sins. Thus they are at times much cast
down and sorely beset. Nor could it be otherwise with them until they see
that in the death of Christ, provision was made for the full forgiveness of
ALL their sins. True it is that the child of God who commits sin has to go to
his Father and confess that sin. But what does the apostle say in reference
to one so confessing his sins? "God is faithful and just to forgive us our sins
and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness." Now, why does he say,
"Faithful and just"? Why does he not say, "Gracious and merciful"? Because
he speaks on the ground that the entire question of sin was gone into and
settled by the death of Christ, who is now up in heaven as the righteous
Advocate. On no other ground could God be faithful and just in connection
with the forgiveness of sins. The sins of the believer have all been atoned for
on the cross. If one had been left out, he should be eternally lost, inasmuch
as it is impossible that a single sin, however trifling, can ever enter the
precincts of the sanctuary of God. And, further, let me add, if all the
believer's sins were not atoned for in the death of Christ, then, neither by
confession, nor by prayer, nor by fasting, nor by any other means, could
they ever be forgiven. The death of Christ is the only ground on which God
could, in faithfulness and justice, forgive sin; and we know He must either
do it in faithfulness and justice, or not at all. This is to His praise and our
exceeding comfort.
But I can imagine my reader exclaiming, "What! do you mean to say that my
future sins were all atoned for?" To this I reply that all our sins were future
when Christ bore them on the accursed tree. The sins of all believers, for the
last eighteen centuries, were future when Christ died for them. Hence, if the
idea of future sins presents a difficulty in reference to what we may commit,
if left here, it presents just as great a difficulty in reference to what we have
committed. But, in truth, all this perplexity about future sins arises very
much from the habit of looking at the cross from our own point of view
instead of God's—looking at it from earth instead of from heaven. Scripture
never speaks of future sins. Past, present, and future are only human and
earthly. All is an eternal now with God. All our sins were before the eye of
infinite Justice at the cross, and all were laid on the head of Jesus, the Sin-
bearer, who, by His death, laid the eternal foundation of forgiveness of sins,
in order that the believer, at any moment of his life, at any point in his
history, at any stage of his career, from the time at which the hallowed
tidings of the gospel fall upon the ear of faith, until the moment in which he
steps into the glory, may be able to say, with clearness and decision,
without reserve, misgiving, or hesitation, "Thou hast cast all my sins behind
Thy back." To say this, is but faith's response to God's own declaration,
when He says, "Their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more;"
"Jehovah hath made to meet on Him the iniquities of us all."
Let us, by way of illustration, take the case of the thief on the cross. When
he, as a convicted sinner, cast the eye of faith upon that blessed One who
hung beside him, was he not, then and there, rendered fit to enter the
paradise of God? Was he not furnished with a divine title to pass from the
cross of a malefactor into the presence of God? Unquestionably. Did he need
anything more to be done for him, in him or with him, in order to fit him for
heaven? By no means. Well, then, suppose that, instead of passing into
heaven, he had been permitted to come down from the cross,—suppose the
nails had been extracted and he allowed to go at liberty; he would have had
sin in his nature, and, having sin in his nature, he would have been liable to
commit sin, in thought, word, and deed. Now, could he ever lose his title, his
fitness, his meetness? Surely not. His title was divine and everlasting. All his
sins were borne by Jesus. That which had fitted him to enter heaven at the
first, had fitted him once and forever, so that if he had remained on earth for
fifty years, he would, at any moment, have been equally fit to enter heaven.
My reader will bear in mind that we are, at present, occupied with the one
point, namely, the extent of divine forgiveness. There are other points of
great importance which might be looked at in connection, such as the
believer's oneness with Christ, his adoption into the family of God, the
indwelling of the Holy Ghost, all of which necessarily imply the full
forgiveness of sins; but we must confine ourselves to our immediate theme,
and having endeavored to set forth the ground and the extent, we shall close
with a few words on
THE STYLE OF DIVINE FORGIVENESS
We are all conscious of how much depends upon the style of an action.
Indeed, there is frequently far more power in the style than in the
substance. How often have we heard such words as these, "Yes, I own he did
me a favor; but then he did it in such a way as to take away all the good of
it." Now, the Lord has His style of doing things, blessed be His name. He not
only does great things, but He does them in such a way as to convince us
that His heart is in the doing of them. Not only is the substance of His acts
good, but the style most charming.
Let us have a sample or two. Look, for instance, at Christ's touching word to
Simon the Pharisee, in Luke vii. "When they had nothing to pay, he frankly
forgave them both." Now, so far as the mere matter of the debt was
concerned, the result would have been the same whatever style had been
adopted. But what heart does not perceive the moral power of the word
"frankly"? Who would part with it? Who could bear to see the substance
stripped of its style? The creditor might forgive with a murmur about the
amount. That murmur would, in the judgment of a sensitive heart, rob the
act of all its charms. On the other hand, the frankness of the style
enhances, beyond expression, the value of the substance.
Again, look, for a moment, at that familiar but ever fruitful section of
inspiration, Luke xv. Each of the parables illustrates the power and beauty
of style. When the man finds his sheep, what does he do? Does he complain
of all the trouble, and commence to drive the sheep home before him? Ah,
no! this would never do. What then? "He layeth it on His shoulders." How?
Complaining of the weight or the trouble? Nay; but "rejoicing." Here we have
the lovely style. He showed that He was glad to get His sheep back again.
The sheep would have been safe on the shoulder however it had been placed
there; but who would part with the word "rejoicing"? Who would bear to see
the substance of the action stripped of its charming style?
So, also, in the case of the woman and her lost piece of silver. "She lights a
candle, sweeps the house, and seeks." How? With dullness, weariness and
indifference? By no means; but "diligently," like one whose whole heart was
in her work. It was quite manifest that she really wanted to find the lost
piece of silver. Her style proved this.
Lastly, mark the style of the father in receiving the poor returning prodigal.
"When he was yet a great way off, his father saw him, and had compassion,
and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him." He does not send out a
servant to tell the erring one to turn aside into one of the out-offices, or
betake himself to the kitchen, or even to confine himself to his own room.
No; he himself runs. He, as it were, lays aside his paternal dignity, in order
to give expression to his fatherly affection. He is not satisfied with merely
receiving the wanderer back: he must prove that his whole heart is in the
reception; and this he does, not merely by the substance of the act, but by
his style of doing it.
Beloved reader, thou seest that the ground is as stable as the very throne of
God itself, that the extent is infinite, and the style all that the heart could
possibly desire. Say, therefore, art thou satisfied as to the great question of
the forgiveness of sins? Can you any longer doubt God's willingness to
forgive, when He has set before you, in such a way, the ground on which,
the extent to which, and the style in which, He forgives sin? Can you
hesitate when He actually
He stands with open arms to receive thee. He points thee to the cross, where
His own hand laid the foundation of forgiveness, and assures thee that all is
done, and beseeches thee to rest now, henceforth and for evermore, in that
which He has wrought for you. May the blessed Spirit lead thee to see these
things in all their clearness and fullness, so that thou mayest not only
believe in the forgiveness of sins, but believe also that all thy sins are
frankly and forever forgiven.
C. H. M.
REGENERATION: WHAT IS IT?
There are few subjects which have given rise to more difficulty and
perplexity than that of regeneration, or the new birth. Very many who are
themselves the subjects of this new birth are at a loss to know what it is,
and filled with doubt as to whether they have ever really experienced it.
Many there are who, were they to clothe their desires in words, would say,
"Oh, that I knew for certain that I had passed from death unto life. If only I
were sure that I was born again, I should be happy indeed." Thus they are
harassed with doubts and fears from day to day and from year to year.
Sometimes they are full of hope that the great change has passed upon
them; but, anon, something springs up within them which leads them to
think their former hopes were a delusion. Judging from feeling and
experience rather than from the plain teaching of the word of God, they are,
of necessity, plunged into uncertainty and confusion as to the whole matter.
Let us, then, proceed to consider this question. What is regeneration? How
is it produced? What are its results?
As to our true state by nature, the word of God presents it as one of total
and irrecoverable ruin. Let us adduce the proofs. "And God saw that the
wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the
thoughts of his heart was only evil continually." (Gen. vi. 5.) The words
"every," "only," and "continually," set aside every idea of a redeeming feature
in man's condition before God. Again, "The Lord looked down from heaven
upon the children of men, to see if there were any that did understand, and
seek God. They are all gone aside, they are all together become filthy: there
is none that doeth good; no, not one." (Ps. xiv. 2, 3.) Here, again, the
expressions "all," "none," "no, not one," preclude the idea of a single
redeeming quality in man's condition, as judged in the presence of God.
Having thus drawn a proof from Moses and one from the Psalms, let us take
one or two from the prophets. "Why should ye be stricken any more? Ye will
revolt more and more: the whole head is sick, and the whole heart faint.
From the sole of the foot even unto the head there is no soundness in it." (Is.
i. 5, 6.) "The voice said, 'Cry.' And he said, 'What shall I cry?' All flesh is
grass, and all the goodliness thereof is as the flower of the field." (Isa. xl. 6.)
"The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can
know it?" (Jer. xvii. 9.)
The above will suffice from the Old Testament. Let us now turn to the New.
"Jesus did not commit Himself unto them, because He knew all, and needed
not that any should testify of man: for He knew what was in man." (John ii.
24, 25.) "That which is born of the flesh is flesh." (John iii. 6.) Read, also,
Romans iii. 9-19. "Because the carnal mind is enmity against God: for it is
not subject to the law of God; neither, indeed, can be." (Rom. viii. 7.) "Having
no hope, and without God in the world." (Eph. ii. 12.) These quotations
might be multiplied, but there is no need. Sufficient proof has been adduced
to show forth the true condition of nature. It is "lost," "guilty," "alienated,"
"without strength," "evil only," "evil continually."
How, then, we may lawfully inquire, can that which is spoken of in such a
way ever be changed or improved? "Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or
the leopard his spots?" "That which is crooked cannot be made straight."
The fact is, the more closely we examine the word of God, the more we shall
see that it is not the divine method to improve a fallen, ruined thing, but to
bring in something entirely new. It is precisely thus in reference to man's
natural condition,—God is not seeking to improve it. The gospel does not
propose, as its object, to better man's nature, but to give him a new one. It
seeks not to put a new piece upon an old garment, but to impart a new
garment altogether. The law looked for something in man, but never got it.
Ordinances were given, but man used them to shut out God. The gospel, on
the contrary, shows us Christ magnifying the law and making it honorable;
it shows Him dying on the cross, and nailing ordinances thereto; it shows
Him rising from the tomb, and taking His seat as a Conqueror, at the right
hand of the Majesty in the heavens; and, finally, it declares that all who
believe in His name are partakers of His own life, and are one with Him who
is risen. (See, carefully, the following passages: John xx. 31; Acts xiii. 39;
Rom. vi. 4-11; Eph. ii. 1-6; iii. 13-18; Col. ii. 10-15.)
It is of the very last importance to be clear and sound as to this. If I am led
to believe that regeneration is a certain change in my old nature, and that
this change is gradual in its operation, then, as a necessary consequence, I
shall be filled with continual anxiety and apprehension, doubt and fear,
depression and gloom, when I discover, as I surely shall, that nature is
nature, and will be nought else but nature to the end. No influence or
operation of the Holy Ghost can ever make the flesh spiritual. "That which is
born of the flesh is flesh," and can never be aught else but "flesh"; and "all
flesh is as grass,"—as withered grass. The flesh is presented in Scripture not
as a thing to be improved, but as a thing which God counts as "dead," and
which we are called to "mortify,"—subdue and deny, in all its thoughts and
ways. In the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ we see the end of everything
pertaining to our old nature. "They that are Christ's have crucified the flesh
with the affections and lusts." (Gal. v. 24.) He does not say, They that are
Christ's are improving, or trying to improve, the flesh. No; but they "have
crucified it." It is utterly unimprovable. How can they do this? By the energy
of the Holy Ghost, acting not on the old nature, but in the new, and
enabling them to keep the old nature where the cross has put it, namely, in
the place of death. God expects nothing from the flesh; neither should we.
He looks upon it as dead; so should we. He has put it out of sight, and we
should keep it so. The flesh should not be allowed to show itself. God does
not own it. It has no existence before Him. True, it is in us, but God gives us
the precious privilege of viewing and treating it as dead. His word to us is,
"Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive
unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord." (Rom. vi. 11.)
This is an immense relief to the heart that has struggled for years in the
hopeless business of trying to improve nature. It is an immense relief,
moreover, to the conscience which has been seeking a foundation for its
peace in the gradual improvement of a totally unimprovable thing. Finally, it
is an immense relief to any soul that may, for years, have been earnestly
breathing after holiness, but has looked upon holiness as consisting in the
improvement of that which hates holiness and loves sin. To each and all of
such it is infinitely precious and important to understand the real nature of
regeneration. No one who has not experienced it can conceive the intensity
of anguish and the bitterness of the disappointment which a soul feels, who,
vainly expecting some improvement in nature, finds, after years of
struggling, that nature is nature still—ever the same. And just in proportion
to the anguish and disappointment will be the joy of discovering that God is
not looking for any improvement in nature,—that He sees it as dead, and us
as alive in Christ,—one with Him, and accepted in Him, forever. To be led
into a clear and full apprehension of this is divine emancipation to the
conscience and true elevation for the whole moral being.
Let us, then, see clearly what regeneration is. It is a new birth,—the
imparting of a new life,—the implantation of a new nature,—the formation of
a new man. The old nature remains in all its distinctness, and the new
nature is introduced in all its distinctness. This new nature has its own
habits, its own desires, its own tendencies, its own affections. All these are
spiritual, heavenly, divine. Its aspirations are all upward. It is ever breathing
after the heavenly source from which it has emanated. As in nature water
always finds its own level, so in grace the new—the divine—nature always
tends toward its own proper source. Thus regeneration is to the soul what
the birth of Isaac was to the household of Abraham (Gen. xxi.). Ishmael
remained the same Ishmael, but Isaac was introduced; so the old nature
remains the same, but the new is introduced. "That which is born of the
Spirit is spirit": it partakes of the nature of its source. A child partakes of
the nature of its parents, and the believer is made "a partaker of the divine
nature." (2 Peter i. 4.) "Of His own will begat He us." (James i. 18.)
In a word, then, regeneration is God's own work, from first to last. God is
the Operator; man is the happy, privileged subject. His co-operation is not
sought in a work which must ever bear the impress of one almighty hand.
God was alone in creation, alone in redemption, and He must be alone in
the mysterious and glorious work of regeneration.
If my reader will turn to the third chapter of John's gospel, he will find, in
our Lord's interview with Nicodemus, much precious instruction in reference
to the mode in which regeneration is produced. Nicodemus held a very high
place in what would be termed the religious world. He was "a man of the
Pharisees," "a ruler of the Jews," "a master of Israel." He could hardly have
occupied a more elevated or influential position. But yet, it is very evident
that this highly privileged man was ill at ease. Despite all his religious
advantages, his heart felt a restless craving after something which neither
his Pharisaism, nor yet the entire system of Judaism could supply. It is
quite possible he might not have been able to define what he wanted; but he
wanted something, else he never would have come to Jesus by night. It was
evident that the Father was drawing him, by a resistless though most gentle
hand, to the Son; and the way He took of drawing him was by producing a
sense of need which nothing around him could satisfy. This is a very
common case. Some are drawn to Jesus by a deep sense of guilt, some by a
deep sense of need. Nicodemus, obviously, belongs to the latter class. His
position was such as to preclude the idea of anything like gross immorality;
and hence it would not, in his case, be so much guilt on his conscience as a
void in his heart. But it comes to the same in the end: the guilty conscience
and the craving heart must both be brought to Jesus, for He alone can
perfectly meet both the one and the other. He can remove, by His precious
sacrifice, every stain from the conscience; and He can fill up, by His peerless
Person, every blank in the heart. The conscience which has been purged by
the blood of Jesus is perfectly clean, and the heart which is filled with the
Person of Jesus is perfectly satisfied.
However, Nicodemus had, like many beside, to unlearn a great deal ere he
could really grasp the knowledge of Jesus. He had to lay aside a cumbrous
mass of religious machinery ere he could apprehend the divine simplicity of
God's plan of salvation. He had to descend from the lofty heights of
Rabbinical learning and traditionary religion, and learn the alphabet of the
gospel in the school of Christ. This was very humiliating to "a man of the
Pharisees,"—"a ruler of the Jews,"—"a master of Israel." There is nothing of
which man is so tenacious as his religion and his learning; and, in the case
of Nicodemus, it must have sounded passing strange upon his ear when "a
teacher come from God" declared to him, "Verily, verily, I say unto thee,
Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God." Being by
birth a Jew, and, as such, entitled to all the privileges of a son of Abraham,
it must have involved him in strange perplexity to be told that he must be
born again,—that he must be the subject of a new birth, in order to see the
kingdom of God. This was a total setting aside of all his privileges and
distinctions. It called him down at once from the very highest to the very
"lowest step of the ladder." A Pharisee, a ruler, a master, was not one whit
nearer to, or fitter for, this heavenly kingdom, than the most disreputable of
the children of men. This was deeply humbling. If he could carry all his
advantages and distinctions with him, so as to have them placed to his
credit in this new kingdom, it would be something. This would secure for
him a position in the kingdom of God far above that of a harlot or a
publican. But then, to be told that he must be born again left him nothing to
glory in. This, I repeat, was deeply humbling to a learned, religious, and
influential man.
But it was puzzling as well as humbling. "Nicodemus saith unto Him, 'How
can a man be born when he is old? Can he enter the second time into his
mother's womb, and be born?'" Surely not. There would be no more gained
by a second natural birth than by a first. If a natural man could enter ten
thousand times into his mother's womb and be born, he would be nought
but a natural man after all, for "that which is born of the flesh is flesh." Do
what you will with flesh,—with nature,—and you cannot alter or improve it.
Nothing could change flesh into spirit. You may exalt it to the rank of a
Pharisee, a ruler of the Jews, a master of Israel,—and you could hardly
make it higher,—but it will be flesh notwithstanding. If this were more
generally and clearly apprehended, it would prove the saving of fruitless
labor to hundreds. Flesh is of no value whatever. In itself it is but withered
grass; and as to its most pious endeavors, its religious advantages and
attainments, its works of righteousness, they have been pronounced by the
pen of inspiration to be as "filthy rags." (Isaiah lxiv. 6.)
But let us see the mode in which our blessed Lord replies to the "how?" of
Nicodemus. It is peculiarly interesting. Jesus answered, "Verily, verily, I say
unto thee, Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter
into the kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that
which is born of the Spirit is spirit. Marvel not that I said unto thee, 'Ye
must be born again.' The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the
sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so
is every one that is born of the Spirit." (John iii. 5-8.) Here we are distinctly
taught that regeneration, or the new birth, is produced by "water and the
Spirit." A man must be born of water and of the Spirit ere he can see the
kingdom of God, or enter into its profound and heavenly mysteries. The
keenest mortal vision cannot "see" the kingdom of God, nor the most
gigantic human intellect "enter" into the deep secrets thereof. "The natural
man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; for they are foolishness
unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually
discerned." (1 Cor. ii. 14.) "Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit,
he cannot enter the kingdom of God."
It may be, however, that many are at a loss to know what is meant by being
"born of water." Certainly the expression has been made the ground of very
much discussion and controversy. It is only by comparing scripture with
scripture that we can ascertain the real sense of any particular passage. It is
a special mercy for the unlettered Christian—the humble student of the
inspired volume—that he need not travel outside the covers of that volume
in order to interpret any passage contained therein.
What, then, is the meaning of being "born of water"? We must reply to this
question by quoting two or three passages from the Word. In the opening of
John's Gospel we read, "He came unto His own, and His own received Him
not. But as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the
sons of God, even to them that believe on His name: which were born, not of
blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God." (John i.
11-13.) From this passage we learn that every one who believes on the name
of the Lord Jesus Christ is born again,—born of God. This is the plain sense
of the passage. All who, by the power of God the Holy Ghost, believe on God
the Son, are born of God the Father. The source of the testimony is divine;
the object of the testimony is divine; the power of receiving the testimony is
divine; the entire work of regeneration is divine. Hence, instead of being
occupied with myself, and inquiring, like Nicodemus, "How can I be born
again?" I have simply to cast myself, by faith, on Jesus; and thus I am born
again. All who put their trust in Christ have gotten a new life—are
regenerated.
Again, "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 unto life." (John v. 24.) "Verily, verily, I
say unto you, He that believeth on Me hath everlasting life." (John vi. 47.)
"But these are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son
of God; and that, believing, ye might have life through His name." (John xx.
31.) All these passages go to prove that the only way in which we can get
this new and everlasting life is by simply receiving the record concerning
Christ. All who believe that record, have this new, this eternal life. Mark, it
is not those who merely say they believe, but those who actually do believe,
according to the sense of the word in the foregoing passages. There is life-
giving power in the Christ whom the Word reveals, and in the Word which
reveals Him. "Verily, verily, I say unto you, The hour is coming, and now is,
when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God; and they that hear
shall live." And then, lest ignorance should marvel or skepticism sneer at the
idea of dead souls hearing, it is added, "Marvel not at this: for the hour is
coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall hear His voice, and shall
come forth: they that have done good, unto the resurrection of life; and they
that have done evil, unto the resurrection of judgment." (John v. 25, 28, 29.)
The Lord Christ can make dead souls, as well as dead bodies, hear His
quickening voice. It is by His mighty voice that life can be communicated to
either body or soul. If the infidel or the skeptic reasons and objects, it is
simply because he makes his own vain mind the standard of what ought to
be, and thus entirely shuts out God. This is the climax of folly.
But the reader may feel disposed to inquire, What has all this to do with the
word "water," in John iii. 5? It has to do with it, inasmuch as it shows that
the new birth is produced, the new life communicated, by the voice of
Christ,—which is really the word of God, as we read in the first chapter of
James, "Of His own will begat He us with the word of truth." (ver. 18.) So
also in 1 Peter, "Being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of
incorruptible, by the word of God, which liveth and abideth forever." (Pet. i.
23.) In both these passages the Word is expressly set forth as the
instrument by which the new birth is produced. James declares that we are
begotten "by the Word of truth"; and Peter declares that we are "born again
by the word of God." If, then, our Lord speaks of being "born of water," it is
obvious that He represents the Word under the significant figure of
"water,"—a figure which "a master of Israel" might have understood, had he
only studied aright Ezekiel xxxvi. 25-27.
From all these quotations we learn that the word of God is the grand
instrument of which the Holy Ghost makes use in calling dead souls into
life. This truth is confirmed, in a peculiarly interesting manner, by our
Lord's conversation with Nicodemus; for, instead of replying to the repeated
inquiry, "How can these things be?" He sets this "master of Israel" down to
learn the simple lesson taught by "the brazen serpent." The bitten Israelite of
old was to be healed by simply looking at the serpent of brass on the pole:
the dead sinner now is to get life by simply looking at Jesus on the cross
and Jesus on the throne. The Israelite was not told to look at his wound,
though it was the sense of his wound that made him look: the dead sinner is
not told to look at his sins, though it is the sense of his sins that will make
him look. One look at the serpent healed the Israelite: one look of faith at
Jesus, who hung on the cross of Calvary, quickens the dead sinner. The
former had not to look a second time to be healed: the latter has not to look
a second time to get life. It was not the way he looked, but the object he
looked at, that healed the Israelite: it is not the way he looks, but the object
he looks at, that saves the sinner: "Look unto ME, and be ye saved, all the
ends of the earth."
Such was the precious lesson which Nicodemus was called to learn, such
the reply to his "how?" If a man begins to reason about the new birth, he
must be confounded; but if he believes in Jesus, he is born again. Man's
reason can never understand the new birth; but the word of God produces
it. Many are astray as to this. They are occupied with the process of
regeneration, instead of the Word which regenerates. Thus they are
perplexed and confounded. They are looking at self instead of at Christ; and
as there is an inseparable connection between the object at which we look
and the effect of looking at it, we can easily see what must be the effect of
looking in upon one's self. What could an Israelite have gained by looking at
his wound? Nothing. What did he gain by looking at the serpent? Health.
What does a sinner gain by looking at himself? Nothing. What does he gain
by looking at Jesus? "Everlasting life."
III. We come now to consider, in the third and last place, the results of
regeneration,—a point of the deepest interest. Who can estimate aright the
glorious results of being a child of God? Who can unfold those affections
which belong to that high and hallowed relationship in which the soul is
placed by being born again? Who can fully explain that precious fellowship
which the child of God is privileged to enjoy with his heavenly Father?
"Behold, what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we
should be called the sons of God: therefore the world knoweth us not,
because it knew Him not. Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth
not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when He shall appear,
we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is. And every man that hath
this hope in Him purifieth himself, even as He is pure." (1 John iii. 1-3.) "For
as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God. For ye
have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear; but we have received
the Spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father. The Spirit itself
beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God: and if
children, then heirs; heirs of God and joint-heirs with Christ; if so be that
we suffer with Him, that we may be also glorified together." (Rom. viii. 14-
17.)
Take the case of the very vilest sinner, who up to this moment has been
living a life of gross wickedness. Let that person receive into his heart the
pure gospel of God,—let him heartily believe "that Christ died for our sins
according to the Scriptures; and that He was buried, and that He rose again
the third day according to the Scriptures"—and he there, then and thus
becomes a child of God, a thoroughly saved, perfectly justified, and divinely
accepted person. In receiving into his heart the simple record concerning
Christ, he has received new life. Christ is the truth and the life; and when
we receive the truth we receive Christ, and when we receive Christ we
receive life,—"he that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life." (John iii.
36.) When does he get this life? The very moment he believes,—"believing ye
might have life through His name." (John xx. 31.) The truth concerning
Christ is the seed of eternal life, and when that truth is believed, life is
communicated.
If I think of God as a judge, and myself as a sinner, I need the blood of the
cross to bring me into His presence, in the way of righteousness. I must fully
understand that every claim which God, the righteous Judge, had upon me,
a guilty sinner, has been divinely answered and eternally settled by "the
precious blood of Christ." This gives my soul peace. I see that, through that
blood, God can be "just and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus."
(Rom. iii. 29.) I learn that in the cross God has been glorified about my
sins—yea, that the whole question of sin was fully gone into and perfectly
settled between God and Christ amid the deep and awful solitudes of
Calvary. Thus my load is taken off, my weight removed, my guilt canceled: I
can breathe freely; I have perfect peace; there is literally nothing against me;
I am as free as the blood of Christ can make me. The Judge has declared
Himself satisfied as to sin by raising the sinner's Surety from the dead, and
placing Him at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens.
But, then, there comes another thing of immense value. I not only see
myself as a guilty sinner provided with a way of access to God as a righteous
Judge, but I see God, in pursuance of His eternal counsels of electing love,
begetting me through the Word of truth, making me His child, adopting me
into His family, and setting me before Him in such a way as that I can enjoy
communion with Him as my Father in the midst of all the tender
endearments of the divine family circle. This is obviously another phase of
the believer's position and character. It is no longer a question of his coming
to God in the full and settled consciousness that every just claim has been
met—this in itself is ineffably precious to every sin-burdened heart—but
there is far more than this: God is my Father and I am His child. He has a
Father's heart, and I can count on the tender affections of that heart in the
midst of all my feebleness and need. He loves me, not because of what I am
enabled to do, but because I am His child.
Look at yonder tottering babe, the object of ceaseless care and solicitude,
wholly unable to promote his father's interests in any one way, yet so loved
by the father that he would not exchange him for ten thousand worlds; and
if it be thus with an earthly father, what must it be with our heavenly
Father? He loves us, not for aught that we are able to do, but because we
are His children. He has begotten us of His own will, by the Word of truth.
(James i. 18.) We could no more earn a place in the heart of the Father than
we could satisfy the claims of the righteous Judge. All is of free grace. The
Father has begotten us, and the Judge has found a ransom. (Job xxxiii. 24.)
We are debtors to grace for both the one and the other.
This is a thoroughly one-sided theology; and not only so, but its one side is
turned the wrong way—yea, it is so turned as to wear the form of an absurd
but most dangerous fatalism, which completely destroys man's
responsibility, and casts dishonor upon God's moral administration. It
sends man forth upon a wild career of reckless folly, and makes God the
author of the sinner's unbelief. This is, in good truth, to add insult to injury.
It is, first, to make God a liar, and then charge Him with being the cause of
it. It is to reject his proffered love, and blame Him for the rejection. This is,
in reality, the most daring wickedness, though based, as I have said, upon a
one-sided theology.
Now, does any one imagine that an argument so flimsy will hold good for a
moment in the presence of the king of terrors, or before the judgment-seat of
Christ? Is there a soul throughout the gloomy regions of the lost that would
ever think of charging God with being the author of its eternal perdition? Ah,
no! it is only on earth that people argue thus. Such arguments are never
breathed in hell. When men get to hell, they blame themselves. In heaven
they praise the Lamb. All who are lost will have to thank self; all who are
saved will have to thank God. It is when the impenitent soul has passed
through the narrow archway of time into the boundless ocean of eternity,
that it will enter into the full depth and power of those solemn words,
Having said thus much by way of caution to any who may be in danger of
falling under the power of the above line of argument, I shall proceed to
unfold a little further the results of regeneration, as seen in the matter of the
discipline of the Father's house.
As the children of God, we are admitted to all the privileges of His house;
and in point of fact the discipline of the house is as much a privilege as
anything else. It is on the ground of the relationship in which God has set
us that He acts in discipline towards us. A father disciplines his children
because they are his. If I see a strange child doing wrong, I am not called
upon to chasten him. I am not in the relationship of a father to him, and as
a consequence I neither know the affections nor the responsibilities of that
relationship. I must be in a relationship in order to know the affections
which belong to it. Now, as our Father, God, in His great grace and
faithfulness, looks after us in all our ways, He will not suffer aught upon us
or about us which would be unworthy of Him and subversive of our real
peace and blessedness. "Furthermore, we have had fathers of our flesh
which corrected us, and we gave them reverence: shall we not much rather
be in subjection unto the Father of spirits, and live? For they verily for a few
days chastened us after their own pleasure; but He for our profit, that we
might be partakers of His holiness." (Heb. xii. 9, 10.) Thus the discipline is a
positive privilege, inasmuch as it is a proof of our Father's care, and has for
its object our participation in the divine holiness.
But then, we must ever bear in mind that the discipline of our Father's hand
is to be interpreted in the light of our Father's countenance, and the deep
mysteries of His moral government to be contemplated through the medium
of his tender love. If we lose sight of this, we shall be sure to get into a spirit
of bondage as respects ourselves, and a spirit of judgment as respects
others, both of which are in direct opposition to the spirit of Christ. All our
Father's dealings with us are in perfect love. When He furnishes us with
bread, it is in love; and when He takes down the rod, it is in love also. "God
is love." It may frequently happen that we are at a loss to know the why and
the wherefore of some special dispensation of our Father's hand. It seems
dark and inexplicable. The mist which enwraps our spirits is so thick and
heavy as to prevent our catching the bright and cheering beams from our
Father's countenance. This is a trying moment—a solemn crisis in the soul's
history. We are in great danger of losing the sense of divine love through
inability to understand the profound secrets of divine government. Satan,
too, is sure to be busy at such a time. He will ply his fiery darts, and throw
in his dark and diabolical suggestions. Thus, between the filthy reasonings
which spring up within and the horrible suggestions which come from
without, the soul is in danger of losing its balance, and of getting away from
the precious attitude of artless repose in divine love, let the divine
government be what it may.
Thus much with reference to our own souls while under any special
visitation of the hand of God. The effect as to others is equally bad. How
often may we have detected ourselves in the habit of cherishing a spirit of
judgment in reference to a child of God whom we found in circumstances of
trial, either of "mind, body, or estate." This should be carefully guarded
against. We ought not to imagine that every visitation of the hand of God
must necessarily be on account of some special sin in the person. This
would be an entirely false principle. The dealings of God are preventive as
well as corrective.
Take a case in point. My child may be in the room with me, enjoying all the
sweet intimacies which belong to our relationship. A person enters who I
know will utter things which I do not wish my child to hear. I therefore,
without assigning any reason, tell my child to go to his room. Now, if he has
not the fullest confidence in my love, he may entertain all manner of false
notions about my act; he may reason about the why and wherefore to such
a degree as almost to question my affection. However, directly the visitor
takes his leave, I call the child into my presence and explain the whole
matter to him, and in the renewed experience of a father's love he gets rid of
the unhappy suspicions of a few dark moments.
Thus it is often with our poor hearts in the matter of the divine dealings
both with ourselves and others. We reason when we ought to repose: we
doubt when we ought to depend. Confidence in our Father's love is the true
corrective in all things.
We should ever hold fast the assurance of that changeless, infinite, and
everlasting love which has taken us up in our low and lost estate, made us
"sons of God," and will never fail us, never let us go, until we enter upon the
unbroken and eternal communion of our Father's house above. May that
love dwell more abundantly in our hearts, that so we may enter more fully
into the meaning and power of regeneration—what it is, how it is produced,
and what are its results. God grant, it for Christ's sake! Amen.
C. H. M.
IN THE FATHER'S HOUSE
To minister peace and comfort to those who, though truly converted, have
not laid hold of a full Christ, and who, as a consequence, are not enjoying
the liberty of the gospel, is the object we have in view in considering the
important and deeply-interesting subject of sanctification. We believe that
very many of those, whose spiritual welfare we desire to promote, suffer
materially from defective, or erroneous, ideas on this vital question. Indeed,
in some cases, the doctrine of sanctification is so entirely misapprehended
as to interfere with the faith of the believer's perfect justification and
acceptance before God.
Now, so far as this view of the question is concerned, we have only to say
that both Scripture and the truthful experience of all believers are entirely
against it. The Word of God never once teaches us that the Holy Spirit has
for His object the improvement, either gradual or otherwise, of our old
nature—that nature which we inherit, by natural birth, from fallen Adam.
The inspired apostle expressly declares that, "The natural man receiveth not
the things of the Spirit of God; for they are foolishness unto him: neither can
he know them, because they are spiritually discerned." (1 Cor. ii. 14.) This
one passage is clear and conclusive on the point. If "the natural man" can
neither "receive" nor "know" "the things of the Spirit of God," then how can
that "natural man" be sanctified by the Holy Ghost? Is it not plain that, to
speak of "the sanctification of our nature" is opposed to the direct teaching
of 1 Cor. ii. 14? Other passages might be adduced to prove that the design of
the Spirit's operations is not to improve or sanctify the flesh, but there is no
need to multiply quotations. An utterly ruined thing can never be sanctified.
Do what you will with it, it is ruined; and, most assuredly, the Holy Ghost
did not come down to sanctify a ruin, but to lead the ruined one to Jesus.
So far from any attempt to sanctify the flesh, we read that "The flesh lusteth
against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; and these are contrary
the one to the other." (Gal. v. 17.) Could the Holy Ghost be represented as
carrying on a warfare with that which He is gradually improving and
sanctifying? Would not the conflict cease so soon as the process of
improvement had reached its climax? But does the believer's conflict ever
cease so long as he is in the body?
But, ah! these things furnish a sorry foundation for the soul's peace. They
are not Christ; and until we see that our standing before God is in Christ,
there cannot be settled peace. The soul that has really got hold of Christ is
desirous indeed of holiness; but if intelligent of what Christ is to him, he has
done with all thoughts about sanctified nature. He has found his all in
Christ, and the paramount desire of his heart is to grow into His likeness.
This is true, practical sanctification.
Again, in Acts xxvi. 18, the converted Gentiles are spoken of as "receiving
forgiveness of sins and an inheritance among them which are sanctified by
faith." Here, faith is the instrument by which we are said to be sanctified,
because it connects us with Christ. The very moment the sinner believes on
the Lord Jesus Christ he becomes linked to Him. He is made one with Him,
complete in Him, accepted in Him. This is true sanctification and
justification. It is not a process. It is not a gradual work. It is not
progressive. The word is very explicit. It says, "them which are sanctified by
faith which is in me." It does not say, "which shall be sanctified," or, "which
are being sanctified." If such were the doctrine it would have been so stated.
In this passage, it is worthy of notice, that nothing is said of "the flesh." Our
fallen, corrupt nature is always treated as a hopelessly ruined thing. It has
been weighed in the balance and found wanting. It has been measured by a
divine rule and found short. It has been tried by a perfect plummet and
proved crooked. God has set if aside. Its "end has come before him." He has
condemned it and put it to death. (Rom. viii. 3.) Our old man is crucified,
dead, and buried. (Rom. vi. 8.) Are we, then, to imagine for a moment, that
God the Holy Ghost came down from heaven for the purpose of exhuming a
condemned, crucified, and buried thing, so that He might sanctify it? The
idea has only to be named, to be abandoned forever by every one who bows
to the authority of Scripture. The more closely we study the Law, the
Prophets, the Psalms, and the entire New Testament, the more closely we
shall see that the flesh is wholly unmendable. It is, absolutely, good for
nothing. The Spirit does not sanctify it, but he enables the believer to
mortify it. We are told to "put off the old man." This precept would never
have been delivered to us if the object of the Holy Ghost were the
sanctification of that "old man."
And, oh! what sweet relief to the suffering one who has been seeking for
satisfaction or rest in his own holiness to find, after years of unsuccessful
struggle, that the very thing he longs for is treasured up in Christ for him,—
his own this moment, even a complete sanctification to be enjoyed by faith!
Such an one may have been battling with his habits, his lusts, his tempers,
his passions; he has been making the most laborious efforts to subdue his
flesh and grow in inward holiness, but alas! he has failed. He finds, to his
deep sorrow, that he is not holy, and he reads that "Without holiness no
man shall see the Lord." (Heb. xii.) Not, observe, without a certain measure,
or attainment in holiness, but without the thing itself; which every Christian
has, from the moment he believes, whether he knows it or not. Perfect
sanctification is as fully included in the word "salvation" as is
"righteousness, or redemption." He did not get Christ by effort, but by faith;
and when he laid hold on Christ he received all that is in Christ. Hence, it is
by abiding in Christ he finds power for the subjugation of his lusts,
passions, tempers, habits, circumstances, and influences. He must look to
Jesus for all.
God looks on His people, and acts toward them, too, according to their
standing in Christ. He has given them this standing. He has made them
what they are. They are His workmanship. Hence, therefore, to speak of
them as half justified would be a dishonor cast upon God; and to speak of
them as half sanctified would be just the same.
This train of thought conducts us to another weighty proof drawn from the
authoritative and conclusive page of inspiration, namely, 1 Cor. vi. 11. In
the verses preceding, the apostle draws a fearful picture of fallen humanity,
and he plainly tells the Corinthian saints that they had been just like that.
"Such were some of you." This is plain dealing. There are no flattering
words—no daubing with untempered mortar—no keeping back the full truth
as to nature's total and irretrievable ruin. "Such were some of you: but ye
are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified, in the name of the
Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God."
What a striking contrast between the two sides of the apostle's "but!" On the
one side, we have all the moral degradation of man's condition; and, on the
other side, we have all the absolute perfectness of the believer's standing
before God. This, truly, is a marvellous contrast; and be it remembered that
the soul passes in a moment, from one side to the other of this "but." "Such
were some of you: but ye are," now, something quite different. The moment
they received Paul's gospel, they were "washed, sanctified, and justified."
They were fit for heaven; and, had they not been so, it would have been a
slur upon the divine workmanship.
This is divinely true. The most inexperienced believer is "clean every whit,"
not as a matter of attainment, but as the necessary result of being in Christ.
He will, no doubt, grow in the knowledge and experience of what
sanctification really is. He will enter into its practical power; its moral effects
upon his habits, thoughts, feelings, affections, and associations: in a word,
he will understand and exhibit the mighty influence of divine sanctification
upon his entire course, conduct, and character. But, then, he was as
completely sanctified, in God's view, the moment he became linked to Christ
by faith, as he will be when he comes to bask in the sunlight of the divine
presence, and reflect back the concentrated beams of glory emanating from
the throne of God and of the Lamb. He is in Christ now; and he will be in
Christ then. His sphere and his circumstances will differ. His feet shall
stand upon the golden pavement of the upper sanctuary, instead of standing
upon the arid sand of the desert. He will be in a body of glory, instead of a
body of humiliation; but as to his standing, his acceptance, his
completeness, his justification, and sanctification, all was settled the
moment he believed on the name of the only begotten Son of God—as settled
as ever it will be, because as settled as God could make it. All this seems to
flow as a necessary and unanswerable inference from 1 Cor. vi. 11.
But how is this application made, and this result reached? By the Holy
Ghost, through the written Word. Hence we read, "Sanctify them through
thy truth." (Jno. xvii.) And again, "God hath from the beginning chosen you
to salvation, through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth." (2
Thess. ii. 13.) So also, in Peter, "Elect according to the foreknowledge of God
the Father, through sanctification of the Spirit." (1 Pet. i. 2.) The Holy Ghost
carries on the believer's practical sanctification on the ground of Christ's
accomplished work; and the mode in which He does so is by applying to the
heart and conscience the truth as it is in Jesus. He unfolds the truth as to
our perfect standing before God in Christ, and, by energizing the new man
in us, He enables us to put away everything incompatible with that perfect
standing. A man who is "washed, sanctified, and justified," ought not to
indulge in any unhallowed temper, lust, or passion. He is separated to God
and should "cleanse himself from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit." It is
his holy and happy privilege to breathe after the very loftiest heights of
personal sanctity. His heart and his habits should be brought and held
under the power of that grand truth that he is perfectly "washed, sanctified,
and justified."
"Sanctify them through Thy truth; Thy Word is truth." (Jno. xvii. 17.) And
again, "The very God of peace sanctify you wholly." (1 Thess. v. 23.) In these
passages, we have the grand practical side of this question. Here we see
sanctification presented, not merely as something absolutely and eternally
true of us in Christ, but also as wrought out in us, daily and hourly, by the
Holy Ghost through the Word. Looked at from this point of view,
sanctification is, obviously, a progressive thing. I should be more advanced
in personal holiness next year than I was in this. I should, through grace, be
advancing, day by day, in practical holiness. But what, let me ask, is this?
What, but the working out in me of that which was true of me in Christ, the
very moment I believed? The basis on which the Holy Ghost carries on the
subjective work in the believer, is the objective truth of his eternal
completeness in Christ.
Again, "Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall
see the Lord." (Heb. xii. 14.) Here, is holiness presented as a thing to be
"followed after"—to be attained by earnest pursuit—a thing which every true
believer will long to cultivate.
May the Lord lead us into the power of these things. May they not dwell as
doctrines and dogmas in the region of our intellect, but enter into and abide
in the heart, as sacred and powerfully influential realities! May we know the
sanctifying power of the truth; (Jno. xvii. 17;) the sanctifying power of faith;
(Acts xxvi. 18;) the sanctifying power of the name of Jesus; (1 Cor. i. 30; vi.
11;) the sanctifying of the Holy Ghost; (1 Pet. i. 2;) the sanctifying grace of
the Father. (Jude 1.)
And, now, unto the Father, and unto the Son, and unto the Holy Ghost, be
honor and glory, might, majesty, and dominion, world without end. Amen.
C. H. M.
FINAL PERSEVERANCE:
WHAT IS IT?
But if, on the other hand, I make Christ my viewing-point, and look at the
subject from thence, I shall be sure to have a correct view, inasmuch as it
then becomes a question of Christ's perseverance, and I am quite sure that
He must persevere, and that no power of the world, the flesh, or the devil,
can ever hinder His final perseverance in the salvation of those whom He
has purchased with His own blood, seeing "He is able to save to the
uttermost them that come unto God by Him." This, surely, is final
perseverance. It matters not what the difficulty or what the hostile power
may be, "He is able to save to the uttermost." The world, with its ten
thousand snares, is against us, but "He is able." Indwelling sin, in its ten
thousand workings, is against us, but "He is able." Satan, with his ten
thousand devices, is against us, but "He is able." In a word, it is Christ's
ability, not ours; it is Christ's faithfulness, not ours; it is Christ's final
perseverance, not ours. All depends upon Him as to this weighty matter. He
has purchased His sheep, and surely He will keep them to the best of His
ability; and, seeing that "all power is given unto Him in heaven and on
earth," His sheep must be perfectly and forever safe. If aught could touch
the life of the feeblest lamb in all the flock of Christ, He could not be said to
have "all power."
Here, then, most assuredly, we have final perseverance; and that, moreover,
not merely the perseverance of the saints, but of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Ghost. Yes, dear friend, this is the way we would have you
view the matter. It is the final perseverance of the Holy Trinity. It is the
perseverance of the Holy Ghost, in opening the ears of the sheep. It is the
perseverance of the Son, in receiving all whose ears are thus opened. And,
finally, it is the perseverance of the Father, in keeping, through His own
name, the blood-bought flock in the hollow of His everlasting hand. This is
plain enough. We must either admit the truth—the consolatory and
sustaining truth—of final perseverance or succumb to the blasphemous
proposition that the enemy of God and man can carry his point against the
Holy and Eternal Trinity. We see no middle ground. "Salvation is of the Lord"
from first to last. It is a free, unconditional, and everlasting salvation. It
reaches down to where the sinner is in all his guilt, ruin, and degradation,
and bears him up to where God is in all His holiness, truth, and
righteousness; and it endures forever. God the Father is its source, God the
Son is its channel, and God the Holy Ghost is the power of application and
enjoyment. It is all of God from beginning to end, from foundation to
topstone, from everlasting to everlasting. If it were not so, it would be
presumptuous folly to speak of final perseverance; but seeing it is so, it
would be presumptuous unbelief to think of aught else.
True, there are great and manifold difficulties in the way—difficulties before
and difficulties after conversion. There are many and powerful adversaries;
but that is the very reason why we must keep the question of final
perseverance entirely clear of self and all its belongings, and make it repose
simply upon God. It matters not in the least what the difficulties or the
adversaries may be, for faith can ever triumphantly inquire, "If God be for
us, who can be against us?" And again, "Who shall separate us from the love
of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or
nakedness, or peril, or sword? As it is written, 'For Thy sake, we are killed
all the day long; we are accounted as sheep for the slaughter.' Nay, in all
these things we are more than conquerors through Him that loved us. For I
am persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor
powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor
any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which
is in Christ Jesus our Lord." (Rom. viii. 35-39.)
Here, again, we have final perseverance taught, in the clearest and strongest
way possible—not any creature shall be able to separate us. Neither self, in
all its forms; nor Satan, in all his wiles and machinations; nor the world, in
all its alurements, or all its scorn, can ever separate the "us" of Romans viii.
39 from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. No doubt
persons may be deceived, and they may deceive others. Spurious cases may
arise; counterfeit conversions may take place. Persons may seem to run well
for a time, and then break down. The blossoms of spring-time may not be
followed by the mellow fruits of autumn. Such things may be; and,
moreover, true believers may fail in many things; they may stumble and
break down in their course. They may have ample cause for self-judgment
and humiliation in the practical details of life. But, allowing the widest
possible margin for all these things, the precious doctrine of final
perseverance remains unshaken—yea, untouched—upon its own divine and
eternal foundation—"I give unto my sheep eternal (not temporary or
conditional) life, and they shall never perish." And again: "Upon this rock I
will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it."
People may argue as they will, and base their arguments on cases which
have come under their notice, from time to time, in the history of professing
Christians; but, looking at the subject from a divine point of view, and
basing our convictions on the sure and unerring Word of God, we maintain
that all who belong to the "us" of Romans viii., the "sheep" of John x., and
the "church" of Matthew xvi., are as safe as Christ can make them, and this
we conceive to be the sum and substance of the doctrine of final
perseverance.
II. And now, dear friend, we shall, in the second place, briefly and pointedly
reply to the questions which you have put before us:—
1. "Will a believer be saved, no matter into what course of sin he may fall,
and die in?" A true believer will, infallibly, be saved; but we consider that
salvation includes, not only full deliverance from the future consequences of
sin, but from the present power and practice thereof. And, hence, if we find
a person living in sin, and yet talking about his assurance of salvation, we
look upon him as an antinomian, and not a saved person at all. "If we say
that we have fellowship with Him, and walk in darkness, we lie, and do not
the truth." The believer may fall, but He will be lifted up; he may be
overtaken, but he will be restored; he may wander, but he will be brought
back, because Christ is able to save to the uttermost, and not one of His
little ones shall perish.
2. "Will the Holy Spirit dwell in a heart where evil and unholy thoughts are
indulged?" The body of the believer is the temple of the Holy Ghost. (1 Cor.
vi. 19.) And this precious truth is the ground of exhortation to purity and
holiness of heart and life. We are exhorted not to grieve the Holy Spirit. To
"indulge" evil and unholy thoughts is not christian walk at all. The Christian
may be assaulted, grieved, and harassed by evil thoughts, and in such a
case he has only to look to Christ for victory. Proper christian walk is thus
expressed in John's first epistle: "We know that whosoever is born of God
sinneth not; but he that is begotten of God keepeth himself, and that wicked
one toucheth him not." (Chap. v. 18.) This is the divine side of the question.
Alas! we know there is the human side likewise; but we judge the human
side by the divine. We do not lower the divine to meet the human, but ever
aim at the divine notwithstanding the human. We should never be satisfied
with anything lower than 1 John v. 18. It is by keeping up the true standard
that we may expect to raise our moral tone. To talk of having the Spirit and
yet "indulge" in evil and unholy thoughts is, in our judgment, the ancient
Nicolaitanism (Rev. ii. 6, 15), or modern antinomianism.
3. "If it be so, then, will not people say, they may live as they like?" Well,
how does a true Christian like to live? As like Christ as possible. If one had
put this question to Paul, what would have been his answer? 2 Cor. v. 14,
15, and Phil. iii. 7-14, furnish the reply. It is to be feared that the persons
who ask such questions know but little of Christ. We can quite understand
a person getting entangled in the meshes of a one-sided theological system
and being perplexed by the conflicting dogmas of systematic divinity; but we
believe that the man who draws a plea from the freedom, sovereignty, and
eternal stability of the grace of God to continue in sin, knows nothing of
Christianity at all, has neither part nor lot in the matter, but is in a truly
awful and dangerous condition.
As to the case which you adduce, of a young man who heard a minister
state in his sermon that "once a child, always a child," and who took
occasion from that to plunge into and continue in open sin, it is only one of
thousands. We believe the minister was right in what he said, but the young
man was wrong in what he did. To judge the words of the former by the acts
of the latter is utterly false. What should I think of my son, if he were to say,
Once a son, always a son, and therefore I may proceed to smash my father's
windows and do all sorts of mischief? We judge the minister's statement by
the Word of God, and pronounce it true. We judge the young man's conduct
by the same rule, and pronounce it false. The matter is quite simple. We
have no reason to believe that the unhappy young man ever really tasted the
true grace of God; for if he had, he would love and cultivate and exhibit
holiness. The Christian has to struggle with sin; but struggling with it and
wallowing in it are two totally different ideas. In the one case we can count
on Christ's sympathy and grace; in the other, we are actually blaspheming
His name by implying that He is the minister of sin.
We consider it a very serious mistake to set about judging the truth of God
by the actings of men. All who do so must reach a false conclusion. The true
way is just to reverse the order. Get hold of God's truth first, and then judge
everything by that. Set up the divine standard, and test everything thereby.
Set up the public scales, and weigh every man's load therein. The scales
must not be regulated by each man's load, but each man's load be tested by
the scales. If ten thousand professors were to fall away, and live and die in
open sin, it would not shake our confidence in the divine doctrine of final
perseverance. The selfsame Word that proves the doctrine to be true, proves
them to be false. "They went out from us, but they were not of us; for if they
had been of us, they would no doubt have continued with us; but they went
out, that they might be manifest that they were not all of us." (1 John ii. 19.)
"The foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth
them that are His. And, let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart
from iniquity." (2 Tim. ii. 19.)
Now, how is one to meet such a difficulty as this? He really does not
understand the apostle James. He is involved in much perplexity by the
apparent contradiction between James and Paul. What is he to do? Just to
apply the principle above stated. No one passage of Scripture can possibly
contradict another. As well might we apprehend a collision between two of
the heavenly bodies while moving in their divinely appointed orbits, as that
two inspired writers could possibly clash in their statements. Well, then, I
read in Rom. iv. 5 such plain words as these: "But to him that worketh not,
but believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for
righteousness." Here I find works entirely excluded as a ground of
justification, and faith alone recognized. So also in chapter iii. I read,
"Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without (or apart
from) works of law." And, again, "Being justified by faith, we have peace with
God." Exactly similar is the teaching in the epistle to the Galatians, where
we read such plain words as these: "Knowing that a man is not justified by
works of law, but by faith of Jesus Christ, even we (Jews) have believed in
Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by faith of Christ, and not by works
of law: for by works of law shall no flesh be justified." (Chap. ii. 16.)
In all these passages, and many more which might be quoted, works are
sedulously excluded as a ground of justification, and that too in language so
plain that a wayfaring man, though a fool, need not err therein. If therefore
we cannot explain James ii. 24, we must either deny its inspiration or have
recourse to our principle, namely, that no one passage of Holy Scripture can
possibly contradict another, and so remain, with unshaken confidence and
unruffled repose, rejoicing in the grand foundation truth of justification by
faith alone, apart from law-works altogether.
Having called the reader's attention to the famous passage in James ii., it
may not be amiss to offer him, in passing, a word or two of exposition which
will help him in the understanding of it. There is a little word in verse 14
which will furnish the key to the entire passage. The inspired apostle
inquires, "What doth it profit, my brethren, though a man say he hath
faith?" Had he said, What doth it profit though a man have faith? the
difficulty would be insuperable, the perplexity hopeless. But the important
word "say" quite removes all difficulty, and unfolds in the simplest possible
way the point which the apostle has in his mind. We might inquire, What
doth it profit though a man say he hath ten thousand a year, if he have it
not?
Now, we are aware that the word "say" is constantly left out in quoting
James ii. 14. Some have even ventured to assert that it is not in the original.
But any one who can read Greek has only to look at the passage and he will
see the word legee (say) placed there by the Holy Ghost, and left there by all
our leading editors and biblical critics; nor can we well conceive a word of
more vital importance in a passage. Its influence, we believe, is felt
throughout the entire context in which it occurs. There is no use in a man
merely saying he has faith; but if he really has it, it "profits" him for time
and eternity, inasmuch as it connects him with Christ, and puts him in full
and inalienable possession of all that Christ has done and all that He is for
us before God.
This leads us to another point, which will greatly tend to clear away the
seeming contradiction between the two inspired apostles, Paul and James.
There is a very material difference between law-works and life-works. Paul
jealously excludes the former; James as jealously insists on the latter. But
be it carefully noted that it is only the former that Paul excludes, as it is
only the latter that James insists on. The acts of Abraham and Rahab were
not law-works, but life-works. They were the genuine fruits of faith, apart
from which they would have possessed no justifying virtue whatever.
It is well worthy of note that with the history of four thousand years before
Him, the Holy Ghost, in the apostle, should have fixed upon two such works
as that of Abraham in Genesis xxii. and that of Rahab in Joshua ii. He does
not adduce some acts of charity or benevolence, though surely He might
easily have selected many such from the vast mass of materials which lay
before Him. But, as if anticipating the use that the enemy would make of the
passage now before us, He takes care to select two such illustrations of His
thesis as prove beyond all question that it is life-works and not law-works
He is insisting upon, and leaves wholly untouched the priceless doctrine of
justification by faith, apart from works of law.
Thus, then, we not only implicitly believe that Paul and James must
harmonize, but we can plainly see that they do.
Having thus sought to define and illustrate our principle, we shall leave you,
dear friend, to apply it in the various cases of difficulty and perplexity which
may come before you in the study of Scripture, while we endeavor to
expound, as the Lord may enable us, the important passages of Scripture
which you have laid before us.
1. The first quotation is from the second epistle of Peter—"But there were
false prophets also among the people, even as there shall be false teachers
among you, who privily shall bring in damnable heresies, even denying the
Lord that bought them, and bring upon themselves swift destruction."
(Chap. ii. 1.) The difficulty of this passage arises, we suppose, from the
expression, "denying the Lord that bought them." But there is, in reality, no
difficulty whatever in these words. The Lord has a double claim on every
man, woman, and child beneath the canopy of heaven. He has a claim
founded on creation, and a claim founded on redemption. It is to the latter
of these two that the apostle refers. The false teachers will not merely deny
the Lord that made them, but even the Lord that bought them. It is of
importance to see this. It will help to clear away many difficulties. The Lord
Jesus has a purchased right over every member of the human family. The
Father has given Him power over all flesh. Hence the sin of those who deny
Him. It would be sin to deny Him as Creator; it is a greater sin to deny Him
as Redeemer. It is not at all a question of regeneration. The apostle does not
say, Denying the Lord that quickened them. This would indeed be a
difficulty; but as the passage stands, it leaves wholly untouched the truth of
final perseverance.
2. The second passage occurs at the close of the same chapter (verses 20
and 22)—"For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world, through
the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they are again
entangled therein and overcome, the latter end is worse with them than the
beginning.... But it is happened unto them according to the true proverb,
'The dog is turned to his own vomit again: and the sow that was washed, to
her wallowing in the mire.'" The diffusion of scriptural knowledge and
evangelical light may and does frequently exert an amazing influence upon
the conduct and character of persons who have known the saving,
quickening, emancipating power of the gospel of Christ. Indeed it is hardly
possible for an open Bible to be circulated, or a free gospel to be preached,
without producing very striking results which, after all, will be found to fall
far short of the grand result of regeneration. Many gross habits may be
abandoned, many "pollutions" laid aside, under the influence of a merely
intellectual "knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ"; while, at the
same time, the heart has never really been savingly reached at all. Now, it
will be invariably found that when persons shake off the influence of
evangelical light—even though that influence never extended beyond their
outward conduct—they are sure to plunge into greater depths of evil, and
greater excesses of worldliness and folly than ever; "The latter end is worse
with them than the beginning." The devil takes delight in dragging the
quondam professor through deeper mire than that in which he wallowed in
the days of his ignorance and thoughtless folly. Hence the urgent need of
pressing on all with whom we have to do the importance of making sure
work of it, so that the knowledge of truth may not merely affect their
external conduct, but reach the heart, and impart that life which, when once
possessed, can never be lost. There is nothing in this passage to terrify the
sheep of Christ, but very much to warn those who, though they may for a
time put on the outward appearance of sheep, have never been inwardly
aught but as the dog and the sow.
3. Ezekiel xviii. 24, 26—"But when the righteous turneth away from his
righteousness, and committeth iniquity, and doeth according to all the
abominations that the wicked man doeth, shall he live? All his
righteousness that he hath done shall not be mentioned: in his trespass that
he hath trespassed, and in his sin that he hath sinned, in them shall he
die.... When a righteous man turneth away from his righteousness and
committeth iniquity, and dieth in them; for his iniquity, that he hath done,
shall he die." With this we may connect your reference to 2 Chronicles xv.
2—"The Lord is with you while ye be with Him: and if ye seek Him, He will
be found of you: but if ye forsake Him, He will forsake you." We feel
constrained, dear friend, to say that it evidences a sad want of spiritual
intelligence to adduce such passages of Scripture as bearing in any way
upon the truth of the final perseverance of Christ's members. These, and
numberless other scriptures in the Old Testament, as well as many similar
passages in the New Testament, unfold to us the deeply important subject of
God's moral government. Now, to be merely a subject of God's government is
one thing; to be a subject of His unchangeable grace is another. We should
never confound them. To elaborate this point, and to refer to the various
passages which illustrate and enforce it, would demand a volume: we would
here only add our full persuasion that no one can understand the word of
God who does not accurately distinguish between man under government
and man under grace. In the one case he is looked at as walking down here,
in the place of responsibility and danger; in the other, he is looked at as
associated with Christ above, in the place of inalienable privilege and eternal
security. These two Old Testament scriptures to which you have referred us
are entirely governmental, and, as a consequence, have nothing whatever to
do with the question of final perseverance.
4. Matthew xii. 45—"Then goeth he and taketh with him seven other spirits
more wicked than himself, and they enter in and dwell there: and the last
state of that man is worse than the first. Even so shall it be unto this wicked
generation." The closing sentence of this passage quite explains the whole
context. Our Lord is describing the moral condition of the Jewish people.
The spirit of idolatry had gone out of them, but only for a time, and to return
again in sevenfold energy and intensity, rendering their last state worse by
far than aught that has yet appeared in their most marvelous history. This
passage, taken in a secondary way, may be very intelligently applied to an
individual who, having undergone a certain moral change, and exhibited a
measure of improvement in his outward conduct, afterwards falls back and
becomes more openly corrupt and vicious than ever.
In conclusion, dear friend, you say that "All those texts which speak of
enduring to the end, and overcoming, are thought to mean that, since there
is a possibility of our not doing so, we may not be saved in the end." As to
this, we would merely add that we shall be most happy at any time to enter
with you upon the close examination of every one of those passages to which
you in this general way refer,* and to prove, by the grace of God, that not
one of them, when rightly interpreted, militates in the smallest degree
against the precious truth of final perseverance; but that, on the contrary,
each passage contains within itself, or within its immediate context, that
which will clearly prove its perfect harmony with the truth of the eternal
security of the very feeblest lamb in all the blood-bought flock of Christ.
May the Lord establish our souls, more and more firmly, in His own truth,
and preserve us unto His heavenly kingdom, to the glory of His holy name!
C. H. M.
The principles of truth laid down in Luke xii. are of the most solemn and
searching character. Their practical bearing is such as to render them, in a
day like the present, of the deepest importance. Worldly-mindedness and
carnality cannot live in the light of the truth here set forth. They are
withered up by the roots. If one were asked to give a brief and
comprehensive title to this most precious section of inspiration, it might be
entitled "Time in the light of eternity." The Lord evidently designed to set His
disciples in the light of that world where every thing is the direct opposite of
that which obtains here—to bring their hearts under the holy influence of
unseen things, and their lives under the power and authority of heavenly
principles. Such being the faithful purpose of the Divine Teacher, He lays
the solid foundation for His superstructure of doctrine with these searching
words: "Beware of the leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy." There
must be no undercurrent in the soul. The deep springs of thought must be
laid bare. We must allow the pure beams of heaven's light to penetrate to the
depths of our moral being. We must not have any discrepancy between the
hidden judgment of the soul and the style of our phraseology—between the
bent of the life and the profession of the lips. In a word, we specially need
the grace of "an honest and a good heart," in order to profit by this
wondrous compendium of practical truth.
We are too apt to give an indifferent hearing or a cold assent to home truth.
We do not like it. We prefer interesting speculations about the mere letter of
Scripture, points of doctrine, or questions of prophecy, because we can
indulge these in immediate connection with all sorts of worldly-mindedness,
covetous practices, and self-indulgence. But ponderous principles of truth,
bearing down upon the conscience in all their magnitude and flesh-cutting
power, who can bear, save those who, through grace, are seeking to purge
themselves from "the leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy"? This
leaven is of a most specious character, takes various shapes, and is
therefore most dangerous. Indeed, wherever it exists, there is a most positive
and insurmountable barrier placed before the soul in its progress in
experimental knowledge and practical holiness. If I do not expose my whole
soul to the action of divine truth,—if I am closing up some corner or crevice
from the light thereof,—if I am cherishing some secret reserve,—if I am
dishonestly seeking to accommodate the truth to my own standard of
practice, or parry its keen edge from my conscience, then, assuredly, I am
defiled by the leaven of hypocrisy, and my growth in likeness to Christ is a
moral impossibility. Hence, therefore, it is imperative upon every disciple of
Christ to search and see that nothing of this abominable leaven is allowed in
the secret chambers of his heart. Let us, by the grace of God, put and keep
it far away, so that we may be able on all occasions to say, "Speak, Lord, for
Thy servant heareth."
But not only is hypocrisy utterly subversive of spiritual progress, it also fails
in attaining the object which it proposes to itself; "for there is nothing
covered that shall not be revealed; neither hid, that shall not be known."
Every man will find his level, and every thought will be brought to light.
What the truth would do now, the judgment-seat will do then. Every grade
and shade of hypocrisy will be unmasked by the light which shall shine
forth from the judgment-seat of Christ. Nothing will be allowed to escape. All
will be reality then, though there is so much fallacy now. Moreover, every
thing will get its proper name then, though it be misnamed now. Worldly-
mindedness is called prudence; a grasping, covetous spirit is called
foresight; and self-indulgence and personal aggrandizement are called
judicious management and laudable diligence in business. Thus it is now;
but then it will be quite the reverse. All things will be seen in their true
colors, and called by their true names, before the judgment-seat. Wherefore
it is the wisdom of the disciple to act in the light of that day, when the
secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed. As to this, he is placed on a vantage-
ground, for, says the apostle, "we must all [saints and sinners—though not
at the same time, nor on the same ground,] be manifested [φανερωθῆναι]
before the judgment-seat of Christ." Should this disturb the disciple's mind?
Assuredly not, if his heart be so purged of the leaven of hypocrisy and his
soul so thoroughly grounded, by the teaching of God the Holy Ghost, in the
great foundation-truth set forth in this very chapter (2 Cor. v.), namely, that
Christ is his life, and Christ his righteousness; that he can say, "We are
manifested [πεφανερώμεθα,—an inflection of the same word as is used at
verse 10,] unto God, and I trust also are manifested in your consciences."
There is nothing that so tends to rob the disciple of Christ of the proper
dignity of his discipleship as walking before the eyes or thoughts of men. So
long as we are doing so, we cannot be unshackled followers of our heavenly
Master. Moreover, the evil of walking before men is morally allied with the
evil of seeking to hide our ways from God. Both partake of the "leaven of the
Pharisees," and both will find their proper place before the judgment-seat.
Why should we fear men? why should we regard their opinions? If their
opinions will not bear to be tried in His presence who has power to cast into
hell, they are worth nothing; for it is with Him we have to do. "With me it is
a very small thing that I should be judged of you, or man's judgment." Man
may have a judgment-seat now, but he will not have it then;—he may set up
his tribunal in time, but he will have no tribunal in eternity. Why, therefore,
should we shape our way in reference to a tribunal so frail and evanescent?
Oh, let us challenge our hearts as to this. God grant us grace to act now in
reference to then—to carry ourselves here with our eye on hereafter—to look
at time in the light of eternity.
The poor unbelieving heart may however inquire, If I thus rise above human
thoughts and human opinions, how shall I get on in a scene where those
very thoughts and opinions prevail? This is a very natural question, but it
meets its full and satisfactory answer from the Master's lips; yea, it would
even seem as though He had graciously anticipated this rising element of
unbelief, when, having carried His disciples above the hazy mists of time,
and set them in the clear, searching, powerful light of eternity, He added,
"Are not five sparrows sold for two farthings? and not one of them is
forgotten before God. But even the very hairs of your head are all numbered.
Fear not, therefore; ye are of more value than many sparrows." (Ver. 6, 7.)
Here the heart is taught not only to fear God, but also to confide in Him,—it
is not only warned, but also tranquilized. "Fear" and "fear not" may seem a
paradox to flesh and blood, but to faith it is no paradox. The man who fears
God most will fear circumstances least. The man of faith is at once the most
dependent and independent man in the world—dependent upon God,
independent upon circumstances. The latter is the consequence of the
former.
And mark the ground of the believer's peace. The One who has power to cast
into hell, the only One whom he is to fear, has actually taken the trouble to
count the hairs of his head. He surely has not taken the trouble for the
purpose of letting him perish here or hereafter. The minuteness of our
Father's care should silence every doubt that might arise in our hearts.
There is nothing too small and there can be nothing too great for Him. The
countless orbs that move through infinite space and a falling sparrow are
alike to Him. His infinite mind can take in with equal facility the course of
everlasting ages and the hairs of our head. This is the stable foundation on
which Christ founds His "fear not" and "take no thought." We frequently fail
in the practical application of this divine principle. We may admire it as a
principle, but it is only in the application of it that its real beauty is seen or
felt. If we do not put it in practice, we are but painting sunbeams on canvas,
while we famish beneath the chilling influences of our own unbelief.
True, He may and does use men as instruments; but if we lean on men
instead of God,—if we lean on instruments instead of on the hand that uses
them, we bring down a curse upon us, for it is written, "Cursed be the man
that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm, and whose heart departeth
from the Lord." (Jer. xvii. 5.) The Lord used the ravens to feed Elijah, but
Elijah never thought of trusting in the ravens. Thus it should be ever. Faith
leans on God, counts on Him, clings to Him, trusts in Him, waits for Him,
ever leaves a clear stage for Him to act on, does not obstruct His glorious
path by any creature-confidence, allows Him to display Himself in all the
glorious reality of what He is, leaves every thing to Him; and, moreover, if it
gets into deep and rough waters, it will always be seen upon the crest of the
loftiest billow, and from thence gazing in perfect repose upon God and His
powerful actings. Such is faith—that precious thing—the only thing in this
world that gives God and man their respective places.
While the Lord Jesus was in the act of pouring forth these unearthly
principles, a true child of earth intrudes upon Him with a question about
property.—"And one of the company said unto Him, 'Master, speak to my
brother, that he divide the inheritance with me.'" How marvelously little did
he know of the true character of that heavenly Man who stood before him!
He knew nothing of the profound mystery of His being, or the object of His
heavenly mission. He surely had not come from the bosom of the Father to
settle lawsuits about property, nor to arbitrate between two covetous men.
The spirit of covetousness was manifestly in the whole affair. Both defendant
and plaintiff were governed by covetousness. One wanted to grasp and the
other wanted to keep; what was this but covetousness? "And he said unto
him, 'Man, who made Me a judge or a divider over you?'" It was not a
question of which was right or which was wrong as to the property.
According to Christ's pure and heavenly doctrine they were both wrong. In
the light of eternity a few acres of land were little worth; and as to Christ
Himself, He was only teaching principles entirely hostile to all questions of
earthly possession; but in His own person and character He set an example
of the very opposite. He did not go to law about the inheritance. He was
"Heir of all things." The land of Israel, the throne of David, and all creation
belonged to Him; but man would not own Him, or give Him possession. "The
husbandmen said among themselves, 'This is the heir; come, let us kill him,
and seize upon the inheritance.'" To this the Heir submitted in perfect
patience, but (eternal homage to His glorious name!) by submitting unto
death He crushed the enemy's power, and brought "many sons to glory."
Thus we see in the doctrine and practice of the Heavenly Man the true
exhibition of the principles of the kingdom of God. He would not arbitrate,
but yet He taught truth which would entirely do away with the need of
arbitration. If the principles of the kingdom of God were dominant, there
would be no need for courts of law; for inasmuch as people would not be
wronged of their rights, they could have no wrongs to be righted. This would
be admitted by all. But then the Christian, being in the kingdom, is bound
to be governed by the principles of the kingdom, and to carry them out at all
cost; for, in the exact proportion that he fails to exhibit those principles, he
is robbing his own soul of blessing, and marring his testimony.
But some may say that it is bringing us down from the high ground of the
Church, as set forth in Paul's epistles, to press thus the principles of the
kingdom. By no means. We belong to the Church, but we are in the
kingdom; and while we must never confound the two, it is perfectly plain
that the ethics—the moral habits and ways—of the Church can never be
below those of the kingdom. If it be contrary to the spirit and principles of
the kingdom to assert my rights and go to law, it must, if possible, be still
more contrary to the spirit and principles of the Church. This cannot be
questioned. The higher my position, the higher should be my code of ethics
and tone of character. I fully believe, and desire firmly to hold,
experimentally to enter into, and practically to exhibit the truth of the
Church as the body and bride of Christ—the possessor of a heavenly
standing, and the expectant of heavenly glory, by virtue of her oneness with
Christ; but I cannot see how my being a member of that highly privileged
body can make my practice lower than if I were merely a subject or member
of the kingdom. What is the difference, as regards present conduct and
character, between belonging to the body of a rejected Head and belonging
to the kingdom of a rejected King? Assuredly it cannot be to lower the tone
in the former case. The higher and more intimate my relationship to the
rejected One, the more intense should be my separation from that which
rejects Him, and the more complete should be my assimilation to His
character, and the more precise and accurate my walk in His footsteps in
the midst of that scene from which He is rejected.
But the simple fact is, WE WANT CONSCIENCE. Yes, beloved reader, a
tender, exercised, honest conscience, which will truly and accurately
respond to the appeals of God's pure and holy Word, is, I verily believe, the
grand desideratum—the pressing want of the present moment. It is not so
much principles we want, as the grace, the energy, the holy decision, that
will carry them out, cost what it may. We admit the truth of principles which
most plainly cut at the very things which we ourselves are either directly or
indirectly doing,—we admit the principle of grace, and yet we live by the
strict maintenance of righteousness. For example, how often does it happen
that persons are preaching, teaching, and professing to enjoy grace, while at
the very moment they are insisting upon their rights in reference to their
tenants; and, either directly themselves or indirectly by means of their
agents, dispossessing poor people, unroofing their houses, and sending
them out, in destitution and misery, upon a cold, heartless world! This is a
plain, palpable case, of which, alas! there have been too many painful
illustrations in the world within the last ten years.
And why put cases? Because one finds such melancholy deficiency in
sensibility of conscience at the present day, that unless the thing is brought
home plainly to one's self it will not be understood. Like David, our
indignation is wrought up to the highest pitch by a picture of moral
turpitude, so long as we do not see self in that picture. It needs some
Nathan to sound in our ears, "Thou art the man," in order to prostrate us in
the dust, with a smitten conscience, and true self-abhorrence. Thus, at the
present day, eloquent sermons are preached, eloquent lectures delivered,
and elaborate treatises written about the principles of grace, and yet the
courts of law are frequented, attorneys, lawyers, sheriffs, agents, and sub-
agents are called into requisition, with all their terrible machinery, in order
to assert our rights; but we feel it not, because we are not present to witness
the distress, and hear the groans and execrations of houseless mothers and
children. Need we wonder, therefore, that true practical Christianity is at a
low ebb amongst us? Is it any marvel that leanness, barrenness, drought
and poverty, coldness and deadness, darkness, ignorance, and spiritual
depression should be found amongst us? What else could be expected, when
the principles of the kingdom of God are openly violated?
But is it unrighteous to seek to get our own, and to make use of the
machinery within our reach in order to do so? Surely not. What is here
maintained is, that no matter how well defined and clearly established the
right may be, the assertion thereof is diametrically opposed to the kingdom
of God. The servant in Matthew xviii. was called "a wicked servant," and
"delivered to the tormentors," not because he acted unrighteously in
enforcing the payment of a lawful debt, but because he did not act in grace
and remit that debt. Well, therefore, might the Lord Jesus sound in His
disciples' ears this warning voice, "Take heed and beware of covetousness;
for a man's life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he
possesseth."
But how difficult to define this "covetousness"! how hard to bring it home to
the conscience! It is, as some one has said of worldliness, "shaded off
gradually from white to jet black;" so that it is only as we are imbued with
the spirit and mind of heaven, and thoroughly schooled in the principles of
eternity, that we shall be able to detect its working. And not only so, but our
hearts must, in this also, be purged from the leaven of the Pharisees, which
is hypocrisy. The Pharisees were covetous, and could only turn Christ's
doctrine into ridicule (see Luke xvi. 14); and so will it be with all those who
are tainted by their leaven. They will not see the just application of truth,
either as to covetousness or any thing else. They will seek to define it in
such a way as will suit themselves. They will interpret, modify, pare down,
accommodate, until they have fully succeeded in getting their conscience
from under the edge of God's truth; and thus they get into the power and
under the influence of the enemy. I must either be governed by the pure
truth of the Word or by the impure principles of the world, which, as we very
well know, are forged in Satan's workshop, and brought into the world to be
used in doing his work.
In the parable of the rich man, which the Lord here puts forth in illustration
of covetousness, we see a character which the world respects and admires.
But in this, as in every thing else brought forward in this searching chapter,
we see the difference between now and then—between "time and eternity."
All depends upon the light in which you look at men and things. If you
merely look at them now, it may be all very well to get on in trade, and
enlarge one's concerns, and make provision for the future. The man who
does this is counted wise now, but he will be a "fool" then. But, my reader,
let us remember that we must make God's then to be our now; we must look
at the things of time in the light of eternity—the things of earth in the light
of heaven. This is true wisdom, which does not confine the heart to that
system of things which obtains "under the sun," but conducts it into the
light, and leaves it under the power of "that world" where the principles of
the kingdom of God bear sway. What should we think of courts of law and
insurance offices if we look at them in the light of eternity? These things do
very well for men who are only governed by now, but the disciple of Christ is
to be governed by then. This makes all the difference; and truly it is a
serious difference.
"The ground of a certain rich man brought forth plentifully." What sin is
there in being a successful agriculturist or merchant? If God bless a man's
labor, should he not rejoice? Truly so; but mark the moral progress of a
covetous heart. "He thought within himself." He did not think in the
presence of God,—he did not think under the mighty influences of the
eternal world; no, "he thought within himself"—within the narrow compass
of his selfish heart. Such was his range; and therefore we need not marvel at
his practical conclusion. "What shall I do, because I have no room where to
bestow my fruits?" What! Was there no way of using his resources with a
view to God's future? Alas! no. Man has a future (or thinks he has) on which
he counts, and for which he makes provision; but self is the only object
which figures in that future,—self, whether in my own person or that of my
wife or child, which is morally the same thing.
The grand object in God's future is Christ; and true wisdom will lead us to
fix our eye on Him, and make Him our undivided object for time and
eternity—now and then. But this, in the judgment of a worldly man, is
nonsense. Yes, Heaven's wisdom is nonsense in the judgment of earth.
Hearken to the wisdom of earth, and the wisdom of those who are under the
influence of earthly maxims and habits. "And he said, 'This will I do: I will
pull down my barns, and build greater; and there will I bestow all my fruits
and my goods.'" Thus we have what he "thought," what he "said," and what
he "did;" and there is a melancholy consistency between his thoughts, his
words, and his acts. "There," in my self-built storehouse, "will I bestow all."
Miserable treasure-house to contain the "all" of an immortal soul! God was
not an item in the catalogue. God was neither his treasury nor his treasure.
This is plain; and it is always thus with a mere man of the world. "And I will
say to my soul, Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years; take
thine ease, eat, drink, and be merry." Thus we see that a worldly man's
provision is only "for many years." Make the best of it, it cannot go beyond
that narrow limit. It cannot, even in his own thought about it, reach into
that boundless eternity which stretches beyond this contracted span of time.
And this provision he offers to his never-dying soul as the basis of its "ease
and merriment." Miserable fatuity! Senseless calculation!
How different is the address which a believer may present to his soul! He too
may say to his soul, "Soul, take thine ease; eat, drink, and be merry;—eat of
the fatness of God's storehouse, and drink of the river of His pleasures, and
of the wine of His kingdom; and be glad in His accomplished salvation; for
thou hast much goods, yea, unsearchable riches, untold wealth, laid up, not
merely for many years, but for eternity. Christ's finished work is the ground
of thine eternal peace, and His coming glory the sure and certain object of
thy hope." This is a different character of address, my reader. This shows
the difference between now and then. It is a fatal mistake not to make Christ
the Crucified, Christ the Risen, Christ the Glorified, the Alpha and Omega of
all our calculations. To paint a future, and not to place Christ in the
foreground, is extravagance of the wildest character; for the moment God
enters the scene, the picture is hopelessly marred.
"But God said unto him, 'Thou fool! this night thy soul shall be required of
thee: THEN whose shall those things be which thou hast provided?'" And
then mark the moral of all this. "So is he," no matter who—saint or sinner,
"that layeth up treasure for himself, and is not rich toward God." The man
who hoards up is virtually making a god of his hoard. His mind is
tranquilized as to the future when he thinks of his hoard, for if he had not
that hoard he would be uneasy. It is sufficient to put a natural man entirely
out of his reason to give him naught but God to depend upon. Any thing but
that for him. Give him old pieces of parchment in the shape of title-deeds, in
which some clever lawyer will finally pick a hole, and prove worthless. He
will lean on them—yea, die in peace, if he can leave such to his heirs. Give
him an insurance policy,—any thing, in short, but God for the natural heart.
ALL IS REALITY SAVE THE ONLY REALITY, in the judgment of nature. This
proves what nature's true condition is. It cannot trust God. It talks about
Him, but it cannot trust Him. The very basis of man's moral constitution is
distrust of God; and one of the fairest fruits of regeneration is the capacity to
confide in God for every thing. "They that know Thy name will put their trust
in Thee." None else can.
"And He said unto His disciples, 'Therefore I say unto you, Take no thought
for your life, what ye shall eat; neither for the body, what ye shall put on.
The life is more than meat, and the body is more than raiment.'" "Be careful
for nothing," says the Spirit by the apostle. Why? Because God is caring for
you. There is no use in two thinking about the same thing, when One can do
every thing and the other can do nothing. "In every thing by prayer and
supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.
And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall garrison
[φρουρήδει] your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus." This is the solid
foundation of peace of heart, which so few really enjoy. Many have gotten
peace of conscience through faith in the sufficiency of Christ's work, who do
not enjoy peace of heart through faith in the sufficiency of God's care. And
oftentimes we go to pray about our difficulties and trials, and we rise from
our knees as troubled as we knelt down. We profess to put our affairs into
the hands of God, but we have no notion of leaving them, there; and
consequently we do not enjoy peace of heart. Thus it was with Jacob, in
Genesis xxxii. He asked God to deliver him from the hand of Esau; but no
sooner did he rise from his knees than he set forth the real ground of his
soul's dependence, by saying, "I will appease him by a present." It is clear he
had much more confidence in the "present" than in God. This is a common
error amongst the children of God. We profess to be looking to the Eternal
Fountain; but the eye of the soul is askance upon some creature-stream.
Thus God is practically shut out; our souls are not delivered, and we have
not got peace of heart.
The apostle then goes on, in Philippians iv. 8, to give a catalogue of those
things about which we ought to think; and we find that self or its affairs is
not once alluded to. "Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are
venerable [σεμνά], whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure,
whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there
be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things.... And the
God of peace shall be with you." Thus, when I know and believe that God is
thinking about me, I have "the peace of God;" and when I am thinking about
Him and the things belonging to Him, I have "the God of peace." This, as
might be expected, harmonizes precisely with Christ's doctrine in Luke xii.
After relieving the minds of His disciples in reference to present supplies and
future treasure, He says, "But rather seek ye the kingdom of God, and all
these things shall be added unto you." That is, I am not to seek the kingdom
with the latent thought in my mind that my wants will be supplied in
consequence. That would not be true discipleship. A true disciple never
thinks of aught but the Master and His kingdom; and the Master will
assuredly think of him and his wants. Thus it stands, my beloved reader,
between a faithful servant and an all-powerful and all-gracious Master. That
servant may therefore be free, perfectly free, from care.
But there is another ground on which we are exhorted to be free from care,
and that is, the utter worthlessness of that care. "Which of you, with taking
thought, can add to his stature one cubit? If ye then be not able to do that
thing which is least, why take ye thought for the rest?" We gain nothing by
our care; and by indulging therein we only unfit ourselves for seeking the
kingdom of God, and place a barrier, by our unbelief, in the way of His
acting for us. It is always true in reference to us, "He could there do no
mighty work, because of their unbelief." Unbelief is the great hindrance to
the display of God's mighty works on our behalf. If we take our affairs into
our own hands, it is clear that we do not want God. Thus we are left to the
depressing influence of our own perplexing thoughts, and finally we take
refuge in some human resource, and make shipwreck of faith.
Wherefore the Lord immediately adds, "Sell that ye have, and give alms:
provide yourselves bags which wax not old, a treasure in the heavens that
fadeth not, where no thief approacheth, neither moth corrupteth. For where
your treasure is, there will the heart be also." If I have treasure on earth, no
matter in what shape, my heart will be there also, and I shall be a downright
worldly man. How shall I most effectually empty my heart of the world? By
getting it filled with Christ. He is the true treasure which neither the world's
"bags" nor its "storehouses" can contain. The world has its "barns" and its
"bags," in which it hoards its "goods;" but its barns will fall and its bags will
wax old: and then, what will become of the treasure? Truly "they build too
low that build beneath the skies."
Yet people will build and hoard up, if not for themselves, at least for their
children, or in other words, their second selves. If I hoard for my children, I
am hoarding for myself; and not only so, but in numberless cases, the
hoard, in place of proving a blessing, proves a positive curse to the child, by
taking him off the proper ground appointed for him, as well as for all, in
God's moral government, namely, "working with his hands the thing which
is good, that he may have [not to hoard up for himself, or for his second self,
but] to give to him that needeth." This is God's appointed ground for every
man; and therefore if I hoard for my child, I am taking both myself and him
off the divine ground, and the consequence will be a forfeiture of blessing.
Do I taste the surpassing sweetness of obedience to and dependence upon
God, and shall I deprive my child thereof? Shall I rob him, virtually, and so
far as in me lies, of God, and give him, as a substitute, a few "old bags," an
insurance policy, or some musty parchments?
But why need I hoard up for my children? If I can trust God for myself, why
not trust Him for them likewise? Cannot the One who has fed and clothed
me feed and clothe them also? Let not the truth be misunderstood or
misinterpreted. I am bound, by the powerful obligations of the word and
example of God, to provide for my own; for, "if any provide not for his own,
and especially for those of his own house, he hath denied the faith, and is
worse than an infidel." (1 Tim. v. 8.) This is plain enough. And, moreover, I
am bound to fit my children, so far as God's principles admit, and my
province extends, for any service to which He may be graciously pleased to
call them. But I am no where instructed in the Word of God to give my
children a hoard in place of an honest occupation, with simple dependence
upon a heavenly Father. As a matter of actual fact, few children ever thank
their fathers for inherited wealth; whereas they will ever remember, with
gratitude and veneration, having been led, by parental care and
management, into a godly course of action for themselves.
I do not, however, forget a passage which has often been used, or rather
abused, to defend the worldly, unbelieving practice of hoarding up. I allude
to 2 Corinthians xii. 14.—"Behold, the third time I am ready to come to you;
and I will not be burdensome to you: for I seek not yours, but you: for the
children ought not to lay up for the parents, but the parents for the
children." How glad people are when they get a semblance of Scripture-
authority for their worldliness! In this passage it is but a semblance of
authority; for the apostle is certainly not teaching Christians to hoard up—
he is not teaching heavenly men to lay up treasure upon the earth, for any
object. He simple refers to a common practice in the world, and to a
common feeling in nature, in order to illustrate his own mode of dealing with
the Corinthians, who were his children in the faith. He had not burdened
them, and he would not burden them, for he was the parent. Now, if the
saints of God are satisfied to go back to the world and its maxims, to nature
and its ways, then let them hoard up with all diligence—let them "heap
treasure together for the last days;" but let them remember that the moth,
the canker-worm, and the rust will be the end of it all. Oh for a heart to
value those immortal "bags" in which faith lays up its "unfading treasure,"
those heavenly storehouses where faith "bestows all its fruits and its goods"!
Then shall we pursue a holy and elevated path through this present evil
world—then, too, shall we be lifted upon faith's vigorous pinion above the
dark atmosphere which inwraps this Christ-rejecting, God-hating world, and
which is impregnated and polluted by those two elements, namely, hatred of
God, and love of gold.
I shall only add, ere closing this paper, that the Lord Jesus—the Adorable,
the Divine, the Heavenly Teacher, having sought to raise, by His unearthly
principles, the thoughts and affections of His disciples to their proper centre
and level, gives them two things to do; and these two things may be
expressed in the words of the Holy Ghost—"To serve the living and true God,
and wait for His Son from heaven." The entire of the teaching of Luke xii,
from verse 35 to the end, may be ranged under the above comprehensive
heads, to which I call the Christian reader's prayerful attention. We have no
one else to serve but "the living God", and nothing to wait for—nothing
worth waiting for but "His Son." May the Holy Ghost clothe His own Word
with heavenly power, so that it may come home to the heart and conscience,
and tell upon the life of every child of God, that the name of the Lord Christ
may be magnified, and His truth vindicated in the conduct of those that
belong to Him. May the grace of an honest heart, and a tender, upright,
well-adjusted conscience, be largely ministered to each and all of us, so that
we may be like a well-tuned instrument, yielding a true tone when touched
by the Master's hand, and harmonizing with His heavenly voice.
Finally, if this paper should fall into the hands of one who has not yet found
rest of conscience in the perfected atonement of the Son of God, I would say
to such an one, You will surely lay this paper down and say, "This is a hard
saying, who can hear it?" You may be disposed to ask, "What would the
world come to, if such principles were universally dominant?" I reply, It
would cease to be governed by Satan, and would be "the kingdom of God."
But let me ask you, my friend, "To which kingdom do you belong? Which is
it—now, or then—with you? Are you living for time, or eternity,—earth, or
heaven,—Satan, or Christ?" Do, I affectionately implore of you, be
thoroughly honest with yourself in the presence of God. Remember, "there is
nothing covered that shall not be revealed." The judgment-seat will bring all
to light. Therefore I say, Be honest with yourself, and now ask your heart,
"Where am I? How do I stand? What is the ground of my peace? What are
my prospects for eternity?" Do not imagine that God wants you to buy
heaven with a surrender of earth. No; He points you to Christ, who, by
bearing sin in His own body on the cross, has opened the way for the
believing sinner to come into the presence of God in the power of divine
righteousness. You are not asked to do or to be any thing; but the gospel
tells you what Jesus is, and what He has done; and if you believe this in
your heart, and confess it with your mouth, you shall be saved. Christ—
God's Eternal Son—God manifest in the flesh—co-equal with the Father,
being conceived by the Holy Ghost, was born of a woman, took upon Him a
body prepared by the power of the Highest, and thus became a REAL MAN—
very God and very man,—He, having lived a life of perfect obedience, died
upon the cross, being made sin and a curse, and having exhausted the cup
of Jehovah's righteous wrath, endured the sting of death, spoiled the grave
of its victory, and destroyed him that had the power of death, He went up
into heaven, and took His seat at the right hand of God. Such is the infinite
merit of His perfect sacrifice, that all who believe are justified from ALL
THINGS—yea, are accepted in Him—stand in His acceptableness before
God, and can never come into condemnation, but have passed from death
into life. This is the gospel!—the glad tidings of salvation, which God the
Holy Ghost came down from heaven to preach to every creature. My reader,
let me exhort you, in this concluding line, to "behold the Lamb of God that
taketh away the sin of the world." Believe and Live!
C. H. M.
THE ALL-SUFFICIENCY OF CHRIST
When once the soul has been brought to feel the reality of its condition
before God—the depth of its ruin, guilt, and misery—its utter and hopeless
bankruptcy, there can be no rest until the Holy Spirit reveals a full and an
all-sufficient Christ to the heart. The only possible answer to our total ruin
is God's perfect remedy.
This is a very simple, but a most important truth; and we may say, with all
possible assurance, the more deeply and thoroughly the reader learns it for
himself the better. The true secret of peace is, to get to the very end of a
guilty, ruined, helpless, worthless self, and there find an all-sufficient Christ
as God's provision for our very deepest need. This truly is rest—a rest which
can never be disturbed. There may be sorrow, pressure, conflict, exercise of
soul, heaviness through manifold temptations, ups and downs, all sorts of
trials and difficulties; but we feel persuaded that when a soul is really
brought by God's Spirit to see the end of self, and to rest in a full Christ, it
finds a peace which can never be interrupted.
The unsettled state of so many of God's dear people is the result of not
having received into their hearts a full Christ, as God's very own provision
for them. No doubt this sad and painful result may be brought about by
various contributing causes, such as a legal mind, a morbid conscience, a
self-occupied heart, bad teaching, a secret hankering after this present
world, some little reserve in the heart as to the claims of God, of Christ, and
of eternity. But whatever may be the producing cause, we believe it will be
found, in almost every case, that the lack of settled peace, so common
amongst the Lord's people, is the result of not seeing, not believing, what
God has made His Christ to be to them and for them, and that forever.
Now, what we propose in this paper is, to show the anxious reader, from the
precious pages of the Word of God, that there is treasured up for him in
Christ all he can possibly need, whether it be to meet the claims of his
conscience, the cravings of his heart, or the exigencies of his path. We shall
seek, by the grace of God, to prove that the work of Christ is the only true
resting-place for the conscience; His Person, the only true object for the
heart; His Word, the only true guide for the path.
In considering this great subject, two things claim our attention; first, what
Christ has done for us; secondly, what He is doing for us. In the former, we
have atonement; in the latter, advocacy. He died for us on the cross: He lives
for us on the throne. By His precious atoning death He has met our entire
condition as sinners. He has borne our sins, and put them away forever. He
stood charged with all our sins—the sins of all who believe in His name.
"Jehovah laid on Him the iniquity of us all." (Isa. liii.) And again, "For Christ
also hath once suffered for sins, the just for the unjust, that He might bring
us to God." (1 Pet. iii. 18.)
This is a grand and all-important truth for the anxious soul—a truth which
lies at the very foundation of the whole Christian position. It is impossible
that any truly awakened soul, any spiritually enlightened conscience, can
enjoy divinely settled peace until this most precious truth is laid hold of in
simple faith. I must know, upon divine authority, that all my sins are put
away forever out of God's sight; that He Himself has disposed of them in
such a manner as to satisfy all the claims of His throne and all the
attributes of His nature; that He has glorified Himself in the putting away of
my sins, in a far higher and more wonderful manner than if He had sent me
to an everlasting hell on account of them.
Yes, He Himself has done it. This is the very gist and marrow—the heart's
core of the whole matter. God has laid our sins on Jesus, and He tells us so
in His holy Word, so that we may know it upon divine authority—an
authority that cannot lie. God planned it; God did it; God says it. It is all of
God, from first to last, and we have simply to rest in it like a little child. How
do I know that Jesus bore my sins in His own body on the tree? By the very
same authority which tells me I had sins to be borne. God, in His marvelous
and matchless love, assures me, a poor guilty, hell-deserving sinner, that He
has Himself undertaken the whole matter of my sins, and disposed of it in
such a manner as to bring a rich harvest of glory to His own eternal name,
throughout the wide universe, in presence of all created intelligence.
The living faith of this must tranquilize the conscience. If God has satisfied
Himself about my sins, I may well be satisfied also. I know I am a sinner—it
may be, the chief of sinners. I know my sins are more in number than the
hairs of my head; that they are black as midnight—black as hell itself. I
know that any one of these sins, the very least, deserves the eternal flames
of hell. I know—because God's Word tells me—that a single speck of sin can
never enter His holy presence; and hence, so far as I am concerned, there
was no possible issue save eternal separation from God. All this I know,
upon the clear and unquestionable authority of that Word which is settled
forever in heaven.
All these had to be provided for in such wise as to glorify Himself in view of
angels, men, and devils. He might have sent me to hell—righteously, justly,
sent me to hell—because of my sins. I deserved nothing else. My whole
moral being, from its profoundest depths, owns this—must own it. I have
not a word to say in excuse for a single sinful thought, to say nothing of a
sin-stained life from first to last—yes, a life of deliberate, rebellious, high-
handed sin.
Now, this must give peace to the conscience, if only it be received in the
simplicity of faith. How is it possible for a person to believe that God has
satisfied Himself as to his sins and not have peace? If God says to us, "Your
sins and iniquities I will remember no more," what could we desire further
as a basis of peace for our conscience? If God assures me that all my sins
are blotted out as a thick cloud—that they are cast behind His back—forever
gone from His sight, should I not have peace? If He shows me the Man who
bore my sins on the cross, now crowned at the right hand of the Majesty in
the heavens, ought not my soul to enter into perfect rest as to the question
of my sins? Most assuredly.
For how, let me ask, did Christ reach the place which He now fills on the
throne of God? Was it as God over all, blessed forever? No; for He was
always that. Was it as the eternal Son of the Father? No; He was ever that—
ever in the bosom of the Father—the object of the Father's eternal and
ineffable delight. Was it as a spotless, holy, perfect Man—One whose nature
was absolutely pure, perfectly free from sin? No; for in that character, and
on that ground, He could at any moment, between the manger and the
cross, have claimed a place at the right hand of God. How was it, then?
Eternal praise to the God of all grace! it was as the One who had by His
death accomplished the glorious work of redemption—the One who had
stood charged with the full weight of our sins—the One who had perfectly
satisfied all the righteous claims of that throne on which He now sits.
This is a grand, cardinal point for the anxious reader to seize. It cannot fail
to emancipate the heart and tranquilize the conscience. We cannot possibly
behold, by faith, the Man who was nailed to the tree, now crowned on the
throne, and not have peace with God. The Lord Jesus Christ having taken
upon Himself our sins, and the judgment due to them, He could not be
where He now is if a single one of those sins remained unatoned for. To see
the Sin-bearer crowned with glory is to see our sins gone forever from the
divine presence. Where are our sins? They are all obliterated. How do we
know this? The One who took them all upon Himself has passed through the
heavens to the very highest pinnacle of glory. Eternal justice has wreathed
His blessed brow with a diadem of glory, as the Accomplisher of our
redemption—the Bearer of our sins; thus proving, beyond all question, or
possibility of a question, that our sins are all put away out of God's sight
forever. A crowned Christ and a clear conscience are, in the blessed
economy of grace, inseparably linked together. Wondrous fact! Well may we
chant, with all our ransomed powers, the praises of redeeming love.
But let us see how this most consolatory truth is set forth in holy Scripture.
In Romans iii. we read, "But now the righteousness of God without law
[χωρὶς νόμου] is manifested, being witnessed by the law and the prophets;
even the righteousness of God by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all
them that believe; for there is no difference: for all have sinned, and come
short of the glory of God; being justified freely by His grace through the
redemption that is in Christ Jesus: whom God hath set forth a propitiation
through faith in His blood, to declare His righteousness for the remission [or
passing over] of sins that are past [in time gone by], through the forbearance
of God; to declare at this time His righteousness; that He might be just and
the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus."
Again, in chapter iv, speaking of Abraham's faith being counted to him for
righteousness, the apostle adds, "Now it was not written for his sake alone,
that it was imputed to him; but for us also, to whom it shall be imputed, if
we believe on Him that raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead; who was
delivered for our offenses, and raised again for our justification." Here we
have God introduced to our souls as the One who raised from the dead the
Bearer of our sins. Why did He do so? Because the One who had been
delivered for our offenses had perfectly glorified Him respecting those
offenses, and put them away forever. God not only sent His only begotten
Son into the world, but He bruised Him for our iniquities, and raised Him
from the dead, in order that we might know and believe that our iniquities
are all disposed of in such a manner as to glorify Him infinitely and
everlastingly. Eternal and universal homage to His name!
Thus far, we have been occupied with that aspect of the work of Christ
which bears upon the question of the forgiveness of sins, and we earnestly
trust that the reader is thoroughly clear and settled on this grand point. It is
assuredly his happy privilege so to be, if only he will take God at His word.
"Christ hath once suffered for sins, the just for the unjust, that He might
bring us to God."
If, then, Christ hath suffered for our sins, should we not know the deep
blessedness of being eternally delivered from the burden of those sins? Can
it be according to the mind and heart of God that one for whom Christ
suffered should remain in perpetual bondage, tied and bound with the chain
of his sins, and crying out, from week to week, month to month, and year to
year, that the burden of his sins is intolerable?
If such utterances are true and proper for the Christian, then what has
Christ done for us? Can it be true that Christ has put away our sins and yet
that we are tied and bound with the chain of them? Is it true that He bore
the heavy burden of our sins and yet that we are still crushed beneath the
intolerable weight thereof?
Some would fain persuade us that it is not possible to know that our sins
are forgiven—that we must go on to the end of our life in a state of complete
uncertainty on this most vital and important question. If this be so, what
has become of the precious gospel of the grace of God—the glad tidings of
salvation? In the view of such miserable teaching as this, what mean those
glowing words of the blessed apostle Paul in the synagogue of Antioch?—"Be
it known unto you therefore, men and brethren, that through this Man
[Jesus Christ, dead and risen] is preached [not promised as a future thing,
but proclaimed now] the forgiveness of sins; and by Him all who believe are
[not shall be, or hope to be] justified from all things, from which ye could not
be justified by the law of Moses." (Acts xiii. 38, 39.)
Reader, say which? where are thy sins? Are they blotted out as a thick
cloud? or are they still lying as a heavy load of guilt, in condemning power,
on thy conscience? If they were not put away by the atoning death of Christ,
they will never be put away; if He did not bear them on the cross, you will
have to bear them in the tormenting flames of hell forever and ever and ever.
Yes; be assured of it, there is no other way of disposing of this most weighty
and momentous question. If Christ did not settle the matter on the cross,
you must settle it in hell. It must be so, if God's Word be true.
But glory be to God, His own testimony assures us that Christ hath once
suffered for sins, the just for the unjust, that He might bring us to God; not
merely bring us to heaven when we die, but bring us to God now. How does
He bring us to God? Tied and bound with the chain of our sins? with an
intolerable burden of guilt on our souls? Nay, verily; He brings us to God
without spot or stain or charge. He brings us to God in all His own
acceptableness. Is there any guilt on Him? No. There was, blessed be His
name, when He stood in our stead, but it is gone—gone forever—cast as lead
into the unfathomable waters of divine forgetfulness. He was charged with
our sins on the cross. God laid on Him all our iniquities, and dealt with Him
about them. The whole question of our sins, according to God's estimate
thereof, was fully gone into and definitively, because divinely, settled
between God and Christ, amid the awful shadows of Calvary. Yes, it was all
done, once and forever, there. How do we know it? By the authority of the
only true God. His Word assures us that we have redemption through the
blood of Christ, the remission of sins, according to the riches of His grace.
He declares to us, in accents of sweetest, richest, deepest mercy, that our
sins and our iniquities He will remember no more. Is not this enough? Shall
we still continue to cry out that we are tied and bound with the chain of our
sins? Shall we thus cast a slur upon the perfect work of Christ? Shall we
thus tarnish the lustre of divine grace, and give the lie to the testimony of
the Holy Ghost in the Scripture of truth? Far be the thought! It must not be
so. Let us rather hail with thanksgiving the blessed boon so freely conferred
upon us by love divine, through the precious blood of Christ. It is the joy of
the heart of God to forgive us our sins. Yes, God delights in pardoning
iniquity and transgression. It gratifies and glorifies Him to pour into the
broken and contrite heart the precious balm of His own pardoning love and
mercy. He spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up, and bruised Him
on the cursed tree, in order that He might be able, in perfect righteousness,
to let the rich streams of grace flow forth from His large, loving heart, to the
poor, guilty, self-destroyed, conscience-smitten sinner.
But should it be that the reader still feels disposed to inquire how he may
have the assurance that this blessed remission of sins—this fruit of Christ's
atoning work—applies to him, let him hearken to those magnificent words
which flowed from the lips of the risen Saviour as He commissioned the
earliest heralds of His grace.—"And He said unto them, 'Thus it is written,
and thus it was necessary for Christ to suffer, and to rise from the dead the
third day; and that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in
His name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem.'" (Luke xxiv. 46, 47.)
Here we have the great and glorious commission—its basis, its authority, its
sphere. Christ has suffered. This is the meritorious ground of remission of
sins. Without shedding of blood there is no remission of sins; but by the
shedding of blood, and by it alone, there is remission of sins—a remission as
full and complete as the precious blood of Christ is fitted to effect.
Finally, as to the sphere. It is, "all nations." This includes me, beyond all
question. There is no sort of exception, condition, or qualification. The
blessed tidings were to be wafted, on the wings of love, to all nations—to all
the world—to every creature under heaven. How could I exclude myself from
this world-wide commission? Do I question, for a moment, that the beams of
God's sun are intended for me? Surely not. And why should I question the
precious fact that remission of sins is for me? Not for a single instant. It is
for me as surely as though I were the only sinner beneath the canopy of
God's heaven. The universality of its aspect precludes all question as to its
being designed for me.
And surely, if any further encouragement were needed, it is found in the fact
that the blessed ambassadors were to "begin at Jerusalem"—the very
guiltiest spot on the face of the earth. They were to make the earliest offer of
pardon to the very murderers of the Son of God. This the apostle Peter does
in those words of marvelous and transcendent grace, "Unto you first God,
having raised up His Son, sent Him to bless you, by turning away every one
of you from your iniquities." (Acts iii. 26.)
Anxious reader, do you, can you, still hesitate as to the forgiveness of your
sins? Christ has suffered for sins. God preaches remission of sins. He
pledges His own Word on the point. "To Him give all the prophets witness,
that through His name whosoever believeth in Him shall receive remission of
sins." What more would you have? How can you any longer doubt or delay?
What are you waiting for? You have Christ's finished work and God's faithful
word. Surely these ought to satisfy your heart and tranquilize your mind.
Do, then, let us entreat you to accept the full and everlasting remission of all
your sins. Receive into your heart the sweet tidings of divine love and mercy,
and go on your way rejoicing. Hear the voice of a risen Saviour, speaking
from the throne of the Majesty in the heavens, and assuring you that your
sins are all forgiven. Let those soothing accents, from the very mouth of God
Himself, fall, in their enfranchising power, upon your troubled spirit,—"Your
sins and iniquities will I remember no more." If God thus speaks to me, if He
assures me that He will no more remember my sins, should I not be fully
and forever satisfied? Why should I go on doubting and reasoning when God
has spoken? What can give certainty but the Word of God, that liveth and
abideth forever? It is the only ground of certainty; and no power of earth or
hell—human or diabolical—can ever shake it. The finished work of Christ
and the faithful Word of God are the basis and the authority of full
forgiveness of sins.
But, blessed forever be the God of all grace, it is not only remission of sins
which is announced to us through the atoning death of Christ. This in itself
would be a boon and a blessing of the very highest order; and, as we have
seen, we enjoy it according to the largeness of the heart of God, and
according to the value and efficacy of the death of Christ, as God estimates
it. But besides the full and perfect remission of sins, we have also
ENTIRE DELIVERANCE FROM THE PRESENT POWER OF SIN
This is a grand point for every true lover of holiness. According to the
glorious economy of grace, the same work which secures the complete
remission of sins has broken forever the power of sin. It is not only that the
sins of the life are blotted out, but the sin of the nature is condemned. The
believer is privileged to regard himself as dead to sin. He can sing, with a
glad heart,
Here lies the precious secret of holy living. We are dead to sin; alive to God.
The reign of sin is over. What has sin to do with a dead man? Nothing. Well,
then, the believer has died with Christ; he was buried with Christ; he is
risen with Christ, to walk in newness of life. He lives under the precious
reign of grace, and he has his fruit unto holiness. The man who draws a
plea from the abundance of divine grace to live in sin, denies the very
foundation of Christianity. "How shall we that have died to sin, live any
longer therein?" Impossible. It would be a denial of the whole Christian
standing. To imagine the Christian as one who is to go on, from day to day,
week to week, month to month, and year to year, sinning and repenting,
sinning and repenting, is to degrade Christianity and falsify the whole
Christian position. To say that a Christian must go on sinning because he
has the flesh in him is to ignore the death of Christ in one of its grand
aspects, and to give the lie to the whole of the apostle's teaching in Romans
vi.-viii. Thank God, there is no necessity whatever why the believer should
commit sin. "My little children, these things write I unto you that ye sin not."
We should not justify ourselves in a single sinful thought. It is our sweet
privilege to walk in the light, as God is in the light; and most surely, when
we are walking in the light, we are not committing sin. Alas! we get out of
the light and commit sin; but the normal, the true, the divine idea of a
Christian is, walking in the light, and not committing sin. A sinful thought is
foreign to the true genius of Christianity. We have sin in us, and shall have
it so long as we are in the body; but if we walk in the Spirit, the sin in our
nature will not show itself in the life. To say that we need not sin is to state
a Christian privilege; to say that we cannot sin is a deceit and a delusion.
PART III
From what has already passed before as, we learn that the grand result of
the work of Christ in the past is to give us a divinely perfect standing before
God. "He has perfected forever them that are sanctified." He has introduced
us into the Divine Presence, in all His own perfect acceptability, in the full
credit and virtue of His name, of His Person, and of His work; so that, as the
apostle John declares, "as He is, so are we in this world." (1 John iv. 17.)
Such is the settled standing of the very feeblest lamb in all the blood-bought
flock of Christ. Nor could it possibly be otherwise. It must be either this or
eternal perdition. There is not the breadth of a hair between this standing of
absolute perfectness before God and a condition of guilt and ruin. We are
either in our sins or in a risen Christ. There is no middle ground. We are
either covered with guilt or complete in Christ. But the believer is declared,
by the authoritative voice of the Holy Ghost in Scripture, to be "complete in
Christ"—"perfect, as pertaining to his conscience"—"perfected in
perpetuity"—"clean every whit"—"accepted in the Beloved"—"made [or
become] the righteousness of God in Christ."
And all this through the sacrifice of the cross. That precious atoning death
of Christ forms the solid and irrefragable foundation of the Christian's
standing. "This Man, after He had offered one sacrifice for sins, forever sat
down on the right hand of God." A seated Christ is the glorious proof and
the perfect definition of the believer's place in the presence of God. Our Lord
Christ, having glorified God about our sins, and borne His judgment on our
entire condition as sinners, has conducted us, in living association with
Himself, into a place, not only of forgiveness, acceptance, and peace, but of
complete deliverance from the dominion of sin—a place of assured victory
over every thing that could possibly be against us, whether indwelling sin,
the fear of Satan, the law, or this present evil world.
All this is most deplorable. It grieves the Holy Spirit, wounds the heart of
Christ, dishonors the grace of God, and contradicts the plainest statements
of holy Scripture. We are most thoroughly persuaded that the condition of
thousands of precious souls at this moment is enough to make the heart
bleed; and all this, to a large extent, is traceable to christendom's teachings,
its creeds and its formularies. Where will you find, amid the ordinary ranks
of Christian profession, a person in the enjoyment of a perfectly purged
conscience, of peace with God, of the Spirit of adoption? Is it not true that
people are publicly and systematically taught that it is the height of
presumption for any one to say that his sins are all forgiven—that he has
eternal life—that he is justified from all things—that he is accepted in the
Beloved—that he is sealed with the Holy Ghost—that he cannot be lost,
because he is actually united to Christ by the indwelling Spirit? Are not all
these Christian privileges practically denied and ignored in christendom?
Are not people taught that it is dangerous to be too confident—that it is
morally safer to live in doubt and fear—that the very utmost we can look for
is the hope of getting to heaven when we die? Where are souls taught the
glorious truths connected with the new creation? Where are they rooted and
grounded in the knowledge of their standing in a risen and glorified Head in
the heavens? Where are they led into the enjoyment of those things which
are freely given of God to His beloved people?
Alas! alas! we grieve to think of the only true answer which can be given to
such inquiries. The flock of Christ is scattered upon the dark mountains
and desolate moors. The souls of God's people are left in the dim distance
which characterized the Jewish system. They know not the meaning of the
rent vail, of nearness to God, of conscious acceptance in the Beloved. The
very table of the Lord is shrouded with the dark and chilling mists of
superstition, and surrounded by the repulsive barriers of a dark and
depressing legality. Accomplished redemption, full remission of sins, perfect
justification before God, acceptance in a risen Christ, the Spirit of adoption,
the bright and blessed hope of the coming of the Bridegroom,—all these
grand and glorious realities—these chartered privileges of the Church of God
are practically set aside by christendom's teachings and religious
machinery.
Some, perhaps, may think we have drawn too gloomy a picture. We can only
say—and we say it with all sincerity—Would to God it were so! We fear the
picture is far too true—yea, the reality is far more appalling than the
picture. We are deeply and painfully impressed with the fact that the
condition, not merely of the professing church, but of thousands of the true
sheep of the flock of Christ, is such, that if we only realized it as God sees it,
it would break our hearts.
However, we must pursue our subject, and by so doing, furnish the very
best remedy that can possibly be suggested for the deplorable condition of
so many of the Lord's people.
We have dwelt upon that precious work which our Lord Jesus Christ has
accomplished for us, in the putting away of all our sins, and in the
condemnation of sin, securing for us perfect remission of the former, and
entire deliverance from the latter, as a ruling power. The Christian is one
who is not only forgiven, but delivered. Christ has died for him, and he has
died in Christ. Hence he is free, as one who is raised from the dead and alive
unto God, through Jesus Christ our Lord. He is a new creation. He has
passed from death unto life. Death and judgment are behind him, and
nothing but glory before him. He possesses an unblotted title and an
unclouded prospect.
Now, if all this be indeed true of every child of God—and Scripture says it
is—what more do we want? Nothing, as to title; nothing, as to standing;
nothing, as to hope. As to all these, we have absolute, divine perfection; but
then our state is not perfect, our walk is not perfect. We are still in the body,
compassed about with manifold infirmities, exposed to manifold
temptations, liable to stumble, to fall, and to wander. We are unable of
ourselves to think a right thought, or to keep ourselves for one moment in
the blessed position into which grace has introduced us. True it is, we have
everlasting life, and we are linked to the living Head in heaven, by the Holy
Ghost sent down to earth, so that we are eternally secure. Nothing can ever
touch our life, inasmuch as it is "hid with Christ in God."
But while nothing can touch our life, or interfere with our standing, yet,
seeing that our state is imperfect and our walk imperfect, our communion is
liable to be interrupted, and hence it is that we need
THE PRESENT WORK OF CHRIST FOR US
Jesus lives at the right hand of God for us. His active intervention on our
behalf never ceases for a single moment. He has passed through the
heavens, in virtue of accomplished atonement, and there He ever carries on
His perfect advocacy for us before our God. He is there as our subsisting
righteousness, to maintain us ever in the divine integrity of the position and
relationship into which His atoning death has introduced us. Thus we read,
in Romans v. 10, "If, while we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by
the death of His Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by His
life." So also in Hebrews iv. we read, "Seeing then that we have a great High-
Priest that has passed through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us
hold fast the confession. For we have not a High-Priest which cannot be
touched with the feeling of our infirmities; but was in all points tempted, in
like manner, without sin. Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of
grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need."
Again, in chapter vii.—"But this Man, because He continueth forever, hath
an unchangeable priesthood. Wherefore He is able also to save them to the
uttermost that come unto God by Him, seeing He ever liveth to make
intercession for them." And in chapter ix.—"For Christ is not entered into
the holy places made with hands, which are the figures of the true; but into
heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us."
Then, in the first epistle of John, we have the same great subject presented
under a somewhat different aspect.—"My little children, these things write I
unto you, that ye sin not. And if any one sin, we have an Advocate with the
Father, Jesus Christ the righteous: and He is the propitiation for our sins;
and not our sins only, but also for the whole world."
For whom, let us ask, is Christ now living and acting at the right hand of
God? Is it for the world? Clearly not; for He says, in John xvii, "I pray not for
the world, but for them which Thou hast given Me; for they are Thine." And
who are these? are they the Jewish remnant? Nay; that remnant is yet to
appear on the scene. Who are they, then? Believers—children of God—
Christians, who are now passing through this sinful world, liable to fail and
to contract defilement every step of the way. These are the subjects of
Christ's priestly ministry. He died to make them clean: He lives to keep them
clean. By His death He expiated our guilt, and by His life He cleanses us,
through the action of the Word by the power of the Holy Ghost. "This is He
that came by water and blood; not by water only, but by water and blood."
We have expiation and cleansing through a crucified Saviour. The double
stream emanated from the pierced side of Christ, dead for us. All praise to
His name!
What solid comfort is here for the people of God! and how needful for our
souls to be established in the knowledge and sense of it! Some there are who
have an imperfect sense of the true standing of a Christian, because they do
not see what Christ has done for them in the past; others, on the contrary,
have such an entirely one-sided view of the state of the Christian that they
do not see our need of what Christ is doing for us now. Both must be
corrected. The former are ignorant of the extent and value of the atonement;
the latter are ignorant of the place and application of the advocacy. Such is
the perfection of our standing, that the apostle can say, "As He is, so are we
in this world." If this were all, we should certainly have no need of
priesthood or advocacy; but then, such is our state, that the apostle has to
say, "If any man sin." This proves our continual need of the Advocate. And,
blessed be God, we have Him continually; we have him ever living for us. He
lives and serves on high. He is our subsisting righteousness before our God.
He lives to keep us always right in heaven, and to set us right when we go
wrong upon earth. He is the divine and indissoluble link between Our souls
and God.
PART IV
Having, in the three preceding papers of this series, sought to unfold the
grand foundation-truths connected with the work of Christ for us—His work
in the past and His work in the present—His atonement and His advocacy,
we shall now seek, by the gracious aid of the Spirit of God, to present to the
reader something of what the Scriptures teach us as to the second branch of
our subject, namely,—
To deprive the unconverted man of such things would almost drive him to
despair or lunacy; but the Christian does not want such things—would not
have them. They would be a perfect weariness to him. We speak, of course,
of the true Christian, of one who is not merely a Christian in name, but in
reality. Alas! alas! many profess to be Christians, and take very high ground
in their profession, who are, nevertheless, to be found mixed up in all the
vain and frivolous pursuits of the men of this world. They may be seen at
the communion-table on the Lord's day, and at a theatre or a concert on
Monday: they may be found assaying to take part in some one or other of
the many branches of Christian work on Sunday, and during the week you
may see them in the ball-room, at the race-course, or some such scene of
folly and vanity.
It is very evident that such persons know nothing of Christ as an object for
the heart. Indeed, it is very questionable how any one with a single spark of
divine life in the soul can find pleasure in the wretched pursuits of a godless
world. The true and earnest Christian turns away from such things—turns
away instinctively; and this, not merely because of the positive wrong and
evil of them—though most surely he feels them to be wrong and evil—but
because he has no taste for them, and because he has found something
infinitely superior, something which perfectly satisfies all the desires of the
new nature. Could we imagine an angel from heaven taking pleasure at a
ball, a theatre, or a race-course? The bare thought is supremely ridiculous.
All such scenes are perfectly foreign to a heavenly being.
It may perhaps seem to some of our readers that we are taking too high
ground. We would ask such, What ground are we to take? Surely, Christian
ground, if we are Christians. Well, then, if we are to take Christian ground,
how are we to know what that ground really is? Assuredly, from the New
Testament. And what does it teach? Does it afford any warrant for the
Christian to mix himself, in any shape or form, with the amusements and
vain pursuits of this present evil world? Let us hearken to the weighty words
of our blessed Lord in John xvii. Let us hear from His lips the truth as to
our portion, our position, and our path in this world. He says, addressing
the Father, "I have given them Thy Word; and the world hath hated them,
because they are not of the world, even as I am not of the world. I pray not
that Thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that Thou shouldest
keep them from the evil. They are not of the world, even as I am not of the
world. Sanctify them through Thy truth; Thy Word is truth. As Thou hast
sent Me into the world, even so have I also sent them into the world." (Ver.
14-18.)
It will perhaps be said, What are we to do? are we to go out of the world? By
no means. Our Lord expressly says, "I pray not that Thou shouldest take
them out of the world, but that Thou shouldest keep them from the evil." In
it, but not of it, is the true principle for the Christian. To use a figure, the
Christian in the world is like a diver. He is in the midst of an element which
would destroy him, were he not protected from its action, and sustained by
unbroken communication with the scene above.
And what is the Christian to do in the world? what is his mission? Here it is:
"As Thou hast sent Me into the world, even so have I sent them into the
world." And again, in John xx. 21—"As My Father hath sent Me, even so
send I you."
Such is the Christian's mission. He is not to shut himself within the walls of
a monastery or convent. Christianity does not consist in joining a
brotherhood or a sisterhood. Nothing of the kind. We are called to move up
and down in the varied relations of life, and to act in our divinely appointed
spheres, to the glory of God. It is not a question of what we are doing, but of
how we do it. All depends upon the object which governs our hearts. If
Christ be the commanding and absorbing object of the heart, all will be
right; if He be not, nothing is right. Two persons may sit down at the same
table to eat; the one eats to gratify his appetite, the other eats to the glory of
God—eats simply to keep his body in proper working order as God's vessel,
the temple of the Holy Ghost, the instrument for Christ's service.
So in every thing. It is our sweet privilege to set the Lord always before us.
He is our model. As He was sent into the world, so are we. What did He
come to do? To glorify God. How did He live? By the Father. "As the living
Father hath sent Me, and I live by the Father, so he that eateth Me, even he
shall live by Me." (John vi. 57.)
This makes it all so simple. Christ is the standard and touchstone for every
thing. It is no longer a question of mere right and wrong according to human
rules; it is simply a question of what is worthy of Christ. Would He do this or
that? would He go here or there? "He left us an example, that we should
follow His steps;" and most assuredly, we should not go where we cannot
trace His blessed footsteps. If we go hither and thither to please ourselves,
we are not treading in His steps, and we cannot expect to enjoy His blessed
presence.
Christian reader, here lies the real secret of the whole matter. The grand
question is just this: Is Christ my one object? what am I living for? Can I
say, "The life that I live in the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of God, who
loved me, and gave Himself for me"? Nothing less than this is worthy of a
Christian. It is a poor miserable thing to be content with being saved, and
then to go on with the world, and live for self-pleasing and self-interest—to
accept salvation as the fruit of Christ's toil and passion, and then live at a
distance from Himself. What should we think of a child who only cared
about the good things provided by his father's hand, and never sought his
father's company—yea, preferred the company of strangers? We should
justly despise him; but how much more despicable is the Christian who
owes his present and his eternal all to the work of Christ and yet is content
to live at a cold distance from His blessed Person, caring not for the
furtherance of His cause—the promotion of His glory!
PART V
If the reader has been enabled, through grace, to make his own of what has
passed before our minds in this series of papers, he will have a perfect
remedy for all uneasiness of conscience and all restlessness of heart. The
work of Christ, if only it be laid hold of by an artless faith, must, of blessed
necessity, meet the former; and the Person of Christ, if only He be
contemplated with a single eye, must perfectly meet the latter. If, therefore,
we are not in the enjoyment of peace of conscience, it can only be because
we are not resting on the finished work of Christ; and if the heart is not at
ease, it proves that we are not satisfied with Christ Himself.
And yet, alas! how few, even of the Lord's beloved people, know either the
one or the other. How rare it is to find a person in the enjoyment of true
peace of conscience and rest of heart! In general, Christians are not a whit
in advance of the condition of Old-Testament saints. They do not know the
blessedness of an accomplished redemption; they are not in the enjoyment
of a purged conscience; they cannot draw nigh with a true heart, in full
assurance of faith, having the heart sprinkled from an evil conscience, and
the body washed with pure water; they do not apprehend the grand truth of
the indwelling of the Holy Ghost, enabling them to cry, "Abba, Father;" they
are, as to their experience, under law; they have never really entered into the
deep blessedness of being under the reign of grace. They have life. It is
impossible to doubt this. They love divine things; their tastes, their habits,
their aspirations—yea, their very exercises, their conflicts, their anxieties,
doubts, and fears all go to prove the existence of divine life. They are, in a
way, separated from the world, but their separation is rather negative than
positive. It is more because they see the utter vanity of the world, and its
inability to satisfy their hearts, than because they have found an object in
Christ. They have lost their taste for the things of the world, but they have
not found their place and their portion in the Son of God where He now is at
the right hand of God. The things of the world cannot satisfy them, and they
are not in the enjoyment of their proper heavenly standing, object, and hope;
hence they are in an anomalous condition altogether; they have no
certainty, no rest, no fixedness of purpose; they are not happy; they do not
know their true bearings; they are neither one thing nor the other.
Is it thus with the reader? We fondly hope not. We trust he is one of those
who, through infinite grace, "know the things that are freely given them of
God;" who know that they have passed from death unto life—that they have
eternal life; who enjoy the precious witness of the Spirit; who realize their
association with a risen and glorified Head in the heavens, with whom they
are linked by the Holy Ghost, who dwells in them; who have found their
object in the Person of that blessed One whose finished work is the divine
and eternal basis of their salvation and peace; and who are earnestly looking
for the blessed moment when Jesus shall come to receive them to Himself,
that where He is, they may be also, to go no more out forever.
This is Christianity. Nothing else deserves the name. It stands out in bold
and striking contrast with the spurious religiousness of the day, which is
neither pure Judaism on the one hand, nor pure Christianity on the other,
but a wretched mixture, composed of some of the elements of each, which
unconverted people can adopt and go on with, because it sanctions the lusts
of the flesh, and allows them to enjoy the pleasures and vanities of the world
to their heart's content. The archenemy of Christ and of souls has
succeeded in producing an awful system of religion, half Jewish, half
Christian, combining, in the most artful manner, the world and the flesh,
with a certain amount of Scripture, so used as to destroy its moral force and
hinder its just application. In the meshes of this system souls are hopelessly
entangled. Unconverted people are deceived into the notion that they are
very good Christians indeed, and going on all right to heaven; and on the
other hand, the Lord's dear people are robbed of their proper place and
privileges, and dragged down by the dark and depressing influence of the
religious atmosphere which surrounds and almost suffocates them.
It lies not, we believe, within the compass of human language to set forth
the appalling consequences of this mingling of the people of God with the
people of the world in one common system of religiousness and theological
belief. Its effect upon the former is to blind their eyes to the true moral
glories of Christianity as set forth in the pages of the New Testament; and
this to such an extent, that if any one attempts to unfold these glories to
their view, he is regarded as a visionary enthusiast, or a dangerous heretic:
its effect upon the latter is to deceive them altogether as to their true
condition, character, and destiny. Both classes repeat the same formularies,
subscribe the same creed, say the same prayers, are members of the same
community, partake of the same sacrament, are, in short, ecclesiastically,
theologically, religiously one.
It will perhaps be said in reply to all this, that our Lord, in His wonderful
discourse in Matthew xiii, distinctly teaches that the wheat and the tares are
to grow together. Yes; but where? in the Church? Nay; but "in the field;" and
He tells us that "the field is the world." To confound these things is to falsify
the whole Christian position, and to do away with all godly discipline in the
assembly. It is to place the teaching of our Lord in Matthew xiii. in
opposition to the teaching of the Holy Ghost in 1 Corinthians v.
However, we shall not pursue this subject further just now. It is far too
important and too extensive to be disposed of in a brief article like the
present. We may perhaps discuss it more fully on some future occasion.
That it demands the serious consideration of the Christian reader we are
most thoroughly convinced; bearing, as it does, so manifestly on the glory of
Christ, on the true interests of His people, on the progress of the gospel, on
the integrity of Christian testimony and service, it would be quite impossible
to overestimate its importance. But we must leave it for the present, and
draw this paper to a close by a brief reference to the third and last branch of
our subject, namely,
THE WORD OF CHRIST AS THE ALL-SUFFICIENT GUIDE FOR OUR
PATH
If Christ's work suffices for the conscience, if His blessed Person suffices for
the heart, then, most assuredly, His precious Word suffices for the path. We
may assert, with all possible confidence, that we possess in the divine
volume of holy Scripture all we can ever need, not only to meet all the
exigencies of our individual path, but also the varied necessities of the
Church of God, in the most minute details of her history in this world.
We are quite aware that in making this assertion we lay ourselves open to
much scorn and opposition, in more quarters than one. We shall be met on
the one hand by the advocates of tradition, and on the other by those who
contend for the supremacy of man's reason and will; but this gives us very
little concern indeed. We regard the traditions of men, whether fathers,
brothers, or doctors, if presented as an authority, as the small dust of the
balance; and as to human reason, it can only be compared to a bat in the
sunshine, dazzled by the brightness, and blindly dashing itself against
objects which it cannot see.
It is the deepest joy of the Christian's heart to retire from the conflicting
traditions and doctrines of men into the calm light of holy Scripture; and
when encountered by the impudent reasonings of the infidel, the rationalist,
and the skeptic, to bow down his whole moral being to the authority and
power of holy Scripture. He thankfully recognizes in the Word of God the
only perfect standard for doctrine, for morals, for every thing. "All Scripture
is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for
correction, for instruction in righteousness; that the man of God may be
perfect [αρτιος], throughly furnished unto all good works."
What more can we need? Nothing. If Scripture can make a child "wise unto
salvation," and if it can make a man "perfect," and furnish him "throughly to
all good works," what do we want of human tradition or human reasonings?
If God has written a volume for us, if He has graciously condescended to
give us a revelation of His mind, as to all we ought to know and think and
feel and believe and do, shall we turn to a poor fellow-mortal—be he ritualist
or rationalist—to help us? Far away be the thought! As well might we turn to
our fellow-man to add something to the finished work of Christ, in order to
render it sufficient for our conscience, or to supply some deficiency in the
Person of Christ, in order to render Him a sufficient object for the heart, as
to betake ourselves to human tradition or human reason to supply some
deficiency in divine revelation.
All praise and thanks to our God, it is not so. He has given us in His own
beloved Son all we want for the conscience, for the heart, for the path—for
time, with all its changing scenes—for eternity, with its countless ages. We
can say,—
There is, there could be, no lack in the Christ of God. His atonement and
advocacy must satisfy all the cravings of the most deeply exercised
conscience. The moral glories—the powerful attractions of His divine Person
must satisfy the most intense aspirations and longings of the heart. And His
peerless revelation—that priceless volume—contains within its covers all we
can possibly need, from the starting-post to the goal of our Christian career.
Christian reader, are not these things so? Dost thou not, from the very
centre of thy renewed moral being, own the truth of them? If so, art thou
resting, in calm repose, on Christ's work? art thou delighting in His Person?
art thou submitting, in all things, to the authority of His Word? God grant it
may be so with thee, and with all who profess His name! May there be a
fuller, clearer, and more decided testimony to "the all-sufficiency of Christ,"
till "that day."
C. H. M.
The book of Job occupies a very peculiar place in the volume of God. It
possesses a character entirely its own, and teaches lessons which are not to
be learnt in any other section of inspiration. It is not by any means our
purpose to enter upon a line of argument to prove the genuineness, or
establish the fact of the divine inspiration, of this precious book. We take
these things for granted; being fully persuaded of them as established facts,
we leave the proofs to abler hands. We receive the book of Job as part of the
Holy Scriptures given of God for the profit and blessing of His people. We
need no proofs of this for ourselves, nor do we attempt to offer any to our
reader.
And we may further add that we have no thought of entering upon the field
of inquiry as to the authorship of this book. This, howsoever interesting it
may be in itself, is to us entirely secondary. We receive the book from God.
This is enough for us. We heartily own it to be an inspired document, and
we do not feel it to be our province to discuss the question as to where,
when, or by whom it was penned. In short, we purpose, with the Lord's help,
to offer a few plain and practical remarks on a book which we consider
needs to be more closely studied, that it may be more fully understood. May
the Eternal Spirit, who indited the book, expound and apply it to our souls!
The opening page of this remarkable book furnishes us with a view of the
patriarch Job, surrounded by every thing that could make the world
agreeable to him, and make him of importance in the world. "There was a
man in the land of Uz whose name was Job; and that man was perfect and
upright, and one that feared God and eschewed evil." Thus much as to what
he was. Let us now see what he had.
"And there were born unto him seven sons and three daughters. His
substance also was seven thousand sheep, and three thousand camels, and
five hundred yoke of oxen, and five hundred she-asses, and a very great
household; so that this man was the greatest of all the children of the east.
And his sons went and feasted in their houses every one his day; and sent
and called for their three sisters, to eat and to drink with them." Then, to
complete the picture, we have the record of what he did.
"And it was so, when the days of their feasting were gone about, that Job
sent and sanctified them, and rose up early in the morning, and offered
burnt-offerings according to the number of them all; for Job said, 'It may be
that my sons have sinned, and cursed God in their hearts.' Thus did Job
continually."
Here, then, we have a very rare specimen of a man. He was perfect, upright,
God-fearing, and eschewed evil. Moreover, the hand of God had hedged him
round about on every side, and strewed his path with richest mercies. He
had all that heart could wish,—children and wealth in abundance,—honor
and distinction from all around. In short, we may almost say, his cup of
earthly bliss was full.
But Job needed to be tested. There was a deep moral root in his heart which
had to be laid bare. There was self-righteousness which had to be brought to
the surface and judged. Indeed, we may discern this root in the very words
which we have just quoted. He says, "It may be that my sons have sinned."
He does not seem to contemplate the possibility of sinning himself. A soul
really self-judged, thoroughly broken before God, truly sensible of its own
state, tendencies, and capabilities, would think of his own sins, and his own
need of a burnt-offering.
Now, let the reader distinctly understand that Job was a real saint of God,—
a divinely quickened soul,—a possessor of divine and eternal life. We cannot
too strongly insist upon this. He was just as truly a man of God in the first
chapter as he was in the forty-second. If we do not see this, we shall miss
one of the grand lessons of the book. The eighth verse of chap. i. establishes
this point beyond all question. "And the Lord said unto Satan, 'Hast thou
considered My servant Job, that there is none like him in the earth,—a
perfect and an upright man, one that feareth God and escheweth evil?"
But, with all this, Job had never sounded the depths of his own heart. He
did not know himself. He had never really grasped the truth of his own utter
ruin and total depravity. He had never learnt to say, "I know that in me, that
is in my flesh, dwelleth no good thing." This point must be seized, or the
book of Job will not be understood. We shall not see the specific object of all
those deep and painful exercises through which Job was called to pass
unless we lay hold of the solemn fact that his conscience had never been
really in the divine presence,—that he had never seen himself in the light,—
never measured himself by a divine standard,—never weighed himself in the
balances of the sanctuary.
If the reader will turn for a moment to chap. xxix., he will find a striking
proof of what we assert. He will there see distinctly what a strong and deep
root of self-complacency there was in the heart of this dear and valued
servant of God, and how this root was nourished by the very tokens of divine
favor with which he was surrounded. This chapter is a pathetic lament over
the faded light of other days; and the very tone and character of the lament
prove how necessary it was that Job should be stripped of every thing, in
order that he might learn himself in the searching light of the divine
presence.
"Oh that I were as in months past, as in the days when God preserved me;
when His candle shined upon my head, and when by His light I walked
through darkness; as I was in the days of my youth, when the secret of God
was upon my tabernacle; when the Almighty was yet with me, when my
children were about me; when I washed my steps with butter, and the rock
poured me out rivers of oil; when I went out to the gate through the city;
when I prepared my seat in the street! The young men saw me and hid
themselves, and the aged arose and stood up. The princes refrained talking,
and laid their hand on their mouth. The nobles held their peace, and their
tongue cleaved to the roof of their mouth. When the ear heard me, then it
blessed me; and when the eye saw me, it gave witness to me: because I
delivered the poor that cried, and the fatherless, and him that had none to
help him. The blessing of him that was ready to perish came upon me, and I
caused the widow's heart to sing for joy. I put on righteousness, and it
clothed me: my judgment was as a robe and a diadem. I was eyes to the
blind, and feet was I to the lame. I was a father to the poor, and the cause
which I knew not I searched out. And I brake the jaws of the wicked, and
plucked the spoil out of his teeth. Then I said, 'I shall die in my nest, and I
shall multiply my days as the sand.' My root was spread out by the waters,
and the dew lay all night upon my branch. My glory was fresh in me, and
my bow was renewed in my hand. Unto me men gave ear, and waited, and
kept silence at my counsel. After my words they spake not again, and my
speech dropped upon them. And they waited for me as for the rain, and they
opened their mouth wide as for the latter rain. If I laughed on them, they
believed it not; and the light of my countenance they cast not down. I chose
out their way, and sat chief, and dwelt as a king in the army, as one that
comforteth the mourners. But now, they that are younger than I have me in
derision, whose fathers I would have disdained to have set with the dogs of
my flock."
Now Job had to be stripped of all this; and when we compare chap. xxix.
with chap. xxx. we can form some idea of how painful the process of
stripping must have been. There is peculiar emphasis in the words, "But
now." Job draws a most striking contrast between his past and his present.
In chap. xxx. he is still occupied with himself. It is still "I;" but ah, how
changed! The very men who flattered him in the day of his prosperity, treat
him with contempt in the day of his adversity. Thus it is ever in this poor,
false, deceitful world, and it is well to be made to prove it. All must, sooner
or later, find out the hollowness of the world,—the fickleness of those who
are ready to cry out "hosanna" to-day, and "crucify Him" to-morrow. Man is
not to be trusted. It is all very well while the sun shines; but wait till the
nipping blasts of winter come, and then you will see how far nature's fair
promises and professions can be trusted. When the prodigal had plenty to
spend, he found plenty to share his portion; but when he began to be in
want, "no man gave unto him."
Thus it was with Job in chap. xxx. But be it well remembered that there is
very much more needed than the stripping of self, and the discovery of the
hollowness and deceitfulness of the world. One may go through all these,
and the result be merely chagrin and disappointment. Indeed, it can be
nothing more if God be not reached. If the heart be not brought to find its
all-satisfying portion in God, then a reverse of fortune leaves it desolate; and
the discovery of the fickleness and hollowness of men fills it with bitterness.
This will account for Job's language in chap. xxx.: "But now they that are
younger than I have me in derision, whose fathers I would have disdained to
have set with the dogs of my flock." Was this the spirit of Christ? Would Job
have spoken thus at the close of the book? He would not. Ah, no, reader;
when once Job got into God's presence, there was an end the egotism of
chap. xxix. and the bitterness of chap. xxx.
But hear Job's further outpourings. "They were children of fools, yea,
children of base men; they were viler than the earth. And now am I their
song, yea, I am their by-word. They abhor me, they flee far from me, and
spare not to spit in my face. Because He hath loosed my cord, and afflicted
me, they also let loose the bridle before me. Upon my right hand rise the
youth; they push away my feet, and they raise up against me the ways of
their destruction. They mar my path, they set forward my calamity, they
have no helper. They came upon me as a wide breaking in of waters: in the
desolation they rolled themselves upon me."
Now, all this, we may truly say, is very far short of the mark. Lamentations
over departed greatness, and bitter invectives against our fellow-men, will
not do the heart much good; neither do they display aught of the spirit and
mind of Christ, nor bring glory to His holy name. When we turn our eyes
toward the blessed Lord Jesus we see something wholly different. That meek
and lowly One met all the rebuffs of this world, all the disappointments in
the midst of His people Israel, all the unbelief and folly of His disciples, with
an, "Even so, Father." He was able to retire from the rebuffs of men into His
resources in God, and then to come forth with those balmy words, "Come
unto Me ... and I will give you rest." No chagrin, no bitterness, no harsh
invectives, nothing rough or unkind, from that gracious Saviour who came
down into this cold and heartless world to manifest the perfect love of God,
and who pursued His path of service spite of all man's perfect hatred.
But the fairest and best of men must retire into the shade when tested by
the perfect standard of the life of Christ. The light of His moral glory makes
manifest the defects and blemishes of even the most perfect of the sons of
men. "In all things He must have the pre-eminence." He stands out in vivid
contrast with even a Job or a Jeremiah in the matter of patient submission
to all that He was called upon to endure. Job completely breaks down under
his heavy trials. He not only pours forth a torrent of bitter invective upon his
fellows, but actually curses the day of his birth. "After this opened Job his
mouth and cursed his day. And Job spake and said, 'Let the day perish
wherein I was born, and the night in which it was said, There is a man-child
conceived'" (chap. iii. 1-3).
We notice the selfsame thing in Jeremiah—that blessed man of God. He, too,
gave way beneath the heavy pressure of his varied and accumulated
sorrows, and gave vent to his feelings in the following bitter accents: "Cursed
be the day wherein I was born; let not the day wherein my mother bare me
be blessed. Cursed be the man who brought tidings to my father, saying, 'A
man-child is born unto thee;' making him very glad. And let that man be as
the cities which the Lord overthrew, and repented not; and let him hear the
cry in the morning, and the shouting at noontide. Because He slew me not
from the womb; or that my mother might have been my grave, and her
womb to be always great with me. Wherefore came I forth out of the womb to
see labor and sorrow, that my days should be consumed with shame?" (Jer.
xx. 14-18.)
What language is here! Only think of cursing the man that brought tidings
of his birth! cursing him because he had not slain him! All this, both in the
prophet and the patriarch, contrasts strongly with the meek and lowly Jesus
of Nazareth. That spotless One passed through deeper sorrows and more in
number than all His servants put together; but not one murmuring word
ever escaped His lips. He patiently submitted to all; and met the darkest
hour with such words as these, "The cup which My Father hath given Me,
shall I not drink it?" Blessed Lord Jesus, Son of the Father, we adore Thee!
We bow down at Thy feet, lost in wonder, love, and praise, and own Thee
Lord of all!—the fairest among ten thousand, and the altogether lovely.
There is no more fruitful field of study than that which is opened before us
in the history of God's dealings with souls. It is full of interest, and abounds
in instruction and profit. One grand object in those dealings is to produce
real brokenness and humility—to strip us of all false righteousness, empty
us of all self-confidence, and teach us to lean wholly upon Christ. All have to
pass through what may be called the process of stripping and emptying.
With some this process precedes, with others it follows, conversion or the
new birth. Many are brought to Christ through deep plowings and painful
exercises of heart and conscience—exercises extending over years, often over
the whole lifetime. Others, on the contrary, are brought with comparatively
little exercise of soul. They lay hold, speedily, of the glad tidings of
forgiveness of sins through the atoning death of Christ, and are made happy
at once. But the stripping and emptying come afterward, and, in many
cases, cause the soul to totter on its foundation, and almost to doubt its
conversion.
This is very painful, but very needful. The fact is, self must be learnt and
judged, sooner or later. If it be not learnt in communion with God, it must
be learnt by bitter experience in failures and falls. "No flesh shall glory in
His presence;" and we must all learn our utter powerlessness, in every
respect, in order that we may taste the sweetness and comfort of the truth,
that Christ is made of God unto us wisdom, righteousness, sanctification,
and redemption. God will have broken material. Let us remember this. It is a
solemn and necessary truth, "Thus saith the high and lofty One that
inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy: I dwell in the high and holy place,
with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the spirit of
the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones." And again, "Thus
saith the Lord, 'The heaven is My throne, and the earth is My footstool:
where is the house that ye build unto Me? and where is the place of My
rest? For all those things hath Mine hand made, and all those things have
been, saith the Lord: but to this man will I look, even to him that is poor and
of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at My word.'" (Is. lvii. 15; lxvi. 1, 2.)
These are seasonable words for all of us. One special want of the present
moment is brokenness of spirit. Nine-tenths of our trouble and difficulty
may be traced to this want. It is marvelous how we get on from day to day,—
in the family, in the assembly, in the world, in our entire practical life, when
self is subdued and mortified. A thousand things which else would prove
more than a match for our hearts are esteemed as nothing, when our souls
are in a truly contrite state. We are enabled to bear reproach and insult, to
overlook slights and affronts, to trample upon our crotchets, predilections,
and prejudices, to yield to others where weighty principle is not involved, to
be ready to every good work, to exhibit a genial large-heartedness in all our
dealings, and an elasticity in all our moral movements which so greatly tend
to adorn the doctrine of God our Saviour. How often, alas! it is otherwise
with us. We exhibit a stiff, unyielding temper; we stand up for our rights; we
maintain our interests; we look after our own things; we contend for our
own notions. All this proves, very clearly, that self is not habitually
measured and judged in the presence of God.
But we repeat—and with emphasis—God will have broken material. He loves
us too well to leave us in hardness and unsubduedness; and hence it is that
He sees fit to pass us through all sorts of exercises in order to bring us into
a condition of soul in which He can use us for His own glory. The will must
be broken; self-confidence, self-complacency, and self-importance must be
cut up by the roots. God will make use of the scenes and circumstances
through which we have to pass, the people with whom we are associated in
daily life, to discipline the heart and subdue the will. And further, He will
deal with us directly Himself, in order to bring about these great practical
results.
All this comes out with great distinctness in the book of Job, and gives a
wonderful interest and charm to its pages. It is very evident that Job needed
a severe sifting. Had he not needed it, we may rest assured the gracious,
loving Lord would not have passed him through it. It was not for nothing
that He let Satan loose upon His dear servant. We may say, with fullest
confidence, that nothing but the most stern necessity would have led Him to
adopt such a line of action. God loved Job with a perfect love; but it was a
wise and faithful love; a love that could take account of every thing, and,
looking below the surface, could see the deep moral roots in the heart of His
servant—roots which Job had never seen, and, therefore, never judged.
What a mercy to have to do with such a God! to be in the hands of One who
will spare no pains in order to subdue every thing in us which is contrary to
Himself, and to bring out in us His own blessed image!
But, beloved reader, is there not something profoundly interesting in the fact
that God can even make use of Satan as an instrument in the discipline of
His people? We see this in the case of the apostle Peter, as well as in that of
the patriarch Job. Peter had to be sifted, and Satan was used to do the
work. "Simon, Simon, behold Satan hath desired to have you, that he may
sift you as wheat." Here, too, there was a stern necessity. There was a deep
root to be reached in Peter's heart—the root of self-confidence; and his
faithful Lord saw it absolutely needful to pass him through a most severe
and painful process in order that this root should be exposed and judged;
and therefore Satan was permitted to sift him thoroughly, so that he might
never again trust his own heart, but walk softly all his days. God will have
broken material, whether it be in a patriarch or an apostle. All must be
mellowed and subdued in order that the divine glory may shine forth with
an ever brightening lustre.
"Now there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves
before the Lord, and Satan came also among them. And the Lord said unto
Satan, 'Whence comest thou?' Then Satan answered the Lord and said,
'From going to and fro in the earth, and from walking up and down in it.'
And the Lord said unto Satan, 'Hast thou considered my servant Job, that
there is none like him in the earth, a perfect and an upright man, one that
feareth God and escheweth evil?' Then Satan answered the Lord, and said,
'Doth Job fear God for naught? Hast not Thou made a hedge about him, and
about his house, and about all that he hath on every side? Thou hast blest
the work of his hands, and his substance is increased in the land. But put
forth Thine hand now, and touch all that he hath, and he will curse Thee to
Thy face.'" What a view we have here of Satan's malignity! What a striking
proof of the way in which he watches and considers the ways and works of
God's people! What insight into human character! What an intimate
knowledge of man's mental and moral constitution! What a terrible thing to
fall into his hands! He is ever on the watch; ever ready, if permitted of God,
to put forth all his malignant energy against the Christian.
The thought of this is most solemn, and should lead us to walk humbly and
watchfully through a scene where Satan rules. He has no power whatever
over a soul who abides in the place of dependence and obedience; and,
blessed be God, he cannot, in any case, go one hair's breadth beyond the
limit prescribed by divine command. Thus, in Job's case, "The Lord said
unto Satan, 'Behold, all that he hath is in thy power; only upon himself put
not forth thine hand.'"
Here Satan was permitted to lay his hand on Job's possessions—to bereave
him of his children, and despoil him of all his wealth. And truly he lost no
time in despatching his business. With marvelous rapidity he executed his
commission. Blow after blow fell, in quick succession, on the devoted head
of the patriarch. Hardly had one messenger told his melancholy tale, ere
another arrived with still heavier tidings, until, at length, the afflicted
servant of God "arose and rent his mantle, and shaved his head, and fell
down upon the ground, and worshiped, and said, 'Naked came I out of my
mother's womb, and naked shall I return thither: the Lord gave, and the
Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord.' In all this, Job
sinned not, nor charged God foolishly" (chap. i. 20-22).
All this is deeply touching. To speak after the manner of men, it was enough
to make reason totter, to be thus, in a moment, bereft of his ten children,
and reduced from princely wealth to absolute penury. What a striking
contrast between the opening and the closing lines of our first chapter! In
the former, we see Job surrounded by a numerous family, and in the
enjoyment of vast possessions; in the latter, we see him left alone, in poverty
and nakedness. And to think of Satan's being allowed—yea, commissioned
of God—to bring about all this! And for what? For the deep and permanent
profit of Job's precious soul. God saw that His servant needed to be taught a
lesson; and, moreover, that, in no other way, by no other means, could this
lesson be taught than by passing him through an ordeal the bare record of
which fills the mind with solemn awe. God will teach His children, even
though it be by stripping them of all that the heart clings to in this world.
"Again there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves
before the Lord, and Satan came also among them to present himself before
the Lord. And the Lord said unto Satan, 'From whence comest thou?' And
Satan answered the Lord, and said, 'From going to and fro in the earth, and
from walking up and down in it.' And the Lord said unto Satan, 'Hast thou
considered My servant Job, that there is none like him in the earth, a
perfect and an upright man, one that feareth God and escheweth evil? and
still he holdeth fast his integrity, although thou movedst Me against him, to
destroy him without cause.' And Satan answered the Lord, and said, 'Skin
for skin, yea, all that a man hath will he give for his life. But put forth Thine
hand now, and touch his bone and His flesh, and he will curse Thee to Thy
face.' And the Lord said unto Satan, 'Behold, he is in thy hand; but save his
life.' So went Satan forth from the presence of the Lord, and smote Job with
sore boils from the sole of his foot unto his crown. And he took him a
potsherd to scrape himself withal; and he sat down among the ashes. Then
said his wife unto him, 'Dost thou still retain thine integrity? curse God, and
die.' But he said unto her, 'Thou speakest as one of the foolish women
speaketh. What? shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not
receive evil?' In all this did not Job sin with his lips" (chap. ii. 1-10).
We are anxious that the reader should distinctly seize this point. It is, to a
very great extent, the key to the entire book of Job. The divine object was to
expose to Job's view the depths of his own heart, in order that he might
learn to delight in the grace and mercy of God, and not in his own goodness,
which was as a morning cloud and the early dew, that passeth away. Job
was a true saint of God; and all Satan's accusations were flung back in his
face; but, all the while, Job was unbroken material, and therefore
unprepared for "the end of the Lord"—that blessed end for every contrite
heart—that end which is marked by "pity and tender mercy." God, blessed
and praised be His name! will not suffer Satan to accuse us; but He will
expose us to ourselves, so that we may judge ourselves, and thus learn to
mistrust our own hearts, and rest in the eternal stability of His grace.
Thus far, then, we see Job "holding fast his integrity." He meets with
calmness all the heavy afflictions which Satan is allowed to bring upon him;
and, moreover, he refuses the foolish counsel of his wife. In a word, he
accepts all as from the hand of God, and bows his head in the presence of
His mysterious dispensations.
All this is well. But the arrival of Job's three friends produces a marked
change. Their very presence—the bare fact of their being eye-witnesses of his
trouble—affects him in a very remarkable manner. "Now when Job's three
friends heard of all this evil that was come upon him, they came every one
from his own place,—Eliphaz the Temanite, and Bildad the Shuhite, and
Zophar the Naamathite; for they had made an appointment together to come
to mourn with him and to comfort him. And when they lifted up their eyes
afar off, and knew him not, they lifted up their voices and wept; and they
rent every one his mantle, and sprinkled dust upon their heads toward
heaven. So they sat down with him upon the ground seven days and seven
nights, and none spake a word unto him; for they saw that his grief was very
great." (Chap. ii. 11-13.)
Now, we can fully believe that those three men were governed, in the main,
by kindly feelings toward Job; and it was no small sacrifice on their part to
leave their homes and come to condole with their bereaved and afflicted
friend. All this we can easily believe. But it is very evident that their
presence had the effect of stirring up feelings and thoughts in his heart and
mind which had hitherto lain dormant. He had borne submissively the loss
of children, property, and of bodily health. Satan had been dismissed, and
the wife's counsel rejected; but the presence of his friends caused Job to
break down completely. "After this, Job opened his mouth, and cursed his
day."
This is very remarkable. It does not appear that the friends had spoken a
single sentence. They sat in total silence, with rent garments, and covered
with dust, gazing on a grief too profound for them to reach. It was Job
himself who first broke silence; and the whole of the third chapter is an
outpouring of the most bitter lamentation, affording melancholy evidence of
an unsubdued spirit. It is, we may confidently assert, impossible that any
one who had learnt, in any little measure, to say, "Thy will be done," could
ever curse his day, or use the language contained in the third chapter of
Job. It may doubtless be said, "It is easy for those to speak who have never
been called to endure Job's heavy trials." This is quite true; and it may
further be added that no other man would have done one whit better under
the circumstances. All this we can fully understand; but it in no wise
touches the great moral of the book of Job—a moral which it is our privilege
to seize. Job was a true saint of God; but he needed to learn himself, as we
all do. He needed to have the roots of his moral being laid bare in his own
sight, so that he might really abhor himself, and repent in dust and ashes.
And furthermore, he needed a truer and deeper sense of what God was, so
that he might trust Him and justify Him under all circumstances.
But we look in vain for aught of this in Job's opening address. "Job spake
and said, 'Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the night in which it
was said, There is a man-child conceived.... Why died I not from the womb?'"
These are not the accents of a broken and a contrite spirit, or of one who
had learnt to say, "Even so, Father, for so it seemed good in Thy sight." It is
a grand point in the soul's history when one is enabled to bow with
meekness to all the dispensations of our Father's hand. A broken will is a
rich and rare endowment. It is a high attainment in the school of Christ to
be able to say, "I have learnt, in whatsoever state I am, to be content." (Phil.
iv. 11.) Paul had to learn this. It was not natural to him; and, most surely,
he never learnt it at the feet of Gamaliel. He had to be thoroughly broken
down at the feet of Jesus of Nazareth, ere he could say from his heart, "I am
content." He had to ponder the meaning of those words, "My grace is
sufficient for thee" ere he could "take pleasure in infirmities." The man who
could use such language was standing at the very antipodes of the man who
could curse his day, and say, "Why died I not from the womb?" Only think of
a saint of God, and heir of glory, saying, "Why died I not from the womb?"
Ah! if Job had been in the presence of God he never could have uttered such
words. He would have known full well why he had not died. He would have
had a soul-satisfying sense of what God had in store for him. He would have
justified God in all things. But Job was not in the presence of God, but in
the presence of his friends; who proved, very distinctly, that they understood
little or nothing of the character of God or the real object of His dealings
with His dear servant Job.
It is not, by any means, our purpose to enter minutely into the lengthened
discussion between Job and his friends—a discussion extending over
twenty-nine chapters. We shall merely quote a few sentences from the
opening address of each of the friends which will enable the reader to form
an idea of the real ground occupied by these mistaken men.
Eliphaz was the first speaker. "Then Eliphaz the Temanite answered and
said, 'If we essay to commune with thee wilt thou be grieved? but who can
withhold himself from speaking? Behold, thou hast instructed many, and
thou hast strengthened the weak hands. Thy words have upholden him that
was falling, and thou hast strengthened the feeble knees. But now it is come
upon thee, and thou faintest; it toucheth thee, and thou art troubled. Is not
this thy fear, thy confidence, thy hope, and the uprightness of thy ways?
Remember, I pray thee, who ever perished, being innocent? or where were
the righteous cut off? Even as I have seen, they that plow iniquity, and sow
wickedness, reap the same'" (chap. iv. 1-8). And again, "I have seen the
foolish taking root; but suddenly I cursed his habitation" (chap. v. 3; see
also chap. xv. 17).
From these sentences it seems very evident that Eliphaz belonged to that
class of people who argue very much from their own experience. His motto
was, "As I have seen." Now, what we have seen may be all true enough, so
far as we are concerned. But it is a total mistake to found a general rule
upon individual experience, and yet it is a mistake to which thousands are
prone. What, for instance, had the experience of Eliphaz to do with Job? It
may be he had never met a case exactly similar; and if there should happen
to be a single feature of dissimilarity between the two cases, then the whole
argument based on experience must go for nothing. And that it went for
nothing in Job's case is evident, for no sooner had Eliphaz ceased speaking,
than, without the slightest attention to his words, Job proceeded with the
tale of his own sorrows, intermingled with much self-vindication and bitter
complaints against the divine dealings (chap. vi. 7).
Bildad is the next speaker. He takes quite different ground from that
occupied by Eliphaz. He never once refers to his own experience, or to what
had come under his own observation. He appeals to antiquity. "Inquire, I
pray thee, of the former age, and prepare thyself to the search of their
fathers. (For we are but of yesterday, and know nothing, because our days
upon earth are a shadow.) Shall not they teach thee, and tell thee, and utter
words out of their heart?" (Chap. viii.-x.)
Now, it must be admitted that Bildad conducts us into a much wider field
than that of Eliphaz. The authority of a number of "fathers" has much more
weight and respectability than the experience of a single individual.
Moreover, it would argue much more modesty to be guided by the voice of a
number of wise and learned men than by the light of one's own experience.
But the fact is that neither experience nor tradition will do. The former may
be true so far as it goes, but you can hardly get two men whose experience
will exactly correspond; and as to the latter, it is a mass of confusion,—for
one father differs from another; and nothing can be more slippery or
uncertain than the voice of tradition—the authority of the fathers.
Hence, as might be expected, Bildad's words had no more weight with Job
than those of Eliphaz. The one was as far from the truth as the other. Had
they appealed to divine revelation it would have been a different matter
altogether. The truth of God is the only standard—the one grand authority.
By that, all must be measured; to that all must, sooner or later, bow down.
No man has any right to lay down his own experience as a rule for his
fellows; and if no man has a right, neither have any number of men. In other
words, it is not the voice of man, but the voice of God which must govern us
all. It is not experience or tradition which shall judge at the last day, but the
word of God. Solemn and weighty fact! May we consider it! Had Bildad and
Eliphaz understood it, their words would have had much more weight with
their afflicted friend.
Let us now very briefly refer to the opening address of Zophar the
Naamathite.
He says, "Oh, that God would speak, and open His lips against thee, and
that He would show thee the secrets of wisdom, that they are double to that
which is! Know, therefore, that God exacteth of thee less than thine iniquity
deserveth." And again, "If thou prepare thy heart, and stretch out thy hands
toward Him; if iniquity be in thy hand, put it far away, and let not
wickedness dwell in thy tabernacles. For then shalt thou lift up thy face
without spot: yea, thou shalt be stedfast, and shalt not fear." (Chap. xi. 5, 6,
13-15.)
These words savor strongly of legality. They prove very distinctly that Zophar
had no right sense of the divine character. He did not know God. No one
possessing a true knowledge of God could speak of Him as opening His lips
against a poor afflicted sinner, or as exacting aught from a needy, helpless
creature. God is not against us, but for us, blessed forever be His name! He
is not a legal exactor, but a liberal giver. Then, again, Zophar says, "If thou
prepare thy heart." But if not, what then? No doubt a man ought to prepare
his heart,—and if he were right, he would; but then, he is not right, and
hence, when he sets about preparing his heart, he finds nothing there but
evil. He finds himself perfectly powerless. What is he to do? Zophar cannot
tell. No; nor can any of his school. How can they? They only know God as a
stern exactor—as One who, if He opens His lips, can only speak against the
sinner.
Need we marvel, therefore, that Zophar was as far from convincing Job as
either of his two companions? They were all wrong. Legality, tradition,
experience, were alike defective, one-sided, false. Not any one of them, or all
of them put together, could meet Job's case. They only darkened counsel by
words without knowledge. Not one of the three friends understood Job; and
what is more, they did not know God's character or His object in dealing
with His dear servant. They were wholly mistaken. They knew not how to
present God to Job; and, as a consequence, they knew not how to lead Job's
conscience into the presence of God. In place of leading him to self-
judgment, they only ministered to a spirit of self-vindication. They did not
introduce God into the scene. They said some true things, but they had not
the truth. They brought in experience, tradition, legality, but not the truth.
Hence the three friends failed to convince Job. Their ministry was one-sided,
and instead of silencing Job, they only led him forth into a field of
discussion which seemed almost boundless. He gives them word for word,
and far more. "No doubt," he says, "but ye are the people, and wisdom shall
die with you. But I have understanding as well as you; I am not inferior to
you: yea, who knoweth not such things as these?" "What ye know, the same
do I know also; I am not inferior to you." "Ye are forgers of lies, ye are all
physicians of no value. Oh that ye would altogether hold your peace! and it
should be your wisdom." "I have heard many such things: miserable
comforters are ye all. Shall vain words have an end? or what emboldeneth
thee that thou answerest? I also could speak as ye do: if your soul were in
my soul's stead, I could heap up words against you, and shake my head at
you." "How long will ye vex my soul, and break me in pieces with words?
These ten times have ye reproached me; ye are not ashamed that ye make
yourselves strange to me." "Have pity upon me, have pity upon me, O ye my
friends; for the hand of God hath touched me."
All these utterances prove how far Job was from that true brokenness of
spirit and humility of mind which ever flow from being in the divine
presence. No doubt the friends were wrong—quite wrong in their notions
about God, wrong in their method of dealing with Job; but their being wrong
did not make him right. Had Job's conscience been in the presence of God,
he would have made no reply to his friends, even though they had been a
thousand times more mistaken and severe in their treatment. He would
have meekly bowed his head, and allowed the tide of reproof and accusation
to roll over him. He would have turned the very severity of his friends to
profitable account, by viewing it as a wholesome moral discipline for his
heart. But no; Job had not yet reached the end of himself. He was full of
self-vindication, full of invective against his fellows, full of mistaken
thoughts about God. It needed another ministry to bring him into a right
attitude of soul.
The more closely we study the lengthened discussion between Job and his
three friends, the more clearly we must see the utter impossibility of their
ever coming to an understanding. He was bent upon vindicating himself;
and they were bent upon the very reverse. He was unbroken and
unsubdued, and their mistaken course of treatment only tended to render
him more so. Had they changed sides, they would have reached a different
issue altogether. If Job had condemned himself, had he taken a low place,
had he owned himself nothing and nobody, he would have left his friends
nothing to say. And, on the other hand, had they spoken softly, tenderly,
and soothingly to him, they would have been far more likely to melt him
down. As it was, the case was hopeless. He could see nothing wrong in
himself; and they could see nothing right. He was determined to maintain
his integrity; and they were quite as determined to pick holes and find out
flaws. There was no point of contact whatever—no common ground of
understanding. He had no penitential breathings for them, and they had no
tender compassions for him. They were traveling in entirely opposite
directions, and never could meet. In a word, there was a demand for another
kind of ministry altogether, and that ministry is introduced in the person of
Elihu.
"So these three men ceased to answer Job [high time they should], because
he was righteous in his own eyes. Then was kindled the wrath of Elihu, the
son of Barachel the Buzite, of the kindred of Ram: against Job was his
wrath kindled, because he justified himself rather than God. Also against
his three friends was his wrath kindled, because they had found no answer,
and yet had condemned Job." (Chap. xxxii. 1-3.)
Here Elihu, with remarkable force and clearness, seizes upon the very root
of the matter on each side. He condenses, in two brief sentences, the whole
of the elaborate discussion contained in twenty-nine chapters. Job justified
himself instead of justifying God: and they had condemned Job, instead of
leading him to condemn himself.
But Job had not yet learnt to tread this marvelously blessed path. He was
still built up in his own goodness, still clothed in his own righteousness, still
full of self-complacency. Hence the wrath of Elihu was kindled against him.
Wrath must assuredly fall upon self-righteousness. It cannot be otherwise.
The only true ground for a sinner to occupy is the ground of genuine
repentance. Here there is naught but that pure and precious grace that
reigns through righteousness by Jesus Christ our Lord. Thus it stands ever.
There is nothing but wrath for the self-righteous—nothing but grace for the
self-judged.
Reader, remember this. Pause for a moment, and consider it. On what
ground dost thou, at this moment, stand? Hast thou bowed before God in
true repentance? Hast thou ever really measured thyself in His holy
presence? Or, art thou on the ground of self-righteousness, self-vindication,
and self-complacency? Do, we entreat you, weigh these solemn questions.
Do not put them aside. We are most anxious to deal with the heart and
conscience of the reader. We do not write merely for the understanding, for
the mind, for the intelligence. No doubt it is well to seek to enlighten the
understanding, by the word of God; but we should exceedingly regret if our
work were to end here. There is far more than this. God wants to deal with
the heart, with the moral being, with the inward man. He will have us real
before Him. It is of no possible use to build ourselves up in self-
opinionativeness; for nothing is surer than that every thing of that kind
must be broken up. The day of the Lord will be against every thing high and
lifted up; and hence it is our wisdom now to be low and broken down; for it
is from the low place that we get the very best view of God and His salvation.
May the reader be led by God's Spirit into the reality of all this! May we all
remember that God delights in a broken and contrite spirit—that He ever
finds His abode with such; but the proud He knoweth afar off.
Thus, then, we may understand why Elihu's wrath was kindled against Job.
He was entirely on God's side. Job was not. We hear nothing of Elihu until
chap. xxxii., though it is very evident that he had been an attentive listener
to the whole discussion. He had given a patient hearing to both sides, and
he found that both were wrong. Job was wrong in seeking to defend himself;
and the friends were wrong in seeking to condemn him.
How often is this the case in our discussions and controversies! And oh,
what sorrowful work it is! In ninety-nine cases out of a hundred in the
which persons are at issue, it will be found to be very much as it was with
Job and his friends. A little brokenness on one side, or a little softness on
the other, would go a great way toward settling the question. We speak not,
of course, of cases in which the truth of God is concerned. There, one must
be bold, decided, and unyielding. To yield where the truth of God or the
glory of Christ is concerned, would be disloyalty to the One to whom we owe
every thing. Plain decision and unflinching firmness alone become us in all
cases in which it is a question of the claims of that blessed One who, when
our interests were concerned, surrendered every thing, even life itself, in
order to secure them. God forbid we should drop a sentence or pen a line
which might have the effect of relaxing our grasp of truth, or abating our
ardor in contending earnestly for the faith once delivered to the saints. Ah,
no, reader, this is not the moment for ungirding the loins, laying aside the
harness, or lowering the standard. Quite the reverse. Never was there more
urgent need of having the loins girt about with truth, of having firm footing,
and of maintaining the standard of divine principle in all its integrity. We
say this advisedly. We say it in view of all the efforts of the enemy to drive us
off the platform of pure truth by referring us to those who have failed in the
maintenance of pure morals. Alas! alas! there is failure—sad, humiliating
failure. We do not deny it. Who could? It is too patent—too flagrant—too
gross. The heart bleeds as we think of it. Man fails always and every where.
His history, from Eden to the present hour, is stamped with failure.
All this is undeniable. But, blessed be God! His foundation standeth sure,
nor can human failure ever touch it. God is faithful. He knoweth them that
are His; and let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from
iniquity. We have yet to learn that the way to improve our morals is to lower
God's standard. We do not and cannot believe it. Let us humble ourselves in
view of our failure; but never surrender the precious truth of God.
But all this is a digression into which we have allowed ourselves to be drawn
in order to guard against the thought that, in urging upon the reader the
importance of cultivating a broken, yielding spirit, we would have him to
yield a single jot or tittle of divine revelation. We must now return to our
subject.
"Now Elihu had waited till Job had spoken, because they were elder than he.
When Elihu saw that there was no answer in the mouth of these three men,
then his wrath was kindled." Note this: "There was no answer." In all their
reasonings, in all their arguments, in all their references to experience,
tradition, and legality, there was "no answer." This is very instructive. Job's
friends had traveled over a very wide range, had said many true things, had
attempted many replies; but, be it carefully noted, they found "no answer." It
is not in the range of earth or of nature to find an answer for a self-righteous
heart. God alone can answer it, as we shall see in the sequel. To all else but
God the unbroken heart can find a ready reply. This is most strikingly
proved in the history now before us. Job's three friends found no answer.
"And Elihu, the son of Barachel the Buzite, answered and said, 'I am young,
and ye are very old; wherefore I was afraid, and durst not show mine
opinion. I said, Days should speak [but, alas! they either do not speak at all
or they speak a quantity of error and folly], and multitude of years should
teach wisdom. But there is a spirit in man, and the inspiration of the
Almighty giveth him understanding." Here divine light, the light of
inspiration, begins to stream in upon the scene, and to roll away the thick
clouds of dust raised by the strife of tongues. We are conscious of moral
power and weight the very moment this blessed servant opens his lips. We
feel we are listening to a man who speaks as the oracles of God—a man who
is sensibly standing in the divine presence. It is not a man drawing from the
meagre store of his own narrow and one-sided experience; nor yet a man
appealing to hoary antiquity, or to a bewildering tradition, or the ever-
conflicting voices of the fathers. No; we have before us now a man who
introduces us at once into the very presence of "the inspiration of the
Almighty."
This is the only sure authority—the only unerring standard. "'Great men are
not always wise, neither do the aged understand judgment. Therefore I said,
Hearken to me; I also will show mine opinion. Behold, I waited for your
words; I gave ear to your reasons, whilst ye searched out what to say. Yea, I
attended unto you, and, behold, there was none of you that convinced Job,
or that answered his words: lest ye should say, We have found out wisdom:
God thrusteth him down, not man. Now he hath not directed his words
against me, neither will I answer him with your speeches.' They were
amazed; they answered no more; they left off speaking." Experience,
tradition, and legality are all swept off the platform to leave room for the
"inspiration of the Almighty"—for the direct and powerful ministry of the
Spirit of God.
The ministry of Elihu breaks upon the soul with peculiar power and
fullness. It stands in vivid contrast with the one-sided and most defective
ministry of the three friends. Indeed, it is quite a relief to reach the close of a
controversy which seemed likely to prove interminable—a controversy
between intense egotism on the one hand and experience, tradition, and
legality on the other,—a controversy barren of any good, so far as Job was
concerned, and leaving all parties at the close very much where they were at
the beginning.
Still, however, the controversy is not without its value and interest to us. It
teaches us very distinctly that when two parties join issue, they never can
reach an understanding unless there be a little brokenness and
subduedness on one side or the other. This is a valuable lesson, and one to
which we all need to give attention. There is a vast amount of headiness and
high-mindedness abroad, not only in the world, but in the Church. There is
a great deal of self-occupation—a quantity of "I, I, I"—and that, too, even
where we least suspect it, and where it is, most of all, unsightly, namely, in
connection with the holy service of Christ. Never, we may safely assert, is
egotism more truly detestable than when it shows itself in the service of that
blessed One who made Himself of no reputation—whose whole course was
one of perfect self-surrender, from first to last—who never sought His own
glory in any thing, never maintained His own interest, never pleased
Himself.
And yet, for all that, reader, is there not a most deplorable amount of
hateful, unsubdued self displayed on the platform of Christian profession
and Christian service? Alas! we cannot deny it. We are disposed to marvel,
as the eye scans the record of the remarkable discussion between Job and
his friends; we are amazed to find close upon a hundred references to
himself in Job xxix.-xxxi. alone. In short, it is all "I" from beginning to end.
But, let us look to ourselves. Let us judge our own hearts in their deeper
workings. Let us review our ways in the light of the divine presence. Let us
bring all our work and service, and have it weighed in the holy balances of
the sanctuary of God. Then shall we discover how much of hateful self is
insinuated, like a dark and defiling tissue, into the whole web of our
Christian life and service. How, for example, comes it to pass that we are so
ready to mount the high horse when self is touched, even in the most
remote degree? Why are we so impatient of reproof, be it clothed in language
ever so refined and gentle? Why so ready to take offense at the slightest
disparagement of self? And, further, why is it that we find our sympathies
and our regards and our predilections going out, with special energy, after
those who think well of us,—who value our ministry, agree with our
opinions, and adopt our cue?
Do not all these things tell a tale? Do they not prove to us that, ere we
condemn the egotism of our ancient patriarch, we should seek to get rid of a
vast amount of our own? It is not, surely, that he was right; but we are far
more wrong. It is far less to be wondered at that a man, amid the dim
twilight of the far-back patriarchal age, was entangled in the snare of self-
occupation, than that we, in the full blaze of Christianity, should fall
thereinto. Christ had not come. No prophetic voice had fallen on the ear.
Even the law had not been given when Job lived and spoke and thought. We
can form a very poor conception indeed of the tiny ray of light by which men
had to walk in the days of Job. But to us pertain the high privilege and holy
responsibility of walking in the very meridian light of a full-orbed
Christianity. Christ has come. He has lived, died, risen, and gone back to
heaven. He has sent down the Holy Ghost to dwell in our hearts, as the
witness of His glory, the seal of accomplished redemption, and the earnest of
the inheritance, until the redemption of the purchased possession. The
canon of Scripture is closed. The circle of revelation is complete. The Word of
God is filled up. We have before us the divine record of the self-emptied One
who went about doing good—the marvelous story of what He did, and how
He did it, of what He said, and how He said it, of who He was and what He
was. We know that He died for our sins according to the Scriptures; that He
condemned sin and put it away; that our old nature—that odious thing
called self, sin, the flesh—has been crucified and buried out of God's sight—
made an end of forever, so far as its power over us is concerned. Moreover,
we are made partakers of the divine nature; we have the holy Ghost dwelling
in us; we are members of Christ's body, of His flesh, and of His bones; we
are called to walk, even as He walked; we are heirs of glory—heirs of God
and joint-heirs with Christ.
What did Job know of all this? Nothing. How could he know what was not
revealed till fifteen centuries after his time? The full extent of Job's
knowledge is poured upon us in those few glowing and impassioned words
at the close of chap xix. "Oh, that my words were now written! Oh, that they
were printed in a book! That they were graven with an iron pen and lead in
the rock forever! For I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that He shall
stand at the latter day upon the earth. And though, after my skin worms
destroy this body yet in my flesh shall I see God: whom I shall see for
myself, and my eyes shall behold, and not another; though my reins be
consumed within me."
This was Job's knowledge—this was his creed. There was a great deal in it,
in one sense; but very little indeed when compared with the mighty circle of
truths in the midst of which we are privileged to move. Job looked forward,
through the dim twilight, to something that was to be done in the far-off
future. We look back, from amid the full flood-tide of divine revelation, to
something that has been done. Job could say of his Redeemer that "He shall
stand in the latter day upon the earth." We know that our Redeemer sitteth
on the throne of the Majesty in the heavens, after having lived and labored
and died on the earth.
And then, on the other hand, when we feel called upon to approach another
in the attitude and tone of reproof, with what rudeness, coarseness, and
harshness we discharge the necessary work! How little softness of tone or
delicacy of touch! How little of the tender and the soothing! How little of the
"excellent oil!" How little of the broken heart and weeping eye! What slender
ability to bring our erring brother down into the dust! Why is this? Simply
because we are not habitually in the dust ourselves. If, on the one hand, we
fail quite as much as Job in the matter of egotism and self-vindication, so on
the other, we prove ourselves fully as incompetent as Job's friends to
produce self-judgment in our brother. For example, how often do we parade
our own experience, like Eliphaz; or indulge in a legal spirit, like Zophar; or
introduce human authority, like Bildad! How little of the spirit and mind of
Christ! How little of the power of the Holy Ghost, or the authority of the
Word of God!
It is not pleasant to write thus. Quite the contrary. But it is pressed upon
us, and we must write. We feel most solemnly, the growing laxity and
indifference of the day in which we live. There is something perfectly
appalling in the disproportion between our profession and practice. The
highest truths are professed in immediate connection with gross worldliness
and self-indulgence. Indeed, it would appear as though, in some cases, the
higher the doctrines professed, the lower the walk. There is a wide diffusion
of truth in our midst; but where is its formative power? Floods of light are
poured upon the intelligence; but where are the profound exercises of heart
and conscience in the presence of God? The rigid rule of precise and
accurate statement is attended to; but where is the true practical result?
Sound doctrine is unfolded in the letter; but where is the spirit? There is the
form of words; but where is the living exponent?
But, Christian reader, we would lovingly and solemnly ask you, Does it not
strike you that there is in our midst a most melancholy lack of the tender
conscience and the exercised heart? Does our practical piety keep pace with
our profession of principle? Is the standard of morals at all up to the
standard of doctrine?
Ah! we anticipate the reply of the grave and thoughtful reader. We know too
well the terms in which that reply must be couched. It is but too plain that
the truth does not act on the conscience—that the doctrine does not shine
in the life—that the practice does not correspond with the profession.
We speak for ourselves. As God is our witness, we pen these lines, in His
presence, in a spirit of self-judgment. It is our hearty desire that the knife
should enter into our own soul, and reach the deep roots of things there.
The Lord knows how much we should prefer laying the ax to the root of self
and there leave it to do its work. But we feel we have a sacred duty to
discharge to the individual reader and to the Church of God; and, moreover,
we feel that that duty would not be discharged were we merely to set forth
the precious and the beautiful and the true. We are convinced that God
would have us not only to be exercised in heart and conscience ourselves,
but also to seek to exercise the hearts and consciences of all with whom we
have to do.
True it is (a truth often stated and proved) that worldliness and carnality,
and self-indulgence in all its phases,—in the wardrobe, the library, the
equipage, and the table,—that fashion and style, folly and vanity, pride of
caste, of intellect, and of purse,—none of these things can be talked down,
written, lectured, or scolded down. This we fully believe. But must not
conscience be addressed? Must not the voice of holy exhortation fall on the
ear? Shall we suffer laxity, indifferentism, and Laodicean lukewarmness to
pave the way for a universal skepticism, infidelity, and practical atheism,
and not be roused in conscience ourselves, and seek to rouse others? God
forbid! No doubt, the higher and the better way is to have the evil expelled
by the good, to have the flesh subdued by the Spirit, to have self displaced
by Christ, to have the love of the world supplanted by the love of the
Father:—all this we fully feel and freely admit; but, while feeling and
admitting all this, we must still press upon our own conscience and that of
the reader the urgent demand for solemn and searching review—for deep
searchings of heart in the secret of the presence of God—for profound self-
judgment, in reference to our whole career. Blessed be God! we can carry on
these exercises before the throne of grace, the precious mercy-seat. "Grace
reigns." Precious consoling sentence! Should it prevent exercise of soul?
Nay, it should only impart the right tone and character thereto. We have to
do with victorious grace, not that we may indulge self, but mortify it all the
more thoroughly.
May the Lord make us really humble, earnest, and devoted! May the deep
utterance of the heart both of the writer and the reader be, "Lord, I am
Thine—Thine only, Thine wholly, Thine forever!"
This may seem to some a digression from our special theme; but we trust
the digression may not be in vain, but that, by the grace of God, it will yield
something for the heart and conscience of both the writer and the reader;
and thus we shall be better prepared to understand and appreciate the
powerful ministry of Elihu, to which we shall now turn our attention, in
dependence upon divine guidance.
The reader cannot fail to notice the double bearing of this remarkable
ministry,—its bearing upon our patriarch and its bearing upon his friends.
This is only what we might expect. Elihu, as we have already remarked, had
patiently listened to the arguments on both sides. He had, as we say, heard
both parties out. He had allowed them to exhaust themselves—to say all
they had to say: "Elihu had waited till Job had spoken, because they were
older than he." This is in lovely moral order. It was, most surely, the way of
the Spirit of God. Modesty in a young man is most graceful. Would there
were more of it in our midst! Nothing is more attractive in the young than a
quiet, retiring spirit. When real worth lies concealed beneath a modest and
humble exterior, it is sure to draw the heart with irresistible power. But on
the other hand, nothing is more repulsive than the bold self-confidence, the
pushing forwardness, and self-conceit of many of the young men of the
present day. All such persons would do well to study the opening words of
Elihu, and to imitate his example.
"And Elihu, the son of Barachel the Buzite, answered and said, 'I am young,
and ye are very old; wherefore I was afraid, and durst not show you mine
opinion. I said, Days should speak, and multitude of years should teach
wisdom.'" This is the natural order. We expect hoary heads to contain
wisdom; and hence it is but right and comely for young men to be swift to
hear, slow to speak, in the presence of their elders. We may set it down as
an almost fixed principle that a forward young man is not led by the Spirit of
God—that he has never measured himself in the divine presence—that he
has never been thoroughly broken down before God.
No doubt it may often happen, as in the case of Job and his friends, that old
men give utterance to very foolish things. Gray hairs and wisdom do not
always go together; and it not unfrequently happens that aged men, relying
upon the mere fact of their years, assume a place for which they have no
sort of power, either moral, intellectual, or spiritual. All this is perfectly true,
and it has to be considered by those whom it may concern. But it leaves
wholly untouched the fine moral sentiment contained in Elihu's opening
address: "I am young, and ye are very old; wherefore I was afraid, and durst
not show you mine opinion." This is always right. It is always comely for a
young man to be afraid to show his opinion. We may rest assured that a
man who possesses inward moral power—who, as we say, has it in him—is
never in haste to push himself forward; but yet, when he does come forward,
he is sure to be heard with respect and attention. The union of modesty and
moral power imparts an irresistible charm to the character; but the most
splendid abilities are marred by a self-confident style.
"But," continues Elihu, "there is a spirit in man; and the inspiration of the
Almighty giveth him understanding." This introduces another element
altogether. The moment the Spirit of God enters the scene, it ceases to be a
question of youth or old age, inasmuch as he can speak by old or young.
"Not by might or by power; but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of hosts." This
holds good always. It was true for the patriarchs; true for the prophets; true
for apostles; true for us; true for all. It is not by human might or power, but
by the eternal Spirit.
Here lay the deep secret of Elihu's quiet power. He was filled with the Spirit,
and hence we forget his youth, while hearkening to the words of spiritual
weight and heavenly wisdom that proceed out of his mouth; and we are
reminded of Him who spake as one having authority, and not as the scribes.
There is a striking difference between a man who speaks as an oracle of
God, and one who speaks in mere official routine—between one who speaks
from the heart, by the Spirit's holy unction, and one who speaks from the
intellect by human authority. Who can duly estimate the difference between
these two? None but those who possess and exercise the mind of Christ.
"Great men," he tells us, "are not always wise." How true! "Neither do the
aged understand judgment. Therefore I said, Hearken to me; I also will show
mine opinion. Behold, I waited for your words; I gave ear to your reasons,
whilst ye searched out what to say. Yea, I attended unto you, and, behold,
there was none of you that convinced Job, or that answered his words."
Let us specially note this. "There was none of you that convinced Job." This
was clear enough. Job was just as far from being convinced at the close of
the discussion as he was at the commencement. Indeed we may say that
each fresh argument drawn from the treasury of experience, tradition, and
legality only served to stir some fresh and deeper depth of Job's unjudged,
unsubdued, unmortified nature. This is a grand moral truth, illustrated on
every page of the book which lies open before us.
But how instructive the reason for all this! "Lest ye should say, We have
found out wisdom; God thrusteth him down, not man." No flesh shall glory
in the presence of God. It may boast itself outside. It may put forth its
pretensions, and glory in its resources, and be proud of its undertakings, so
long as God is not thought of. But only introduce Him, and all the
vauntings, the boastings, the vain-gloryings, the lofty pretensions, and the
self-complacency, and the self-conceit will be withered up in a moment.
Thus it was; thus it is; and thus it must ever be. God knows how to humble
the proud heart and subdue the stubborn will. It is utterly vain for any one
to set himself up; for we may rest assured that every one who is set up
must, sooner or later, be upset. The moral government of God has so
ordered and enacted that all that is high and lifted up must come down.
This is a salutary truth for us all; but especially for the young, the ardent,
and the aspiring. The humble, retired, shady path is, unquestionably, the
safest, the happiest, and the best. May we ever be found treading it, until we
reach that bright and blessed scene where pride and ambition are
unknown?
The effect of Elihu's opening words upon Job's three friends was most
striking. "They were amazed; they answered no more; they left off speaking.
When I had waited—for they spake not, but stood still, and answered no
more—I said, I will answer also my part; I also will show mine opinion." And
then, lest any should suppose that he was speaking his own words, he adds,
"For I am full of matter; the spirit within me constraineth me." This is the
true spring and power of all ministry, in all ages. It must be "the inspiration
of the Almighty," or it is worth absolutely nothing.
We repeat, this is the only true source of ministry, at all times and in all
places. And in saying this, we do not forget that a mighty change took place
when our Lord Christ ascended to heaven and took His seat at the right
hand of God, in virtue of accomplished redemption. To this glorious truth we
have often referred the readers of our magazine, Things New and Old; and
hence shall not now permit ourselves to dwell upon it. We merely touch
upon it in this place, lest the reader might imagine that, when we speak of
the true source of ministry in all ages, we were forgetting what is marked
and distinctive in the Church of God now, in consequence of the death and
resurrection of Christ, the presence and indwelling of the Holy Ghost, in the
individual believer, and in the Church, which is the body of Christ on earth.
Far from it. Thanks and praise be to God! we have too deep a sense of the
value, importance, and practical weight of that grand and glorious truth ever
to lose sight of it for a moment. Indeed, it is just this deep sense, together
with the remembrance of Satan's ceaseless effort to ignore the truth of the
presence of the Holy Ghost in the Church, that leads us to pen this
cautionary paragraph.
Still, Elihu's principle must ever hold good. If any man is to speak with
power and practical effect, he must be able, in some measure, to say, "I am
full of matter; the spirit within me constraineth me. Behold, my belly is as
wine which hath no vent; it is ready to burst like new bottles. I will speak,
that I may be refreshed: I will open my lips and answer." Thus it must ever
be, in measure at least, with all who will speak with real power and effect to
the hearts and consciences of their fellows. We are forcibly reminded, by
Elihu's glowing words, of that memorable passage in the seventh of John,
"He that believeth on Me, as the Scripture hath said, out of his belly shall
flow rivers of living water." True it is that Elihu knew not the glorious truth
set forth in these words of our Lord, inasmuch as they were not made good
till fifteen centuries after his time. But then he knew the principle—he
possessed the germ of what was afterward to come out in full blow and rich
mellow fruit. He knew that a man, if he is to speak with point, pungency,
and power, must speak by the inspiration of the Almighty. He had listened
till he was tired to men talking a quantity of powerless matter—saying some
truisms—drawing from their own experience, or from the musty stores of
human tradition. He was well-nigh wearied out with all this, and he rises, in
the mighty energy of the Spirit, to address his hearers as one fitted to speak
like an oracle of God.
Here lies the deep and blessed secret of ministerial power and success. "If
any man speak," says Peter, "let him speak as the oracles of God." It is not,
be it carefully observed, merely speaking according to Scripture—an all-
important and essential matter, most surely. It is more. A man may rise and
address his fellows for an hour, and, from beginning to end of his discourse,
he may not utter so much as a single unscriptural sentence; and all the
while, he may not have been God's oracle at the time,—he may not have
been God's mouthpiece, or the present exponent of His mind to the souls
before him.
This is peculiarly solemn, and demands the grave consideration of all who
are called to open their lips in the midst of God's people. It is one thing to
utter a certain amount of true sentiment, and quite another to be the living
channel of communication between the very heart of God and the souls of
God's people. It is this latter, and this alone, that constitutes true ministry.
A man who speaks as an oracle of God will bring the conscience of the
hearer so into the very light of the divine presence that every chamber of the
heart is laid open, and every moral spring touched. This is true ministry. All
else is powerless, valueless, fruitless. Nothing is more deplorable and
humiliating than to listen to a man who is evidently drawing from his own
poor and scanty resources, or trafficking in second-hand truth—in borrowed
thoughts. Better far for such to be silent—better for their hearers, better for
themselves. Nor this only. We may often hear a man giving forth to his
fellows that on which his own mind has been dwelling in private with much
interest and profit. He may utter truth, and important truth; but it is not the
truth for the souls of the people—the truth for the moment. He has spoken
according to Scripture so far as his matter is concerned, but he has not
spoken as an oracle of God.
Thus, then, may all learn a valuable lesson from Elihu; and, most surely, it
is a needed lesson. Some may feel disposed to say it is a difficult lesson—a
hard saying. But no; if we only live in the Lord's presence, in the abiding
sense of our own nothingness and of His all-sufficiency, we shall know the
precious secret of all effective ministry; we shall know how to lean upon God
alone, and thus be independent of men, in the right sense; we shall be able
to enter into the meaning and force of Elihu's further words, "Let me not, I
pray you, accept any man's person; neither let me give flattering titles unto
man. For I know not to give flattering titles; in so doing, my Maker would
soon take me away." (Job xxxii. 21, 22.)
But Elihu begins by telling Job the truth. He introduces God into the scene
in His true character. This was just what the three friends had failed to do.
No doubt they had referred to God; but their references were cloudy,
distorted, and false. This is plain from chap. xlii. 7, 8, where we are told that
"the Lord said to Eliphaz the Temanite, My wrath is kindled against thee,
and against thy two friends; for ye have not spoken of Me the thing that is
right, as My servant Job hath. Therefore take unto you now seven bullocks
and seven rams, and go to my servant Job, and offer up for yourselves a
burnt-offering; and my servant Job shall pray for you, for him will I accept:
lest I deal with you after your folly, in that ye have not spoken of Me the
thing which is right, like My servant Job." They had utterly failed to bring
God before the soul of their friend, and there they failed in producing the
needed self-judgment.
Not so Elihu. He pursues a totally different line of things. He brings the light
of "truth" to bear upon Job's conscience; and at the same time he
administers the precious balm of "grace" to his heart. Let us quote his
further sayings, "Wherefore, Job, I pray thee, hear my speeches, and
hearken to all my words. Behold, now I have opened my mouth, my tongue
hath spoken in my mouth. My words shall be of the uprightness of my
heart, and my lips shall utter knowledge clearly. The Spirit of God hath
made me, and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life. If thou canst
answer me, set thy words in order before me, stand up. Behold, I am
according to thy wish in God's stead: I am also formed out of clay. Behold,
my terror shall not make thee afraid, neither shall my hand be heavy upon
thee."
Here it is that Elihu stands out in vivid contrast. He tells Job the truth; but
he lays no heavy hand upon him. Elihu has learnt the mighty mysterious
power of "the still small voice"—the soul-subduing, heart-melting virtue of
grace. Job had given utterance to a quantity of false notions about himself,
and those notions had sprouted from a root to which the sharp ax of "truth"
had to be applied. "Surely," says Elihu, "thou hast spoken in my hearing,
and I have heard the voice of thy words, saying, 'I am clean without
transgression, I am innocent; neither is there iniquity in me.'"
What words for any poor sinful mortal to utter! Surely, though "the true
light" in which we may walk had not shone on the soul of this patriarch, we
may well marvel at such language. And yet, mark what follows. Although he
was so clean, so innocent, so free from iniquity, he nevertheless says of God,
that "He findeth occasions, he counteth me for His enemy. He putteth my
feet in the stocks, He marketh all my paths." Here is a palpable discrepancy.
How could a holy, just, and righteous Being count a pure and innocent man
His enemy? Impossible. Either Job was self-deceived, or God was
unrighteous; and Elihu, as the minister of truth, is not long in pronouncing
a judgment, and telling us which is which. "Behold, in this thou art not just:
I will answer thee, that God is greater than man." What a simple truth! And
yet how little understood! If God is greater than man, then obviously He,
and not man, must be the judge of what is right. This, the infidel heart
refuses; and hence the constant tendency to sit in judgment upon the works
and ways and word of God—upon God Himself. Man, in his impious and
infidel folly, undertakes to pronounce judgment upon what is and what is
not worthy of God; to decide upon what God ought and what He ought not
to say and to do. He proves himself utterly ignorant of that most simple,
obvious necessary truth, that "God is greater than man."
Now, it is when the heart bows under the weight of this great moral truth,
that we are in a fit attitude to understand to object of God's dealings with
us. Assuredly He must have the upper hand. "Why dost thou strive against
Him? for He giveth not account of any of His matters. For God speaketh
once, yea, twice, yet man perceiveth it not. In a dream, in a vision of the
night, when deep sleep falleth upon men, in slumberings upon the bed; then
He openeth the ears of men, and sealeth their instruction, that He may
withdraw man from his purpose, and hide pride from man. He keepeth back
his soul from the pit, and his life from perishing by the sword."
The real secret of all Job's false reasoning is to be found in the fact that he
did not understand the character of God, or the object of all His dealings. He
did not see that God was trying him, that He was behind the scenes and
using various agents for the accomplishment of His wise and gracious ends.
Even Satan himself was a mere instrument in the hand of God; nor could he
move the breadth of a hair beyond the divinely prescribed limit; and
moreover, when he had executed his appointed business, he was dismissed,
and we hear no more about him. God was dealing with Job. He was trying
him in order that He might instruct him, withdraw him from his purpose,
and hide pride from him. Had Job seized this grand point, it would have
saved him a world of strife and contention. Instead of getting angry with
people and things, with individuals and influences, he would have judged
himself and bowed low before the Lord in meekness and brokenness and
true contrition.
This is immensely important for us all. We are all of us prone to forget the
weighty fact that "God trieth the righteous." "He withdraweth not His eyes
from them." We are in His hands, and under His eye continually. We are the
objects of His deep, tender, and unchanging love; but we are also the
subjects of His wise moral government. His dealings with us are varied. They
are sometimes preventive; sometimes corrective; always instructive. We may
be bent on some course of our own, the end of which would be moral ruin.
He intervenes and withdraws us from our purpose. He dashes into
fragments our air-built castles, dissipates our golden dreams, and
interrupts many a darling scheme on which our hearts were bent, and
which would have proved to be certain destruction. "Lo, all these things
worketh God oftentimes with man, to bring back his soul from the pit, to be
enlightened with the light of the living."
If the reader will turn for a moment to Hebrews xii. 3-12, he will find much
precious instruction on the subject of God's dealings with His people. We do
not attempt to dwell upon it, but would merely remark that it presents three
distinct ways in which we may meet the chastening of our Father's hand. We
may "despise" it, as though His hand and His voice were not in it; we may
"faint" under it, as though it were intolerable, and not the precious fruit of
His love; or, lastly, we may be "exercised by it," and thus reap in due time,
"the peaceable fruits of righteousness."
Now if our patriarch had only seized the great fact that God was dealing with
him; that He was trying him for his ultimate good; that He was using
circumstances, people, the Sabeans, Satan himself, as His instruments; that
all his trials, his losses, his bereavements, his sufferings, were but God's
marvelous agency in bringing about His wise and gracious end; that He
would assuredly perfect that which concerned His dear and much-loved
servant, because His mercy endureth forever; in a word, had Job only lost
sight of all second causes, and fixed his thoughts upon the living God alone,
and accepted all from His loving hand, he would have more speedily reached
the divine solution of all his difficulties.
But it is precisely here that we are all apt to break down. We get occupied
with men and things; we view them in reference to ourselves. We do not
walk with God through, or rather above, the circumstances; but on the
contrary, we allow the circumstances to get power over us. In place of
keeping God between us and our circumstances, we permit these latter to
get between us and God. Thus we lose the sense of His presence, the light of
His countenance, the holy calmness of being in His loving hand, and under
His fatherly eye. We become fretful, impatient, irritable, fault-finding. We get
far away from God, out of communion, thoroughly astray, judging every one
except ourselves, until at length God takes us in hand, and by His own
direct and powerful ministry, brings us back to Himself in true brokenness
of heart and humbleness of mind. This is "the end of the Lord."
This effect was threefold. It had reference to God, to himself, and to his
friends—the very points on which he was so entirely astray. As to God, Elihu
had declared Job's mistake in the following words: "Job hath spoken
without knowledge, and his words were without wisdom. My desire is that
Job may be tried unto the end, because of his answers for wicked men. For
he addeth rebellion unto his sin; he clappeth his hands among us, and
multiplieth his words against God.... Thinkest thou this to be right, that
thou saidst, 'My righteousness is more than God's'?" But mark the change.
Hearken to the breathings of a truly repentant spirit; the brief yet
comprehensive statement of a corrected judgment. "Then Job answered the
Lord, and said, 'I know that Thou canst do every thing, and that no thought
can be withholden from Thee. Who is he that hideth counsel without
knowledge? therefore have I uttered that I understood not; things too
wonderful for me, which I knew not. Hear, I beseech Thee, and I will speak. I
will demand of thee, and declare thou unto Me. I have heard of Thee by the
hearing of the ear, but now mine eye seeth Thee.'" (Chap. xlii. 1-9.)
Here, then, was the turning-point. All his previous statements as to God and
His ways are now pronounced to be "words without knowledge." What a
confession! What a moment in man's history when he discovers that he has
been all wrong! What a thorough break-down! What profound humiliation! It
reminds us of Jacob getting the hollow of his thigh touched, and thus
learning his utter weakness and nothingness. These are weighty moments in
the history of souls—great epochs, which leave an indelible impress on the
whole moral being and character. To get right thoughts about God is to
begin to get right about every thing. If I am wrong about God, I am wrong
about myself, wrong about my fellows, wrong about all.
Thus it was with Job. His new thoughts as to God were immediately
connected with new thoughts of himself; and hence we find that the
elaborate self-vindication, the impassioned egotism, the vehement self-
gratulation, the lengthened arguments in self-defense—all is laid aside; all is
displaced by one short sentence of three words,—"I am vile." And what is to
be done with this vile self? Talk about it? Set it up? Be occupied with it?
Take counsel for it? Make provision for it? Nay, "I abhor it."
This is the true moral ground for every one of us. Job took a long time to
reach it, and so do we. Many of us imagine that we have reached the end of
self when we have given a nominal assent to the doctrine of human
depravity, or judged some of those sprouts which have appeared above the
surface of our practical life. But, alas! it is to be feared that very few of us
indeed really know the full truth about ourselves. It is one thing to say, "We
are all vile," and quite another to feel, deep down in the heart, that "I am
vile." This latter can only be known and habitually realized in the immediate
presence of God. The two things must ever go together, "Mine eye seeth
Thee," "Wherefore I abhor myself." It is as the light of what God is shines in
upon what I am that I abhor myself. And then my self-abhorrence is a real
thing. It is not in word, neither in tongue, but in deed and in truth. It will be
seen in a life of self-abnegation, a humble spirit, a lowly mind, a gracious
carriage in the midst of the scenes through which I am called to pass. It is of
little use to profess very low thoughts of self while, at the same time, we are
quick to resent any injury done to us,—any fancied insult, slight, or
disparagement. The true secret of a broken and contrite heart is, to abide
ever in the divine presence, and then we are able to carry ourselves right
toward those with whom we have to do.
Thus we find that when Job got right as to God and himself, he soon got
right as to his friends, for he learned to pray for them. Yes, he could pray for
the "miserable comforters," the "physicians of no value," the very men with
whom he had so long, so stoutly, and so vehemently contended! "And the
Lord turned the captivity of Job when he prayed for his friends."
Happy scene! Precious fruit of divine ministry! What remains? What more is
needed? What but that the hand of God should lay the top-stone on the
beauteous structure? Nor is this lacking, for we read, "The Lord gave Job
twice as much as he had before." But how? By what agency? Was it by his
own independent industry and clever management? No; all is changed. Job
is on new moral ground. He has new thoughts of God, new thoughts of
himself, new thoughts of his friends, new thoughts of his circumstances; all
things are become new. "Then came there unto him all his brethren, and all
his sisters, and all they that had been of his acquaintance before, and did
eat bread with him in his house; and they bemoaned him, and comforted
him over all the evil that the Lord had brought upon him; every man also
gave him a piece of money, and every one an earring of gold. So the Lord
blessed the latter end of Job more than his beginning.... After this lived Job
a hundred and forty years, and saw his sons, and his sons' sons, even four
generations. So Job died, being old and full of days."
What raised the wondrous thought?
Or who did it suggest?
"That we, the Church, to glory brought,
Should WITH the Son be blest."
O God, the thought was Thine!
(Thine only it could be,)
Fruit of the wisdom, love divine,
Peculiar unto Thee.
For, sure, no other mind,
For thoughts so bold, so free,
Greatness or strength, could ever find;
Thine only it could be.
The motives, too, Thine own,
The plan, the counsel, Thine!—
Made for Thy Son, bone of His bone
In glory bright to shine.
O God, with great delight
Thy wondrous thought we see,
Upon His throne, in glory bright,
The bride of Christ shall be.
Sealed with the Holy Ghost,
We triumph in that love,
Thy wondrous thought has made our boast,
"GloryWITH Christ above."
THE BIBLE
Some, we are aware, would fain persuade us that things are so totally
changed since the Bible was penned, that we need other guidance than that
which its precious pages supply. They tell us that Society is not what it was;
that the human race has made progress; that there has been such a
development of the powers of nature, the resources of science, and the
appliances of philosophy, that to maintain the sufficiency and supremacy of
the Bible, at such a point in the world's history as the nineteenth century of
the Christian era, can only be regarded as childishness, ignorance, or
imbecility.
Now, the men that tell us these things may be very clever and very learned;
but we have no hesitation whatever in telling them that, in this matter, "they
do greatly err, not knowing the Scriptures, nor the power of God." We
certainly do desire to render all due respect to learning, genius, and talent,
whenever we find them in their right place, and at their proper work; but
when we find them lifting their proud heads above the word of God; when we
find them sitting in judgment, and casting a slur upon that peerless
revelation, we feel that we owe them no respect whatever; yea, we treat them
as so many agents of the devil, in his efforts to shake those eternal pillars on
which the faith of God's people has ever rested. We cannot listen for a
moment to men, however profound in their reading and thinking, who dare
to treat God's book as though it were man's book, and speak of those pages
that were penned by the Allwise, Almighty, and Eternal God, as though they
were the production of a shallow and short-sighted mortal.
It is important that the reader should see clearly that men must either deny
that the Bible is the word of God, or admit its sufficiency and supremacy in
all ages, and in all countries—in all stages and conditions of the human
race. Grant us but this, that God has written a book for man's guidance,
and we argue that that book must be amply sufficient for man, no matter
when, where, or how we find him. "All scripture is given by inspiration of
God ... that the man of God may be perfect (αρτιος), thoroughly furnished
unto all good works." (2 Tim. iii. 16, 17.) This, surely, is enough. To be
perfect and thoroughly furnished, must needs render a man independent of
all the boasted powers of science and philosophy, falsely so called.
We are quite aware that, in writing thus, we expose ourselves to the sneer of
the learned rationalist, and the polished and cultivated philosopher. But we
are not very careful about this. We greatly admire the answer of a pious,
but, no doubt, very ignorant woman to some very learned man who was
endeavoring to show her that the inspired writer had made a mistake in
asserting that Jonah was in the whale's belly. He assured her that such a
thing could not possibly be, inasmuch that the natural history of the whale
proved that it could not swallow anything so large. "Well," said the poor
woman, "I do not know much about natural history; but this I know, that if
the Bible were to tell me that Jonah swallowed the whale I would believe it."
Now, it is quite possible many would pronounce this poor woman to have
been under the influence of ignorance and blind credulity; but, for our part,
we should rather be the ignorant woman, confiding in God's word, than the
learned rationalist trying to pick holes in it. We have no doubt as to who was
in the safer position.
But, let it not be supposed that we prefer ignorance to learning. Let none
imagine that we despise the discoveries of science, or treat with contempt
the achievements of sound philosophy. Far from it. We honor them highly in
their proper sphere. We could not say how much we prize the labors of those
learned men who have consecrated their energies to the work of clearing the
sacred text of the various errors and corruptions which, from age to age, had
crept into it, through the carelessness or infirmity of copyists, taken
advantage of by a crafty and malignant foe. Every effort put forth to
preserve, to unfold, to illustrate, and to enforce the precious truth of
Scripture, we most highly esteem; but, on the other hand, when we find men
making use of their learning, their science, and their philosophy, for the
purpose of undermining the sacred edifice of divine revelation, we deem it
our duty, to raise our voice, in the clearest and strongest way, against them,
and to warn the reader, most solemnly, against their baneful influence.
We believe that the Bible, as written in the original Hebrew and Greek
languages, is the very word of the only wise and the only true God, with
whom one day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day,
who saw the end from the beginning, and not only the end, but every stage
of the way. We therefore hold it to be nothing short of positive blasphemy to
assert that we have arrived at a stage of our career in which the Bible is not
sufficient, or that we are compelled to travel outside its covers to find ample
guidance and instruction for the present moment, and for every moment of
our earthly pilgrimage. The Bible is a perfect chart, in which every exigency
of the Christian mariner has been anticipated. Every rock, every sand-bank,
every shoal, every strand, every island, has been carefully noted down. All
the need of the Church of God, its members, and its ministers, has been
most fully provided for. How could it be otherwise, if we admit the Bible to
be the word of God? Could the mind of God have devised, or His finger
sketched an imperfect chart? Impossible. We must either deny the divinity
or admit the sufficiency of the Book. We are absolutely shut up to this
alternative. There is not so much as a single point between these two
positions. If the book is incomplete, it cannot be of God; if it be of God it
must be perfect. But if we are compelled to betake ourselves to other
sources for guidance and instruction, as to the path of the Church of God,
its members or its ministers, then is the Bible incomplete, and being such, it
cannot be of God at all.
What then, dear reader, are we to do? Whither can we betake ourselves? If
the Bible be not a divine and therefore all-sufficient guide-book, what
remains? Some will tell us to have recourse to tradition. Alas! what a
miserable guide. No sooner have we launched out into the wide field of
tradition than our ears are assailed by ten thousand strange and conflicting
sounds. We meet, it may be, with a tradition which seems very authentic,
very venerable, well worthy of respect and confidence, and we commit
ourselves to its guidance; but, directly we have done so, another tradition
crosses our path, putting forth quite as strong claims on our confidence,
and leading us in quite an opposite direction. Thus it is with tradition. The
mind is bewildered, and one is reminded of the assembly at Ephesus,
concerning which we read that, "Some cried one thing, and some another;
for the assembly was confused." The fact is, we want a perfect standard, and
this can only be found in a divine revelation, which, as we believe, is to be
found within the covers of our most precious Bible. What a treasure! How
we should bless God for it! How we should praise His name for His mercy in
that He hath not left His Church dependent upon the ignis fatuus of human
tradition, but upon the steady light of divine revelation! We do not want
tradition to assist revelation, but we use revelation as the test of tradition.
We should just as soon think of bringing out a rush-light to assist the sun's
meridian beams, as of calling in human tradition to aid divine revelation.
Now, we quite admit that expediency holds out most attractive inducements.
It does seem so very delightful to be doing a great deal of good, to be gaining
the ends of a large-hearted benevolence, to be reaching tangible results. It
would not be an easy matter duly to estimate the ensnaring influences of
such objects, or the immense difficulty of throwing them overboard. Have we
never been tempted as we stood upon the narrow path of obedience, and
looked forth upon the golden fields of expediency lying on either side, to
exclaim, "Alas! I am sacrificing my usefulness for an idea"? Doubtless; but
then what if it should turn out that we have the very same foundation for
that "idea" as for the fundamental doctrines of salvation? The question is,
What is the idea? Is it founded upon "Thus saith the Lord"? If so, let us
tenaciously hold by it, though ten thousand advocates of expediency were
hurling at us the grievous charge of narrow-mindedness.
There is immense power in Samuel's brief but pointed reply to Saul, "Hath
the Lord as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the
voice of the Lord! Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken
than the fat of rams." (1 Sam. xv. 22.) Saul's word was "Sacrifice." Samuel's
word was "Obedience." No doubt the bleating of the sheep and the lowing of
the oxen were most exciting. They would be looked upon as substantial
proofs that something was being done; while on the other hand, the path of
obedience seemed narrow, silent, lonely, and fruitless. But oh! those
pungent words of Samuel! "to obey is better than sacrifice." What a
triumphant answer to the most eloquent advocates of expediency! They are
most conclusive—most commanding words. They teach us that it is better, if
it must be so, to stand, like a marble statue, on the pathway of obedience,
than to reach the most desirable ends by transgressing a plain precept of
the word of God.
But let none suppose that one must be like a statue on the path of
obedience. Far from it. There are rare and precious services to be rendered
by the obedient one—services which can only be rendered by such, and
which owe all their preciousness to their being the fruit of simple obedience.
True, they may not find a place in the public record of man's bustling
activity; but they are recorded on high, and they will be published at the
right time. As a dear friend has often said to us, "Heaven will be the safest
and happiest place to hear all about our work down here." May we
remember this, and pursue our way, in all simplicity, looking to Christ for
guidance, power, and blessing. May His smile be enough for us. May we not
be found looking askance to catch the approving look of a poor mortal whose
breath is in his nostrils, nor sigh to find our names amid the glittering
record of the great men of the age. The servant of Christ should look far
beyond all such things. The grand business of the servant is to obey. His
object should not be to do a great deal, but simply to do what he is told.
This makes all plain; and, moreover, it will make the Bible precious as the
depository of the Master's will, to which he must continually betake himself
to know what he is to do, and how he is to do it. Neither tradition nor
expediency will do for the servant of Christ. The all-important enquiry is,
"What saith the Scriptures."
This settles everything. From the decision of the word of God there must be
no appeal. When God speaks man must bow. It is not by any means a
question of obstinate adherence to a man's own notions. Quite the opposite.
It is a reverent adherence to the word of God. Let the reader distinctly mark
this. It often happens that, when one is determined, through grace, to abide
by Scripture, he will be pronounced dogmatic, intolerant and imperious;
and, no doubt, one has to watch over his temper, spirit, and style, even
when seeking to abide by the word of God. But, be it well remembered, that
obedience to Christ's commandments is the very opposite of imperiousness,
dogmatism, and intolerance. It is not a little strange that when a man
tamely consents to place his conscience in the keeping of his fellow, and to
bow down his understanding to the opinions of men, he is considered meek,
modest, and liberal; but let him reverently bow to the authority of the holy
Scripture, and he will be looked upon as self-confident, dogmatic, and
narrow-minded. Be it so. The time is rapidly approaching when obedience
shall be called by its right name, and meet its recognition and reward. For
that moment the faithful must be content to wait, and while waiting for it,
be satisfied to let men call them whatever they please. "The Lord knoweth
the thoughts of man, that they are vanity."
But we must draw to a close, and would merely add, in conclusion, that
there is a third hostile influence against which the lover of the Bible will
have to watch, and that is rationalism—or the supremacy of man's reason.
The faithful disciple of the word of God will have to withstand this audacious
intruder, with the most unflinching decision. It presumes to sit in judgment
upon the word of God—to decide upon what is and what is not worthy of
God—to prescribe boundaries to inspiration. Instead of humbly bowing to
the authority of Scripture, which continually soars into a region where poor
blind reason can never follow, it proudly seeks to drag Scripture down to its
own level. If the Bible puts forth aught which, in the smallest degree,
clashes with the conclusions of rationalism, then there must be some flaw.
God is shut out of His own book if He says anything which poor blind,
perverted reason cannot reconcile with her own conclusions—which
conclusions, be it observed, are not unfrequently the grossest absurdities.
Nor is this all. Rationalism deprives us of the only perfect standard of truth,
and conducts us into a region of the most dreary uncertainty. It seeks to
undermine the authority of a book in which we can believe everything, and
carries us into a field of speculation in which we can be sure of nothing.
Under the dominion of rationalism the soul is like a vessel broken from its
safe moorings in the haven of divine revelation, to be tossed like a cork upon
the wild watery waste of universal scepticism.
We press upon our readers earnestly to set a higher value than ever upon
the Holy Scriptures, and to warn them, in most urgent terms, against every
influence, whether of tradition, expediency, or rationalism, which might tend
to shake their confidence in those heavenly oracles. There is a spirit abroad,
and there are principles at work, which make it imperative upon us to keep
close to Scripture—to treasure it in our hearts—and to submit to its holy
authority.
May God the Spirit, the Author of the Bible, produce, in the writer and
reader of these lines, a more ardent love for that Bible! May He enlarge our
experimental acquaintance with its contents, and lead us into more
complete subjection to its teachings in all things, that God may be more
glorified in us through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
CHRISTIANITY: WHAT IS IT?
We have endeavored to hold up the Bible as the Church's supreme and all-
sufficient guide, in all ages, in all climes, and under all circumstances. We
now desire to hold up Christianity in its divine beauty and moral excellence,
as illustrated in this well-known passage of Holy Scripture.
And be it observed that, as it was the Bible itself, and not any special system
of theology deduced therefrom, that we sought to present to our readers; so
now, it is Christianity, and not any peculiar form of human religiousness,
that we desire to place before them. We are deeply thankful for this. We dare
not enter upon the defence of men or their systems. Men err in their
theology and fail in their ethics; but the Bible and Christianity remain
unshaken and unshakeable. This is an unspeakable mercy. Who can duly
estimate it? To be furnished with a perfect standard of divinity and morals is
a privilege for which we can never be sufficiently thankful. Such a standard
we possess, blessed be God! in the Bible and in the Christianity which the
Bible unfolds to our view. Men may err in their creed and break down in
their conduct, but the Bible is the Bible still, and Christianity is Christianity
still.
Now, we believe that this third chapter of Philippians gives us the model of a
true Christian—a model on which every Christian should be formed. The
man who is here introduced to our notice could say, by the Holy Ghost,
"Brethren, be ye followers together of me." Nor is it as an apostle that he
here speaks to us—nor as one endowed with extraordinary gifts, and
privileged to see unspeakable visions. It is not to Paul, the apostle, nor Paul,
the gifted vessel, that we listen, in verse 17 of our chapter, but to Paul, the
Christian. We could not follow him in his brilliant career, as an apostle. We
could not follow him, in his rapture to Paradise; but we can follow him in his
Christian course, in this world; and it seems to us that we have in our
chapter a very full view of that course, and not only of the course itself, but
also the starting-post and the goal. In other words, we have to consider,
first, the Christian's standing; secondly, the Christian's object; and thirdly,
the Christian's hope. May God the Holy Ghost be our teacher, while we dwell
for a little on these most weighty and most interesting points! And first, as to
The point is unfolded, in a double way, in our chapter. We are not only told
what the Christian's standing is, but also what it is not. If ever there was a
man who could boast of having a righteousness of his own in which to stand
before God, Paul was the man. "If," says he, "any other man thinketh that he
hath whereof to trust in the flesh, I more: circumcised the eighth day, of the
stock of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, an Hebrew of the Hebrews; as
touching the law, a Pharisee; concerning zeal, persecuting the church;
touching the righteousness which is in the law, blameless."
Hence Saul, as an earnest Jew, could not but be a zealous persecutor of the
Church of God. It was part of his religion—of that in which he "excelled
many of his equals in his own nation"—of that in which he was "exceedingly
zealous." Whatever was to be had, in the shape of religiousness, Saul would
have it; whatever height was to be attained, he would attain. He would leave
no stone unturned in order to build up the superstructure of his own
righteousness—righteousness in the flesh—righteousness in the old
creation. He was permitted to possess himself of all the attractions of legal
righteousness in order that he might fling them from him amid the brighter
glories of a righteousness divine. "But what things were gain to me, those I
counted loss for Christ. Yea, doubtless, and I count all things but loss, for
the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord; for whom I have
suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win
Christ, and be found in Him, not having mine own righteousness which is of
the law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness
which is of God by faith."
And we should note here that the grand prominent thought, in the above
passage, is not that of a guilty sinner betaking himself to the blood of Jesus
for pardon, but rather of a legalist casting aside, as dross, his own
righteousness, because of having found a better. We need hardly say that
Paul was a sinner—"chief of sinners"—and that, as such, he betook himself
to the precious blood of Christ, and there found pardon, peace, and
acceptance with God. This is plainly taught us in many passages of the New
Testament. But it is not the leading thought in the chapter now before us.
Paul is not speaking of his sins, but of his gains. He is not occupied with his
necessities, as a sinner, but with his advantages, as a man—a man in the
flesh—a man in the old creation—a Jew—a legalist.
True it is, most blessedly true, that Paul brought all his sins to the cross,
and had them washed away in the atoning blood of the divine Sin-offering.
But, in this passage, we see another thing. We see a legalist flinging far
away from him his own righteousness, and esteeming it as a worthless and
unsightly thing in contrast with a risen and glorified Christ, who is the
righteousness of the Christian—the righteousness which belongs to the new
creation. Paul had sins to mourn over, and he had a righteousness to boast
in. He had guilt on his conscience, and he had laurels on his brow. He had
plenty to be ashamed of, and plenty to glory in. But the special point
presented in Phil. iii. 4-8 is not a sinner getting his sins pardoned, his guilt
cleared, his shame covered, but a legalist laying aside his righteousness, a
scholar casting away his laurels, and a man abandoning his vain glory,
simply because he had found true glory, unfading laurels, and an
everlasting righteousness in the Person of a victorious and exalted Christ. It
was not merely that Paul, the sinner, needed a righteousness because, in
reality, he had none of his own; but that Paul, the Pharisee, preferred the
righteousness which was revealed to him in Christ, because it was infinitely
better and more glorious than any other.
We do therefore earnestly exhort the reader to look well to this our first
point, "In Christ it is we stand." He is our righteousness. He Himself, the
crucified, risen, exalted, glorified Christ. Yes; He is our righteousness. To be
found in Him is proper Christian standing. It is not Judaism, Catholicism,
nor any other ism. It is not the being a member of this church, that church,
or the other church. It is to be in Christ. This is the great foundation of true
practical Christianity. In a word this is the standing of the Christian.
This, and this alone, is the Christian's object. To have any other object is not
Christianity at all. Alas! Christians have other objects. And that is precisely
the reason why we said, at the opening of this paper, that it is Christianity,
and not the ways of Christians, that we desire to hold up to the view of our
readers. It matters not in the least what the object is; if it is not Christ, it is
not Christianity. The true Christian's desire will ever be embodied in these
words, "That I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection, and the
fellowship of His sufferings, being made conformable unto His death." It is
not that I may get on in the world—that I may make money—that I may
attain a high position—that I may aggrandize my family—that I may make a
name—that I may be regarded as a great man, a rich man, a popular man.
No; not one of these is a Christian object. It may be all very well for a man,
who has got nothing better, to make such things his object. But the
Christian has got Christ. This makes all the difference. It may be all well
enough for a man, who does not know Christ as his righteousness, to do the
best he can in the way of working out a righteousness for himself; but to one
whose standing is in a risen Christ, the very fairest righteousness that could
be produced by human efforts would be an actual loss. So is it exactly in the
matter of an object. The question is not, What harm is there in this or that?
but, Is it a Christian object?
It is well to see this. We may depend upon it, beloved reader, that one great
reason of the low tone which prevails amongst Christians will be found in
the fact that the eye is taken off Christ and fixed upon some lower object. It
may be a very laudable object for a mere man of the world—for one who
merely sees his place in nature, or in the old creation. But the Christian is
not this. He does not belong to this world at all. He is in it, but not of it.
"They," says our blessed Lord, "are not of the world, even as I am not of the
world." (John xvii.) "Our citizenship is in heaven;" and we should never be
satisfied to propose to ourselves any lower object than Christ. It matters not
in the least what a man's position may be. He may be only a scavenger, or
he may be a prince, or he may stand at any one of the many gradations
between these two extremes. It is all the same, provided Christ is his real,
his only object. It is a man's object, not his position, that gives him his
character.
Now Paul's one object was Christ. Whether he was stationary, or whether he
travelled; whether he preached the gospel, or whether he gathered sticks;
whether he planted churches, or made tents, Christ was his object. By night
and by day, at home or abroad, by sea or by land, alone or in company, in
public or private, he could say, "One thing I do." And this, be it remembered,
was not merely Paul the laborious apostle, or Paul the raptured saint, but
Paul the living, acting, walking Christian—the one who addresses us in
these words, "Brethren, be ye followers together of me." Nor should we ever
be satisfied with anything less than this. True, we fail sadly; but let us
always keep the true object before us. Like the school-boy at his copy, he
can only expect to succeed by keeping his eye fixed upon his head-line. His
tendency is to look at his own last written line, and thus each succeeding
line is worse than the preceding one. Thus it is in our own case. We take our
eye off the blessed and perfect head-line, and begin to look at ourselves, our
own productions, our own character, our interests, our reputation. We begin
to think of what would be consistent with our own principles, our
profession, or our standing, instead of fixing the eye steadily upon that one
object which Christianity presents, even Christ Himself.
But some will say, "Where will you find this?" Well, if it be meant, where are
we to find it amongst the ranks of Christians, now-a-days, it might be
difficult indeed. But we have it in the third chapter of the epistle to the
Philippians. This is enough for us. We have here a model of true
Christianity, and let us ever and only aim thereat. If we find our hearts
going after other things let us judge them. Let us compare our lines with the
head-line, and earnestly seek to produce a faithful copy thereof. In this way,
although we may have to weep over constant failure, we shall always be kept
occupied with our proper object, and thus have our character formed; for,
let it never be forgotten, it is the object which forms the character. If money
be my object, my character is covetous; if power, I am ambitious; if books, I
am literary; if Christ, I am a Christian. It is not here a question of life and
salvation, but only of practical Christianity. If we were asked for a simple
definition of a Christian, we should at once say: A Christian is a man who
has Christ for his object. This is most simple. May we enter into its power,
and thus exhibit a more healthy and vigorous discipleship in this day, when
so many, alas! are minding earthly things.
We shall close this hasty and imperfect sketch of a wide and weighty
subject, with a line or two on
This, our third and last point, is presented in our chapter in a manner quite
as characteristic as the other two. The standing of the Christian is to be
found in Christ; the object of the Christian is to know Christ; and the hope
of the Christian is to be like Christ. How beautifully perfect is the connection
between these three things. No sooner do I find myself in Christ as my
righteousness, than I long to know Him as my object, and the more I know
Him, the more ardently shall I long to be like Him, which hope can only be
realized when I see Him as He is. Having a perfect righteousness, and a
perfect object, I just want one thing more, and that is to be done with
everything that hinders my enjoyment of that object. "For our conversation
(or citizenship, πολιτυμα not αναστροφε, Phil. iii. 20), is in heaven; from
whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall
change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto His glorious body,
according to the working whereby He is able even to subdue all things unto
Himself."
Now putting all these things together, we get a very complete view of true
Christianity. We cannot attempt to elaborate any one of the three points
above referred to; for, it may be truly said, each point would demand a
volume to treat it fully. But we would ask the reader to pursue the
marvellous theme for himself. Let him rise above all the imperfections and
inconsistencies of Christians, and gaze upon the moral grandeur of
Christianity as exemplified in the life and character of the model man
presented to our view in this chapter. And may the language of his heart be,
"Let others do as they will, as for me, nothing short of this lovely model shall
ever satisfy my heart. Let me turn away my eye from men altogether, and fix
it intently upon Christ Himself, and find all my delight in Him as my
righteousness, my object, my hope." Thus may it be with the writer and the
reader, for Jesus' sake.
JEHOSHAPHAT
In tracing the inspired record of the houses of Israel and Judah, from the
period of their separation, under Rehoboam, we can without difficulty
recognize the marked distinction between them. The line of kings from
Jeroboam to Hosea presents only a dark and sorrowful catalogue of evil-
doers in the sight of the Lord: we look in vain for an exception. Even Jehu,
who manifested so much zeal and energy in the abolition of idolatry, proved,
in the sequel, that his heart was far from being right with God. In fact, a
dark cloud of idolatry seems to have settled upon the whole house of Israel,
until they were carried away beyond Babylon, and scattered amongst the
Gentiles.
Not so, however, with Judah. Here we find some happy exceptions—some
pleasant rays from that lamp which the Lord so graciously granted in
Jerusalem for David His servant's sake. The soul is refreshed by the history
of such men as Josiah, Asa, Joash, and Hezekiah,—men whose hearts were
devoted to the service of the sanctuary, and who therefore exerted a holy
influence on their times.
In Jehoshaphat's case, it was not until after years that the results of his
false steps began to show themselves: "And after certain years, he went
down to Ahab to Samaria; and Ahab killed sheep and oxen for him in
abundance, and for the people he had with him, and persuaded him to go
up with him to Ramoth-gilead." Satan knows his ground; he knows where
the seed of evil has taken root; he knows the heart that is prepared to
respond to his temptation; he knew that the "affinity" into which the king of
Judah had entered with the king of Israel had prepared him for further
steps in a downward course. When a Christian enters into connection with
the world, he lays himself open to be "persuaded" by the world, to enter
upon an unchristian course of action. David took Ziklag from Achish (1
Sam. xxvii. 6), and the next step was, to join Achish against Israel. (1 Sam.
xxviii. 1.) The world will never give any thing to a child of God without
making large demands in return. When the king of Judah had allowed Ahab
to kill sheep and oxen for him, he would have found it difficult not to meet
Ahab's desire in reference to Ramoth-gilead. The safest way therefore is, to
be no debtor to the world. Jehoshaphat should have had nothing whatever
to do with Ahab; he should have kept himself pure. The Lord was not with
Ahab, and though it might seem a desirable thing to recover one of the cities
of refuge out of the hand of the enemy, yet Jehoshaphat should have known
that he was not to do evil that good might come. If we join with the world in
its schemes, we must expect to be identified with it in its convulsions.
Ramoth-gilead had been of old assigned as a city of refuge for the slayer
(Deut. iv. 43), and to recover this city from the king of Syria was the object of
Ahab's expedition. But behind this we can detect the snare of the enemy,
who cared little about the city, provided he could thereby betray a child of
God from the path of purity and separation. The devil has always found
religious and benevolent objects most effectual in their influence upon the
people of God. He does not come at first with something openly ungodly; he
does not tempt a believer to join the world for some wicked design, because
he knows that the sensitive conscience would shrink from such a thing; his
way is rather to present in the distance some desirable object—to cover his
schemes with the cloak of religion or benevolence, and thus insnare. There
is, however, one truth which would, if realized, effectually deliver the
Christian from all connection with the men of this world. The apostle, by the
Holy Ghost, teaches us that unbelievers are "unto every good work
reprobate." (Tit. i. 16.) This is enough for an obedient soul. We must not join
with those who are so represented. It matters not what they propose—be it a
work of benevolence or a work of religion,—Scripture tells us they are
reprobate, yes, "reprobate," though they profess that they know God. This
should be sufficient. God cannot accept of or acknowledge the works or
offerings of those whose hearts are far from Him; nor should the Church
mingle with such, even though it be for the accomplishment of desirable
ends. "Keep thyself pure" is a valuable admonition for us all. "To obey is
better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams." It would have
been infinitely better and more acceptable for Jehoshaphat to have kept
himself pure from all contact with Ahab's defilement than to have recovered
Ramoth from the Syrians, even had he succeeded in doing so.
However, he had to learn this by painful experience. And thus it is that most
of us learn our lessons. We may speak much of certain points of truth, while
we know but little of having learnt them experimentally. When Jehoshaphat
at the commencement of his career strengthened himself against Israel, he
had little idea of the way in which he would afterward be insnared by the
very worst of Israelites. The only effectual safeguard against evil is, to be in
communion with God about it. When we look at evil in the light of the
holiness of God, we not only look at the act, but at the principle; and if the
principle be unsound, no matter what the result may be, we should have
nothing to do with it. But to deal thus with evil requires much exercise of
soul before God—much spirituality, much self-judgment, much prayer and
watchfulness. The Lord grant us these, and also more tenderness and godly
sensitiveness of conscience.
But we should remember that when the Christian joins with the world for
any purpose whatsoever, whether of religion or of benevolence, he is just
saying (as Jehoshaphat said to Ahab), "I am as thou art." Let the Christian
reader ask his own heart, Is this right? Is he prepared to say this? It will not
do to say, "We are not to judge others." Jehoshaphat ought to have judged,
as is manifested from the language of Jehu the prophet, when he met him
on his return from Ramoth, "Shouldst thou help the ungodly, and love them
that hate the Lord?" How was he to know who was ungodly, or who hated
the Lord, if he did not exercise judgment? We have certainly no right to
judge those that are without, but we are bound to exercise judgment as to
those with whom we enter into fellowship. Nor does this in the least involve
of necessity the idea of one's own personal superiority in any one particular.
No; it is not, "Stand by thyself: I am holier than thou;" but, "I must stand
apart, because God is holy." This is the true principle. It is upon the ground
of what God is (not of what we are) that we separate from known evil. "Be ye
holy, for I am holy."
But it may be said, there are few, if any, who occupy a position in which
their conduct could exert such an extensive influence as that of king
Jehoshaphat. To meet this, it may be needful to dwell a little upon a truth
sadly neglected in the present day, namely, that of the unity of the body of
Christ, and the consequent effect which the conduct of each member,
however obscure, must produce upon the whole body.
The great doctrine of the unity of the Church upon earth is, it is to be
feared, feebly apprehended and feebly carried out, even by the most
spiritually minded and intelligent of the Lord's people. The reason of this is
very apparent. The doctrine is viewed rather in the light of the Church's
present condition, than of her condition as presented in the New Testament;
and this being so, the unity never can be understood. If we simply take
Scripture for our guide, we shall have no difficulty about it. There we read,
"If one member suffer, all the members suffer with it." This principle did not
hold good in the days of king Jehoshaphat, because the body of Christ,
properly so called, had no actual existence. All the members of it were
written in God's book; but "as yet there was none of them"—they existed in
the purpose of God, but that purpose had not been actualized. Hence,
though so many were led astray by the influence of Jehoshaphat, it was not
by any means on the principle stated in the above passage; it was not all
suffering from the act of one because they were one body, but many being
led astray by one because they followed his example. The distinction is very
important. There is no member of the Church, how obscure soever, whose
path and conduct do not affect, in some measure, all the members. "By one
Spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles,
whether we be bond or free; and have been all made to drink into one
Spirit." Hence, if a Christian be walking loosely or carelessly,—if he be out of
communion,—if he fail in prayer, in watchfulness, or in self-judgment, he is
really injuring the whole body; and, on the contrary, when he is walking in
spiritual health and vigor, he is promoting the blessing and interest of all.
How fully was this proved in the case of king Jehoshaphat! He became the
friend and companion of Ahab, who hated Micaiah, the servant of God; and
as a consequence, although he did not himself positively persecute the
righteous witness, yet he did what was as bad; for he sat beside Ahab, and
beheld the Lord's prophet first struck, and then committed to prison, simply
because he would not tell a lie to please a wicked king, and harmonize with
four hundred wicked prophets. What must have been the feelings of
Jehoshaphat when he beheld his brother smitten and imprisoned for his
faithfulness in testifying against an expedition in which he himself was
engaged! Yet such was the position into which his connection with Ahab had
forced him that he could not avoid being a witness of these wicked
proceedings; yea, and moreover, a partaker of them also. When a man
associates himself with the world, he must do so thoroughly. The enemy will
not be satisfied with half measures; on the contrary, he will use every effort
to force a saint out of communion into the most terrible extremes of evil.
The beginning of evil is like the letting out of water. Small beginnings lead to
fearful results. There is first a slight tampering with evil at a distance; then,
by degrees, a nearer approach to it; after this, a taking hold of it more
firmly; and finally, a deliberate plunge into it, whence nothing but the most
marked interposition of God can rescue. Jehoshaphat "joined affinity with
Ahab;" then accepted of his hospitality; after that, was "persuaded" into
open association with him; and finally, took his place at the battle of
Ramoth-gilead. He had said to Ahab, "I am as thou art," and Ahab takes him
at his word; for he says to him, "I will disguise myself, and will go to the
battle; but put thou on thy robes." Thus, so completely did Jehoshaphat
surrender his personal identity, in the view of the men of the world, that "it
came to pass, when the captains of the chariots saw Jehoshaphat, that they
said, 'It is the king of Israel.'" Terrible position for Jehoshaphat! To find him
personating, and thus mistaken for, the worst of Israel's kings is a sad proof
of the danger of associating with the men of the world. Happy was it for
Jehoshaphat that the Lord did not take him at his word when he said to
Ahab, "I am as thou art." The Lord knew that Jehoshaphat was not Ahab,
though he might personate and be mistaken for him. Grace had made him
to differ, and conduct should have proved him to be what grace had made
him. But, blessed be God, "He knows how to deliver the godly out of
temptation," and He graciously delivered His poor servant out of the evil into
which he had plunged himself, and in which he would have perished, had
not the hand of God been stretched out to rescue him. "Jehoshaphat cried
out, and the Lord helped him; and God moved them to depart from him."
Here we have the turning-point in this stage of Jehoshaphat's life. His eyes
were opened to see the position into which he had brought himself; at least,
he saw his danger, if he did not apprehend the moral evil of his course.
Encompassed by the captains of Syria, he could feel something of what it
was to have taken Ahab's place. Happily for him, however, he could look up
to the Lord from the depth of his distress,—he could cry out to Him in the
time of his extremity; had it not been thus, the enemy's arrow, lodged deep
in his heart, might have told out the sorrowful result of his ungodly
association. "Jehoshaphat cried out," and his cry came up before the Lord,
whose ear is ever open to hear the cry of such as feel their need. "Peter went
out and wept bitterly." The prodigal said, "I will arise, and go to my father;"
and the father ran to meet him, and fell on his neck, and kissed him. Thus
is it that the blessed God ever meets those who, feeling that they have hewn
out for themselves broken cisterns, which can hold no water, return to Him,
the fountain of living waters. Would that all who feel that they have in any
measure departed from Christ and slipped into the current of this present
world might find their way back, in true humility and contrition of spirit, to
Him who says, "Behold, I stand at the door, and knock; if any man hear My
voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and
he with Me."
How different Ahab's case! He, though carrying in his bosom a mortal
wound, propped himself up in his chariot until the evening, fondly desiring
to hide his weakness, and accomplish the object of his heart. We find no cry
of humility, no tear of penitence, no looking upward. Ah, no; we find not any
thing but what is in full keeping with his entire course. He died as he had
lived—doing evil in the sight of the Lord. How fruitless were his efforts to
prop himself up! Death had seized upon him; and though he struggled for a
time to keep up an appearance, yet "about the time of the sun going down
he died." Terrible end!—the end of one who had "sold himself to work
wickedness." Who would be the votary of the world? Who that valued a life of
simplicity and purity would mix himself up with its pursuits and habits?
Who that valued a peaceful and happy termination of his career would link
himself with its destinies?
Dear Christian reader, let us, with the Lord's help, endeavor to shake off the
world's influence, and purge ourselves from its ways. We have no idea how
insidiously it creeps in upon us. The enemy at first weans from really simple
and Christian habits, and by degrees we drop into the current of the world's
thoughts. Oh that we may, with more holy jealousy and tenderness of
conscience, watch against the approach of evil, lest the solemn statement of
the prophet should apply to us, "Her Nazarites were purer than snow, they
were whiter than milk, they were more ruddy in body than rubies, their
polishing was of sapphire: (but such is the sorrowful change, that) their
visage is blacker than a coal, they are not known in the streets, their skin
cleaveth to their bones; it is withered, it is become like a stick"!
We shall now look a little at chap. xix. Here we see some blessed results
from all that Jehoshaphat had passed through. "He returned to his house in
peace to Jerusalem." Happy escape! The Lord's hand had interposed for him,
and delivered him from the snare of the fowler, and, we may say, he would
no doubt have his heart full of gratitude to Him who had so made him to
differ from Ahab, though he had said, "I am as thou art." Ahab had gone
down to his grave in shame and degradation, while Jehoshaphat returned to
his house in peace. But what a lesson he had learned! How solemn to think
of his having been so near the brink of the precipice! Yet the Lord had a
controversy with him about what he had done. Though He allowed him to
return in peace to Jerusalem, and did not suffer the enemy to hurt him, He
would speak to his conscience about his sin; He would bring him aside from
the field of battle, to deal with him in private. "And Jehu, the son of Hanani
the seer, went out to meet him, and said to king Jehoshaphat, 'Shouldst
thou help the ungodly, and love them that hate the Lord? therefore is wrath
upon thee from before the Lord." This was a solemn appeal, and it produced
its own effect. Jehoshaphat "went out again through the people, from
Beersheba to mount Ephraim, and brought them back unto the Lord God of
their fathers." "When thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren." Thus did
Peter; thus too did king Jehoshaphat; and blessed is it when lapses and
failings lead, through the Lord's tender mercy, to such a result. Nothing but
divine grace can ever produce this. When, after beholding Jehoshaphat
surrounded by the Syrian captains (chap. xviii.), we find him here going out
through the length and breadth of the land to instruct his brethren in the
fear of the Lord, we can only exclaim, "What hath God wrought!" But he was
just the man for such a work. It is one who has felt in his own person the
terrible fruits of a careless spirit that can most effectually say, "Take heed
what ye do." A restored Peter, who had himself denied the Holy One, was the
chosen vessel to go and charge others with having done the same, and to
offer them that precious blood which had cleansed his conscience from the
guilt of it. So likewise the restored Jehoshaphat came from the battle of
Ramoth-gilead to sound in the ears of his brethren with solemn emphasis,
"Take heed what ye do." He that had just escaped from the snare could best
tell what it was, and tell how to avoid it.
And mark the special feature in the Lord's character which engaged
Jehoshaphat's attention: "There is no iniquity with the Lord our God, nor
respect of persons, nor taking of gifts." Now his snare seems to have been
the gift of Ahab: "Ahab slew sheep and oxen for him in abundance, and for
the people he had with him, and persuaded him to go up with him to
Ramoth-gilead." He allowed his heart to be warmed by Ahab's gift, and was
thereby the more easily swayed by Ahab's arguments. Just as Peter accepted
the compliment of being let into the high-priest's fire, and, being warmed
thereby, denied his Lord. We can never canvass, with spiritual coolness, the
world's arguments and suggestions, while we are breathing its atmosphere,
or accepting its compliments. We must keep outside and independent of it,
and thus we shall find ourselves in a better position to reject its proposals,
and triumph over its allurements.
However, Jehoshaphat had to be thankful for the salutary lesson which his
fall had taught him; it had taught him to walk more in the fear of the Lord,
and caused him to impress that more upon others also. This was doing not
a little. True, it was a sad and painful way to learn; but it is well when we
learn even by our falls,—it is well when we can tell even by painful
experience the terrible evil of being mixed up with the world. Would to God
we all felt it more! Would that we more walked in the solemn apprehension
of the defiling nature of all worldly association, and of our own tendency to
be defiled thereby! we should then be more efficient teachers of others! we
should be able to say, with somewhat more weight, "Take heed what ye do;"
and again, "Deal courageously, and the Lord shall be with the good."
There are three special points in Jehoshaphat's address to the Lord (vv. 6-
12).
3. The attempt of the enemy to drive the seed of Abraham out of that land.
And as it had enabled Abraham to believe that God would put his seed into
the possession of Canaan, so it enabled Jehoshaphat to believe that He
would keep them therein, and he therefore did not need to wait for victory in
order to praise; he already stood in the full results of victory. Faith could
say, "Thou hast guided them in Thy strength unto Thy holy habitation,"
though they had but just entered upon the wilderness.
But what a strange sight it must have been for the enemies of Jehoshaphat,
to see a band of men with musical instruments instead of weapons in their
hands. It was something of the same principle of warfare as that adopted by
Hezekiah afterward, when he clothed himself in sackcloth instead of armor.
(Isa. xxxvii. 1.) Yes, it was the same, for both had been trained in the same
school, and both fought under the same banner. Would that our warfare
with the present age—with its habits, manners, and maxims—were more
conducted on the same principle. "Above all, taking the shield of faith,
wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked one."
But it would be sad indeed were any one to plunge into worldliness with the
hope that it might lead to an issue similar to that of Jehoshaphat. Vain,
presumptuous hope! Sinful expectation! Who that valued a pure, calm, and
peaceful walk could for a moment entertain it? "The Lord knoweth how to
deliver the godly out of temptation," but shall we, on that account, go and
deliberately plunge ourselves into it? God forbid!
Yet, ah! who can sound the depths of the human heart—its profound,
malignant depths? Who can disentangle its complicated mazes? Could any
one imagine that Jehoshaphat would again, after such solemn lessons, join
himself with the ungodly, to further their ambitious, or rather their
avaricious, schemes? No one could imagine it, save one who had learned
something of his own heart. Yet so he did. "He joined himself with Ahaziah,
king of Israel, who did very wickedly. And he joined himself with him, to
make ships to go to Tarshish; and they made the ships in Ezion-gaber. Then
Eliezer, the son of Dodavah of Mareshah, prophesied against Jehoshaphat,
saying, 'Because thou hast joined thyself with Ahaziah, the Lord hath
broken thy works.' And the ships were broken, and they were not able to go
to Tarshish." (vv. 35-37.) What is man! A poor, stumbling, failing, halting
creature; ever rushing into some new folly or evil. Jehoshaphat had, as it
were, but just recovered from the effects of his association with Ahab, and
he forthwith joins himself with Ahaziah. He had with difficulty, or rather
through the special and most gracious interference of the Lord, escaped
from the arrows of the Syrians, and again we find him in league with the
kings of Israel and Edom, to fight against the Moabites.
I would only remark, in conclusion, that it seems like a relief to the spirit to
read the words, "Jehoshaphat slept with his fathers" (chap. xxi. 1), as we
feel assured, that he has at last got beyond the reach of the enemy's snares
and devices; and further, that he comes under the Spirit's benediction,
"Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord; for they rest from their
labors,"—yes, a rest from their conflicts, snares, and temptations also.
LIFE AND TIMES OF JOSIAH
Two thousand four hundred years have rolled away since king Josiah lived
and reigned; but his history is pregnant with instruction, which can never
lose its freshness or its power. The moment at which he ascended the throne
of his fathers was one of peculiar gloom and heaviness. The tide of
corruption, swollen by many a tributary stream, had risen to the highest
point; and the sword of judgment, long held back in divine patience and
long-suffering, was about to fall in terrible severity upon the city of David.
The brilliant reign of Hezekiah had been followed by a long and dreary
period of fifty-five years under the sway of his son Manasseh; and albeit the
rod of correction had proved effectual in leading this great sinner to
repentance and amendment, yet no sooner had the sceptre fallen from his
hand than it was seized by his godless and impenitent son Amon, who "did
that which was evil in the sight of the Lord, as did Manasseh his father: for
Amon sacrificed unto all the carved images which Manasseh his father had
made, and served them; and humbled not himself before the Lord, as
Manasseh his father had humbled himself: but Amon trespassed more and
more. And his servants conspired against him, and slew him in his own
house.... And the people of the land made Josiah his son king in his stead"
(2 Chron. xxxiii. 22-25).
Thus, then, Josiah, a child of eight years, found himself on the throne of
David, surrounded by the accumulated evils and errors of his father and his
grandfather—yea, by forms of corruption which had been introduced by no
less a personage than Solomon himself. If the reader will just turn for a
moment to 2 Kings xxiii., he will find a marvelous picture of the condition of
things at the opening of Josiah's history. There were "idolatrous priests,
whom the kings of Judah had ordained to burn incense in the high places,
in the cities of Judah, and in the places round about Jerusalem; those also
that burned incense unto Baal, to the sun, and to the moon, and to the
planets, and to all the host of heaven."
But further, there were "horses that the kings of Judah had given to the
sun," and that, moreover, "at the entering in of the house of the Lord," and
"chariots of the sun," and "high places which Solomon the king of Israel had
builded for Ashtoreth the abomination of the Zidonians, and for Chemosh
the abomination of the Moabites, and for Milcom the abomination of the
children of Ammon."
All this is most solemn, and worthy of the serious consideration of the
Christian reader. We certainly ought not to pass it over as a mere fragment
of ancient history. It is not as though we were reading the historic records of
Babylon, of Persia, of Greece, or of Rome. We should not marvel at the kings
of those nations burning incense to Baal, ordaining idolatrous priests, and
worshiping the host of heaven; but when we see kings of Judah, the sons
and successors of David, children of Abraham, men who had access to the
book of the law of God, and who were responsible to make that book the
subject of their profound and constant study,—when we see such men
falling under the power of dark and debasing superstition, it sounds in our
ears a warning voice, to which we cannot with impunity refuse to give heed.
We should bear in mind that all these things have been written for our
learning; and although it may be said that we are not in danger of being led
to burn incense to Baal, or to worship the host of heaven, yet we may be
assured we have need to attend to the admonitions and warnings with
which the Holy Ghost has furnished us in the history of God's ancient
people. "Now all these things happened unto them for ensamples; and they
are written for our admonition, on whom the ends of the ages have come" (1
Cor. x. 11). These words of the inspired apostle, though directly referring to
the actings of Israel in the wilderness, may nevertheless apply to the entire
history of that people—a history fraught with the deepest instruction from
first to last.
But how are we to account for all those gross and terrible evils into which
Solomon and his successors were drawn? What was their origin? Neglect of
the Word of God. This was the source of all the mischief and all the sorrow.
Let professing Christians remember this; let the whole Church of God
remember it. The neglect of the Holy Scriptures was the fruitful source of all
those errors and corruptions which blot the page of Israel's history, and
which brought down upon them many heavy strokes of Jehovah's
governmental rod. "Concerning the works of men, by the word of Thy lips, I
have kept me from the paths of the destroyer" (Psa. xvii. 4). "From a child
thou hast known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto
salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is given by
inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction,
for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be perfect [ἄρτιος],
throughly furnished unto all good works" (2 Tim. iii. 15-17).
In these two precious quotations we have the word of God presented in its
twofold virtue; it not only perfectly preserves us from evil, but perfectly
furnishes us unto all good,—it keeps us from the paths of the destroyer, and
guides us in the ways of God.
We doubt if the minds of Christians generally are alive to the real character
and extent of these formidable influences. There are at this moment millions
of souls throughout the length and breadth of the professing Church who
are building their hopes for eternity upon the sandy foundation of
ordinances, rites, and ceremonies. There is a very marked return to the
traditions of the fathers, as they are called; an intense longing after those
things which gratify the senses—music, painting, architecture, vestments,
lights, incense,—all the appliances, in short, of a gorgeous and sensuous
religion. The theology, the worship, and the discipline of the various
churches of the Reformation are found insufficient to meet the religious
cravings of the people. They are too severely simple to satisfy hearts that
long for something tangible on which to lean for support and comfort—
something to feed the senses, and fan the flame of devotion.
Hence the strong tendency of the religious mind in the direction of what is
called ritualism. If the soul has not got hold of the truth, if there is not the
living link with Christ, if the supreme authority of Holy Scripture be not set
up in the heart, there is no safeguard against the powerful and fascinating
influences of ceremonial religiousness. The most potent efforts of mere
intellectualism, eloquence, logic, all the varied charms of literature, are
found to be utterly insufficient to hold that class of minds to which we are
now referring. They must have the forms and offices of religion; to these they
will flock; around these they will gather; on these they will build.
It is solemn and affecting beyond expression to think of all this, and not less
so to contemplate the lethargy and indifference of those who profess to have
the truth. We do not stop to inquire what it is that ministers to this lethargic
state of many professors. That is not our object. We desire, by the grace of
God, to see them thoroughly roused out of it, and to this end it is that we
call their attention to the influences that are abroad, and to the only divine
safeguard against them. We cannot but feel deeply for our children, growing
up in such an atmosphere as that which at present surrounds us, and
which will become yet darker and darker. We long to see more earnestness
on the part of Christians in seeking to store the minds of the young with the
precious and soul-saving knowledge of the word of God. The child Josiah,
and the child Timothy, should incite us to greater diligence in the
instruction of the young, whether in the bosom of the family, in the Sunday-
school, or in any way we can reach them. It will not do for us to fold our
arms, and say, "When God's time comes, our children will be converted; and
till then, our efforts are useless." This is a fatal mistake. "God is a rewarder
of them that diligently seek Him." (Heb. xi.) He blesses our prayerful efforts
in the instruction of our children. And further, who can estimate the
blessing of being early led in the right way—of having the character formed
amid holy influences, and the mind stored with what is true and pure and
lovely? On the other hand, who will undertake to set forth the evil
consequences of allowing our children to grow up in ignorance of divine
things? Who can portray the evils of a polluted imagination—of a mind
stored with vanity, folly, and falsehood—of a heart familiarized from infancy
with scenes of moral degradation? We do not hesitate to say that Christians
incur very heavy and awful responsibility in allowing the enemy to
preoccupy the minds of their children at the very period when they are most
plastic and susceptible.
True, there must be the quickening power of the Holy Ghost. It is as true of
the children of Christians as of any other that they "must be born again."
We all understand this. But does this fact touch the question of our
responsibility in reference to our children? Is it to cripple our energies or
hinder our earnest efforts? Assuredly not. We are called upon by every
argument, divine and human, to shield our precious little ones from every
evil influence, and to train them in that which is holy and good. And not
only should we so act in respect to our own children, but also in respect to
the thousands around us, who are like sheep having no shepherd, and who
may each say, alas, with too much truth, "No man careth for my soul."
May the foregoing pages be used by God's Spirit to act powerfully on the
hearts of all who may read them, that so there may be a real awakening to a
sense of our high and holy responsibilities to the souls around, and a
shaking off of that terrible deadness and coldness over which we all have to
mourn.
PART II
In studying the history of Josiah and his times, we learn one special and
priceless lesson, namely, the value and authority of the word of God. It
would be utterly impossible for human language to set forth the vast
importance of such a lesson—a lesson for every age, for every clime, for
every condition—for the individual believer and for the whole Church of God.
The supreme authority of Holy Scripture should be deeply impressed on
every heart. It is the only safeguard against the many forms of error and evil
which abound on every hand. Human writings, no doubt, have their value;
they may interest the mind as a reference, but they are perfectly worthless
as authority.
This is a most dangerous error, and its root lies far deeper in the heart than
many of us are aware. It has often been said to us, when quoting passages
of Scripture, "How do you know that that is the word of God?" What is the
point of such a question? Plainly to overthrow the authority of the Word. The
heart that could suggest such an inquiry does not want to be governed by
Holy Scripture at all. The will is concerned. Here lies the deep secret. There
is the consciousness that the Word condemns something that the heart
wants to hold and cherish, and hence the effort to set the Word aside
altogether.
But how are we to know that the book which we call the Bible is the word of
God? We reply, It carries its own credentials with it. It bears its own
evidence upon every page, in every paragraph, in every line. True, it is only
by the teaching of the Holy Spirit, the divine Author of the book, that the
evidence can be weighed and the credentials appreciated. But we do not
want man's voice to accredit God's book; or, if we do, we are most assuredly
on infidel ground as regards divine revelation. If God cannot speak directly
to the heart—if He cannot give the assurance that it is He Himself who
speaks, then where are we? whither shall we turn? If God cannot make
Himself heard and understood, can man do it better?—can he improve upon
God? Can man's voice give us more certainty? Can the authority of the
Church, the decrees of general councils, the judgment of the fathers, the
opinion of the doctors, give us more certainty than God Himself? If so, we
are just as completely at sea—just as thoroughly in the dark as though God
had not spoken at all. Of course, if God has not spoken, we are completely
in the dark; but if He has spoken, and yet we cannot know His voice without
man's authority to accredit it, where lies the difference? Is it not plain to the
reader of these lines that if God in His great mercy has given us a revelation,
it must be sufficient of itself; and on the other hand, that any revelation
which is not sufficient of itself cannot possibly be divine? And further, is it
not equally plain that if we cannot believe what God says because He says it,
we have no safer ground to go upon when man presumes to affix his
accrediting seal?
How did Timothy know that the Holy Scriptures were the word of God? He
knew it by divine teaching. He knew of whom he had learned. Here lay the
secret. There was a living link between his soul and God, and he recognized
in Scripture the very voice of God. Thus it must ever be. It will not do merely
to be convinced in the intellect, by human arguments, human evidences,
and human apologies, that the Bible is the word of God; we must know its
power in the heart and on the conscience by divine teaching; and when this
is the case, we shall no more need human proofs of the divinity of the book
than we need a rushlight at noonday to prove that the sun is shining. We
shall then believe what God says because He says it, and not because man
accredits it, nor because we feel it. "Abraham believed God, and it was
counted unto him for righteousness." He did not want to go to the
Chaldeans, or to the Egyptians, in order to find out from them if what he
had heard was in reality the word of God. No, no; he knew whom he had
believed, and this gave him holy stability. He could say, beyond all question,
"God has established a link between my soul and Himself, by means of His
Word, which no power of earth or hell can ever snap." This is the true
ground for every believer—man, woman, or child, in all ages and under all
circumstances. This was the ground for Abraham and Josiah, for Luke and
Theophilus, for Paul and Timothy; and it must be the ground for the writer
and the reader of these words, else we shall never be able to stand against
the rising tide of infidelity, which is sweeping away the very foundations on
which thousands of professors are reposing.
But let us now turn to Josiah, and see how all that we have been dwelling
upon finds its illustration in his life and times.
"Josiah was eight years old when he began to reign" (2 Chron. xxxiv. 1). This
tells a tale as to the condition and ways of God's people. Josiah's father had
been murdered by his own servants, after a brief and evil reign of two years,
in the twenty-fourth year of his age. Such things ought not to have been.
They were the sad fruit of sin and folly—the humiliating proofs of Judah's
departure from Jehovah. But God was above all; and although we should
not have expected ever to find a child of eight years of age on the throne of
David, yet that child could find his sure resource in the God of his fathers:
so that in this case, as in all others, "where sin abounded, grace did much
more abound." The very fact of Josiah's youth and inexperience only
afforded an occasion for the display of divine grace, and the setting forth of
the value and the power of the word of God.
This was a good beginning. It is a great matter, while the heart is yet tender,
to have it impressed with the fear of the Lord. It preserves it from a host of
evils and errors. "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom," and it
taught this pious youth to know what was "right," and to adhere to it with
unswerving fixedness of purpose. There is great force and value in the
expression, "He did that which was right in the sight of the Lord." It was not
that which was right in his own eyes, nor yet in the eyes of the people, nor
in the eyes of those that had gone before him; but simply what was right in
the sight of the Lord. This is the solid foundation of all right action. Until the
fear of the Lord gets its true place in the heart, there can be nothing right,
nothing wise, nothing holy. How can there be, if indeed that fear is the
beginning of wisdom? We may do many things through the fear of man,
many things through force of habit, through surrounding influences; but
never can we do what is really right in the sight of the Lord until our hearts
are brought to understand the fear of His holy name. This is the grand
regulating principle. It imparts seriousness, earnestness, and reality—rare
and admirable qualities! It is an effectual safeguard against levity and
vanity. A man, or a child, who habitually walks in the fear of God is always
earnest and sincere, always free from trifling and affectation, from
assumption and bombast, life has a purpose, the heart has an object, and
this gives intensity to the whole course and character.
But further, we read of Josiah that "he walked in the ways of David his
father, and declined neither to the right hand nor to the left." What a
testimony for the Holy Ghost to bear concerning a young man! How we do
long for this plain decision! It is invaluable at all times, but especially in a
day of laxity and latitudinarianism—of false liberality and spurious charity
like the present. It imparts great peace of mind. A vacillating man is never
peaceful; he is always tossed to and fro. "A double-minded man is unstable
in all his ways." He tries to please everybody, and in the end pleases nobody.
The decided man, on the contrary, is he who feels he has "to please but
One." This gives unity and fixedness to the life and character. It is an
immense relief to be thoroughly done with men-pleasing and eye-service—to
be able to fix the eye upon the Master alone, and go on with Him through
evil report and through good report. True, we may be misunderstood and
misrepresented; but that is a very small matter indeed; our great business is
to walk in the divinely appointed path, "declining neither to the right hand
nor to the left." We are convinced that plain decision is the only thing for the
servant of Christ at the present moment; for so surely as the devil finds us
wavering, he will bring every engine into play in order to drive us completely
off the plain and narrow path. May God's Spirit work more mightily in our
souls, and give us increased ability to say, "My heart is fixed, O God; my
heart is fixed: I will sing and give praise."
We shall now proceed to consider the great work which Josiah was raised up
to accomplish; but ere doing so, we must ask the reader to notice
particularly the words already referred to, namely, "In the eighth year of his
reign, while he was yet young, he began to seek after the God of David his
father." Here, we may rest assured, lay the true basis of all Josiah's valuable
service. He began by seeking after God. Let young Christians ponder this
deeply. Hundreds, we fear, have made shipwreck by rushing prematurely
into work. They have become occupied and engrossed with their service
before the heart was rightly established in the fear and love of God. This is a
very serious error indeed, and we have met numbers, within the last few
years, who have fallen into it. We should ever remember that those whom
God uses much in public He trains in secret; and further, that all His most
honored servants have been more occupied with their Master than with their
work. It is not that we undervalue work; by no means; but we do find that
all those who have been signally owned of God, and who have pursued a
long and steady course of service and Christian testimony, have begun with
much deep and earnest heart-work, in the secret of the divine presence. And
on the other hand, we have noticed that when men have rushed prematurely
into public work—when they began to teach before they had begun to learn,
they have speedily broken down and gone back.
It is well to remember this. God's plants are deeply rooted, and often slow of
growth. Josiah "began to seek God" four years before he began his public
work. There was in his case a firm ground-work of genuine personal piety,
on which to erect the superstructure of active service. This was most
needful. He had a great work to do. "High places and groves, carved images
and molten images," abounded on all hands, and called for no ordinary
faithfulness and decision. Where were these to be had? In the divine
treasury, and there alone. Josiah was but a child, and many of those who
had introduced the false worship were men of years and experience. But he
set himself to seek the Lord. He found his resource in the God of his father
David. He betook himself to the fountain-head of all wisdom and power, and
there gathered up strength wherewith to gird himself for what lay before
him.
See also the narrative given in 2 Kings xxiii, where we have a much more
detailed list of the abominations with which this devoted servant of God had
to grapple. We do not quote any further. Enough has been given to show the
fearful lengths to which even the people of God may go when once they turn
aside, in the smallest measure, from the authority of Holy Scripture. We feel
that this is one special lesson to be learned from the deeply interesting
history of this best of Judah's kings, and we fondly trust it may be learned
effectually. It is indeed a grand and all-important lesson. The moment a man
departs, the breadth of a hair, from Scripture, there is no accounting for the
monstrous extravagance into which he may rush. We may feel disposed to
marvel how such a man as Solomon could ever be led to "build high places
for Ashtoreth the abomination of the Zidonians, and for Chemosh the
abomination of the Moabites, and for Milcom the abomination of the
children of Ammon." But then we can easily see how that having in the first
place disobeyed the word of his Lord in going to those nations for wives, he
easily enough fell into the deeper error of adopting their worship.
But, Christian reader, let us remember that all the mischief, all the
corruption and confusion, all the shame and dishonor, all the reproach and
blasphemy, had its origin in the neglect of the word of God. We cannot
possibly ponder this fact too deeply. It is solemn, impressive, and
admonitory beyond expression. It has ever been a special design of Satan to
lead God's people away from Scripture. He will use anything and everything
for this end—tradition, the Church so-called, expediency, human reason,
popular opinion, reputation and influence, character, position, and
usefulness—all those he will use in order to get the heart and conscience
away from that one golden sentence—that divine, eternal motto, "It is
written." All that enormous pile of error which our devoted young monarch
was enabled to "grind into dust, and beat into powder"—all, all had its origin
in the gross neglect of this most precious sentence. It mattered little to
Josiah that all these things could boast of antiquity, and the authority of the
fathers of the Jewish nation. Neither was he moved by the thought that
these altars and high places, these groves and images, might be regarded as
proofs of largeness of heart, breadth of mind, and a liberality of spirit that
spurned all narrowness, bigotry, and intolerance—that would not be
confined within the narrow bounds of Jewish prejudice, but could travel
forth through the wide, wide world, and embrace all in a circle of charity and
brotherhood. None of these things, we are persuaded, moved him. If they
were not based upon "Thus saith the Lord," he had but one thing to do with
them, and that was to "beat them into powder."
PART III
The various periods in the life of Josiah are very strongly marked. "In the
eighth year of his reign, he began to seek after the God of David his father;"
"in the twelfth year he began to purge Judah and Jerusalem;" and "in the
eighteenth year of his reign, when he had purged the land and the house, he
sent Shaphan the son of Azaliah, and Maaseiah the governor of the city, and
Joah the son of Joahaz the recorder, to repair the house of the Lord his
God."
Now in all this we can mark that progress which ever results from a real
purpose of heart to serve the Lord. "The path of the just is as a shining light,
which shineth more and more unto the perfect day." Such was the path of
Josiah; and such, too, may be the path of the reader, if only he is influenced
by the same earnest purpose. It does not matter what the circumstances
may be. We may be surrounded by the most hostile influences, as Josiah
was in his day; but a devoted heart, an earnest spirit, a fixed purpose, will,
through grace, lift us above all, and enable us to press forward from stage to
stage of the path of true discipleship.
What vivid language! The whole scene seems, in the vision of the prophet,
reduced to primæval chaos and darkness. In short, nothing could be more
gloomy than the aspect here presented. The whole of these opening chapters
should be carefully studied, if we would form a correct judgment of the
times in which Josiah's lot was cast. They were evidently times
characterized by deep-seated and wide-spread corruptions, in every shape
and form. High and low, rich and poor, learned and ignorant, prophets,
priests, and people—all presented an appalling picture of hollowness, deceit,
and heartless wickedness, which could only be faithfully portrayed by an
inspired pen.
But why dwell upon this? Why multiply quotations in proof of the low moral
condition of Israel and Judah in the days of king Josiah? Mainly to show
that, no matter what may be our surroundings, we can individually serve
the Lord, if only there be the purpose of heart to do so. Indeed, it is in the
very darkest times that the light of true devotedness shines forth most
brightly. It is thrown into relief by the surrounding gloom. The very
circumstances which indolence and unfaithfulness would use as a plea for
yielding to the current will only furnish a devoted spirit with a plea for
making head against it. If Josiah had looked around him, what would he
have seen? Treachery, deceit, corruption, and violence. Such was the state
of public morals. And what of religion? Errors and evils in every imaginable
shape. Some of these were hoary with age. They had been instituted by
Solomon and left standing by Hezekiah. Their foundations had been laid
amid the splendors of the reign of Israel's wisest and wealthiest monarch,
and the most pious and devoted of Josiah's predecessors had left them as
they found them.
Who, then, was Josiah, that he should presume to overturn such venerable
institutions? What right had he, a mere youth, raw and inexperienced, to set
himself in opposition to men so far beyond him in wisdom, intelligence, and
mature judgment? Why not leave things as he found them? Why not allow
the current to flow peacefully on through those channels which had
conducted it for ages and generations? Disruptions are hazardous. There is
always great risk in disturbing old prejudices.
These and a thousand kindred questions might doubtless have exercised the
heart of Josiah; but the answer was simple, direct, clear and conclusive. It
was not the judgment of Josiah against the judgment of his predecessors,
but it was the judgment of God against all. This is a most weighty principle
for every child of God and every servant of Christ. Without it, we can never
make head against the tide of evil which is flowing around us. It was this
principle which sustained Luther in the terrible conflict which he had to
wage with the whole of Christendom. He too, like Josiah, had to lay the axe
to the root of old prejudices, and shake the very foundation of opinions and
doctrines which had held almost universal sway in the Church for over a
thousand years. How was this to be done? Was it by setting up the
judgment of Martin Luther against the judgment of popes and cardinals,
councils and colleges, bishops and doctors? Assuredly not. This would never
have brought about the Reformation. It was not Luther versus Christendom,
but Holy Scripture versus Error.
Reader, ponder this! Yes, ponder it deeply. We feel it is a grand and all-
important lesson for this moment, as it surely was for the days of Luther
and for the days of Josiah. We long to see the supremacy of Holy Scripture—
the paramount authority of the word of God—the absolute sovereignty of
divine revelation reverently owned throughout the length and breadth of the
Church of God. We are convinced that the enemy is diligently seeking, in all
quarters and by all means, to undermine the authority of the Word, and to
weaken its hold upon the human conscience. And it is because we feel this
that we seek to raise, again and again, a note of solemn warning, as also to
set forth, according to our ability, the vital importance of submitting, in all
things, to the inspired testimony—the voice of God in Scripture. It is not
sufficient to render a merely formal assent to that popular statement, "The
Bible, and the Bible alone, is the religion of Protestants." We want more than
this. We want to be, in all things, absolutely governed by the authority of
Scripture—not by our fellow-mortal's interpretation of Scripture, but by
Scripture itself. We want to have the conscience in a condition to yield, at all
times, a true response to the teachings of the divine Word.
This is what we have so vividly illustrated in the life and times of Josiah,
and particularly in the transactions of the eighteenth year of his reign, to
which we shall now call the reader's attention. This year was one of the most
memorable, not only in the history of Josiah, but in the annals of Israel. It
was signalized by two great facts, namely, the discovery of the book of the
law and the celebration of the feast of the Passover. Stupendous facts!—
facts which have left their impress upon this most interesting period, and
rendered it pre-eminently fruitful in instruction to the people of God in all
ages.
It is worthy of note that the discovery of the book of the law was made
during the progress of Josiah's reformatory measures. It affords one of the
ten thousand proofs of that great practical principle that "to him that hath
shall more be given;" and again, "If any man will do His will, he shall know
of the doctrine."
"Now in the eighteenth year of his reign, when he had purged the land and
the house, he sent Shaphan the son of Azaliah, and Maaseiah the governor
of the city, and Joah the son of Joahaz the recorder, to repair the house of
the Lord his God. And when they came to Hilkiah the priest, they delivered
the money that was brought into the house of God.... And when they
brought out the money that was brought into the house of the Lord, Hilkiah
the priest found a book of the law of the Lord given by Moses. And Hilkiah
the priest answered and said to Shaphan the scribe, I have found the book
of the law in the house of the Lord. And Hilkiah delivered the book to
Shaphan. And Shaphan carried the book to the king.... And Shaphan read it
before the king. And it came to pass, when the king had heard the words of
the law, that he rent his clothes" (2 Chron. xxxiv. 8-19).
Here we have a tender conscience bowing under the action of the word of
God. This was one special charm in the character of Josiah. He was, in
truth, a man of a humble and contrite spirit, who trembled at the word of
God. Would that we all knew more of this! It is a most valuable feature of the
Christian character. We certainly do need to feel much more deeply the
weight, authority, and seriousness of Scripture. Josiah had no question
whatever in his mind as to the genuineness and authenticity of the words
which Shaphan had read in his hearing. We do not read of his asking, "How
am I to know that this is the word of God?" No; he trembled at it; he bowed
before it; he was smitten down under it; he rent his garments. He did not
presume to sit in judgment upon the word of God, but, as was meet and
right, he allowed the Word to judge him.
Thus it should ever be. If man is to judge Scripture, then Scripture is not
the word of God at all; but if Scripture is in very truth the word of God, then
it must judge man. And so it is and so it does. Scripture is the word of God,
and it judges man thoroughly. It lays bare the very roots of his nature—it
opens up the foundations of his moral being. It holds up before him the only
faithful mirror in which he can see himself perfectly reflected. This is the
reason why man does not like Scripture—cannot bear it—seeks to set it
aside—delights to pick holes in it—dares to sit in judgment upon it. It is not
so in reference to other books. Men do not trouble themselves so much to
discover and point out flaws and discrepancies in Homer or Herodotus,
Aristotle or Shakespeare. No; but Scripture judges them—judges their ways,
their lusts. Hence the enmity of the natural mind to that most precious and
marvelous Book, which, as we have already remarked, carries its own
credentials with it to every divinely prepared heart. There is a power in
Scripture which must bear down all before it. All must bow down under it,
sooner or later. "The word of God is quick and powerful, and sharper than
any two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and
spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and
intents of the heart. Neither is there any creature that is not manifest in His
sight; but all things are naked and opened unto the eyes of Him with whom
we have to do" (Heb. iv. 12, 13).
Josiah found it to be even so. The word of God pierced him through and
through. "And it came to pass, when the king had heard the words of the
law, that he rent his clothes. And the king commanded Hilkiah, and Ahikam
the son of Shaphan, and Abdon the son of Micah, and Shaphan the scribe,
and Asaiah a servant of the king's, saying, Go inquire of the Lord for me,
and for them that are left in Israel and in Judah, concerning the words of
the book that is found; for great is the wrath of the Lord that is poured out
upon us, because our fathers have not kept the word of the Lord, to do after
all that is written in this book." What a striking contrast between Josiah,
with contrite heart, exercised conscience, and rent garments, bowing down
under the mighty action of the word of God, and our modern skeptics and
infidels, who, with appalling audacity, dare to sit in judgment upon that very
same Word! Oh that men would be wise in time, and bow their hearts and
consciences in reverent submission to the word of the living God before that
great and terrible day of the Lord in the which they shall be compelled to
bow, amid "weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth."
God's word shall stand forever, and it is utterly vain for man to set himself
up in opposition to it, or seek by his reasonings and skeptical speculations
to find out errors and contradictions in it. "Forever, O Lord, Thy word is
settled in heaven." "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but My words shall
not pass away." "The word of the Lord endureth forever." Of what possible
use is it, therefore, for man to resist the word of God? He can gain nothing;
but oh! what may he lose? If man could prove the Bible false, what should
he gain? but if it be true after all, what does he lose? A serious inquiry! May
it have its weight with any reader whose mind is at all under the influence of
rationalistic or infidel notions.
"And Hilkiah and they that the king had appointed went to Huldah the
prophetess, the wife of Shallum the son of Tikvath, the son of Hasrah,
keeper of the wardrobe; (now she dwelt in Jerusalem, in the college;) and
they spake to her to that effect." At the opening of this paper we referred to
the fact of a child of eight years old being on the throne of David as
indicative of the condition of things amongst the people of God. Here, too, we
are arrested by the fact that the prophetic office was filled by a woman. It
surely tells a tale. Things were low; but the grace of God was unfailing and
abundant, and Josiah was so thoroughly broken down that he was prepared
to receive the communication of the mind of God through whatever channel
it might reach him. This was morally lovely. It might, to nature's view, seem
very humiliating for a king of Judah to have recourse to a woman for
counsel; but then that woman was the depositary of the mind of God, and
this was quite enough for a humble and a contrite spirit like Josiah's. He
had thus far proved that his one grand desire was to know and do the will of
God, and hence it mattered not by what vehicle the voice of God was
conveyed to his ear, he was prepared to hear and obey.
Christian reader, let us consider this. We may rest assured that herein lies
the true secret of divine guidance. "The meek will He guide in judgment, and
the meek will He teach His way" (Ps. xxv. 9). Were there more of this blessed
spirit of meekness among us, there would be less confusion, less
controversy, less striving about words to no profit. If we were all meek, we
should all be divinely guided and divinely taught, and thus we should see
eye to eye; we should be of one mind, and speak the same thing, and avoid
much sad and humbling division and heart-burning.
See what a full answer the meek and contrite Josiah received from Huldah
the prophetess—an answer both as to his people and as to himself. "And she
answered them, Thus saith the Lord God of Israel, Tell ye the man that sent
you to me, Thus saith the Lord, Behold, I will bring evil upon this place, and
upon the inhabitants thereof, even all the curses that are written in the
book which they have read before the king of Judah. Because they have
forsaken Me, and have burned incense unto other gods, that they might
provoke Me to anger with all the works of their hands; therefore My wrath
shall be poured out upon this place, and shall not be quenched."
All this was but the solemn reiteration and establishment of what had
already fallen upon the open and attentive ear of the king of Judah; but
then it came with fresh force, emphasis, and interest, as a direct personal
communication to himself. It came enforced and enhanced by that earnest
sentence, "Tell ye the man that sent you to me."
But there was more than this. There was a gracious message directly
concerning Josiah himself. "And as for the king of Judah, who sent you to
inquire of the Lord, so shall ye say unto him, Thus saith the Lord God of
Israel concerning the words which thou hast heard: Because thy heart was
tender, and thou didst humble thyself before God when thou heardest His
words against this place, and against the inhabitants thereof, and
humbledst thyself before Me, and didst rend thy clothes and weep before
Me; I have even heard thee also, saith the Lord. Behold, I will gather thee to
thy fathers, and thou shalt be gathered to thy grave in peace, neither shall
thine eyes see all the evil that I will bring upon this place and upon the
inhabitants of the same. So they brought the king word again" (2 Chron.
xxxiv. 23-28).
All this is full of instruction and encouragement for us in this dark and evil
day. It teaches us the immense value, in the divine estimation, of deep
personal exercise of soul and contrition of heart. Josiah might have deemed
the case hopeless—that nothing could avert the mighty tide of wrath and
judgment which was about to roll over the city of Jerusalem and the land of
Israel—that any movement of his must prove utterly unavailing—that the
divine purpose was settled—the decree gone forth, and that, in short, he had
only to stand by and let things take their course. But Josiah did not reason
thus. No; he bowed before the divine testimony. He humbled himself, rent
his clothes, and wept. God took knowledge of this. Josiah's penitential tears
were precious to Jehovah, and though the appalling judgment had to take
its course, yet the penitent escaped. And not only did he himself escape, but
he became the honored instrument in the Lord's hand of delivering others
also. He did not abandon himself to the influence of a pernicious fatalism,
but in brokenness of spirit and earnestness of heart he cast himself upon
God, confessing his own sins and the sins of his people. And then, when
assured of his own personal deliverance, he set himself to seek the
deliverance of his brethren also. This is a fine moral lesson for the heart.
May we learn it thoroughly.
PART IV
Take any truth you please. Take, for example, the glorious truth of the
Lord's coming. How is a man most likely to affect his hearers by the
presentation of this truth? Unquestionably by being deeply affected himself.
If the heart be under the power of that solemn word, "the Lord is at hand,"—
if this fact be realized in all its solemnity as to the world, and in its sweet
attractiveness as to the believer individually and the Church collectively,
then it will assuredly be presented in a way calculated to move the hearts of
the hearers. It is easy to see when a man feels what he is saying. There may
be a very clear and clever exposition of the doctrine of the second advent,
and of all the collateral truths; but if it be cold and heartless, it will fall
powerless on the ears of the audience. In order to speak to hearts, on any
subject, the heart of the speaker must feel it. What was it that gave such
power to Whitefield's discourses? It was not the depth or the range of truth
contained in them, as is manifest to any intelligent reader. No. The secret of
their mighty efficacy lay in the fact that the speaker felt what he was saying.
Whitefield wept over the people, and no marvel if the people wept under
Whitefield. He must be a hardened wretch indeed who can sit unmoved
under a preacher who is shedding tears for his soul's salvation.
Alas! it is much to be feared that too many of us speak truth in the same
way, and hence the little result. We are persuaded that earnest, faithful
preaching is one of the special wants of this our day. There are a few here
and there, thank God, who seem to feel what they are at—who stand before
their audience as those who consider themselves as channels of
communication between God and their fellows—men who are really bent on
their work—bent, not merely on preaching and teaching, but on saving and
blessing souls. The grand business of the evangelist is to bring the soul and
Christ together; the business of the teacher and pastor is to keep them
together. True it is, most blessedly true, that God is glorified and Jesus
Christ magnified by the unfolding of truth, whether men will hear or
whether they will forbear; but is this fact to be allowed to interfere, in the
smallest degree, with the ardent desire for results in reference to souls? We
do not for a moment believe it. The preacher should look for results, and
should not be satisfied without them. He should no more think of being
satisfied to go on without results than the husbandman thinks of going on
from year to year without a crop. Some preachers there are who only
succeed in preaching their hearers away, and then they content themselves
by saying, "We are a sweet savor to God." Now, we believe this is a great
mistake, and a fatal delusion. What we want is to live before God for the
results of our work—to wait upon Him—to agonize in prayer for souls—to
throw all our energies into the work—to preach as though the whole thing
depended upon us, although knowing full well that we can do just nothing,
and that our words must prove as the morning cloud if not fastened as a
nail in a sure place by the Master of assemblies. We are convinced that, in
the divine order of things, the earnest workman must have the fruit of his
labor; and that according to his faith, so shall it be. There may be
exceptions, but as a general rule, we may rest assured that a faithful
preacher, will, sooner or later, reap fruit.
We have been drawn into the foregoing line of thought while contemplating
the interesting scene in the life of Josiah presented to us at the close of 2
Chronicles xxxiv. It will be profitable for us to dwell upon it. Josiah was a
man thoroughly in earnest. He felt the power of truth in his own soul, and
he could not rest satisfied until he gathered the people around him, in order
that the light which had shone upon him might shine upon them likewise.
He did not, he could not, rest in the fact that he was to be gathered to his
grave in peace—that his eyes were not to see the evil that was coming upon
Jerusalem—that he was to escape the appalling tide of judgment which was
about to roll over the land. No; he thought of others, he felt for the people
around him; and inasmuch as his own personal escape stood connected
with and based upon his true penitence and humiliation under the mighty
hand of God, so he would seek, by the action of that Word which had
wrought so powerfully in his own heart, to lead others to like penitence and
humiliation.
"Then the king sent and gathered together all the elders of Judah and
Jerusalem. And the king went up into the house of the Lord, and all the men
of Judah, and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and the priests, and the
Levites, and all the people, great and small; and he read in their ears all the
words of the book of the covenant that was found in the house of the Lord.
And the king stood in his place, and made a covenant before the Lord, to
walk after the Lord, and to keep His commandments and His testimonies
and his statutes with all his heart and with all his soul, to perform the
words of the covenant which are written in this book. And he caused all that
were present in Jerusalem and Benjamin to stand to it. And the inhabitants
of Jerusalem did according to the covenant of God, the God of their fathers.
And Josiah took away all the abominations out of all the countries that
pertained to the children of Israel, and made all that were present in Israel
to serve, even to serve the Lord their God. And all his days they departed not
from following the Lord, the God of their fathers."
There is a fine moral lesson in all this for us—yea, many lessons to which
we, with all our light, knowledge, and privilege, may well sit down. What first
of all strikes us at this moment is the fact that Josiah felt his responsibility
to those around him. He did not put his light under a bushel, but rather
allowed it to shine for the full benefit and blessing of others. This is all the
more striking, inasmuch as that great practical truth of the unity of all
believers in one body was not known to Josiah, because not revealed by
God. The doctrine contained in that one brief sentence, "There is one body
and one Spirit," was not made known until long after the times of Josiah,
even when Christ the risen Head had taken His seat at the right hand of the
Majesty in the heavens.
But although this truth was "hid in God," nevertheless there was the unity
of the nation of Israel. There was a national unity, though there was not the
unity of a body; and this unity was always recognized by the faithful,
whatever might be the outward condition of the people. The twelve loaves on
the table of show-bread in the sanctuary were the divine type of the perfect
unity and yet the perfect distinctness of the twelve tribes. The reader can see
this in Leviticus xxiv. It is full of interest, and should be deeply pondered by
every student of Scripture and every earnest lover of the ways of God.
During the dark and silent watches of the night, the seven lamps of the
golden candlestick threw their light upon the twelve loaves ranged by the
hand of the high-priest according to the commandment of God upon the
pure table. Significant figure!
It was on this grand truth that Elijah the Tishbite took his stand, when on
Mount Carmel he built an altar "with twelve stones, according to the
number of the tribes of the sons of Jacob, unto whom the word of the Lord
came, saying, 'Israel shall be thy name'" (1 Kings xviii). To this same truth
Hezekiah had regard when he commanded "that the burnt-offering and the
sin-offering should be made for all Israel" (2 Chron. xxix. 24). Paul, in his
day referred to this precious truth, when in the presence of king Agrippa he
spoke of "our twelve tribes, instantly serving God day and night" (Acts xxvi.
7).
Now, if any one of those men of faith had been asked, "Where are the twelve
tribes?" could he have given an answer? could he have pointed them out?
Assuredly he could; but not to sight—not to man's view, for the nation was
divided—its unity was broken. In the days of Elijah and Hezekiah there were
the ten tribes and the two; and in the days of Paul, the ten tribes were
scattered abroad, and only a remnant of the two in the land of Palestine,
under the dominion of Daniel's fourth beast. What then? Was the truth of
God made of none effect by Israel's outward condition? Far be the thought!
"Our twelve tribes" must never be given up. The unity of the nation is a
grand reality to faith. It is as true at this moment as when Joshua pitched
the twelve stones at Gilgal. The word of our God shall stand forever. Not one
jot or tittle of aught that He has spoken shall ever pass away. Change and
decay may mark the history of human affairs,—death and desolation may
sweep like a withering blast over earth's fairest scenes, but Jehovah will
make good His every word, and Israel's twelve tribes shall yet enjoy the
promised land, in all its length, breadth, and fulness. No power of earth or
hell shall be able to hinder this blessed consummation. And why? What
makes us so sure? How can we speak with such absolute certainty? Simply
because the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it. We may be more sure that
Israel's tribes shall yet enjoy their fair inheritance in Palestine than that the
house of Tudor once held sway in England. The former we believe on the
testimony of God, who cannot lie; the latter on the testimony of man only.
It is of the utmost importance that the reader should be clear as to this, not
only because of its special bearing upon Israel and the land of Canaan, but
also because it affects the integrity of Scripture as a whole. There is a loose
mode of handling the word of God, which is at once dishonoring to Him and
injurious to us. Passages which apply distinctly and exclusively to
Jerusalem and to Israel are made to apply to the spread of the gospel and
the extension of the Christian Church. This, to say the least of it, is taking a
very unwarrantable liberty with divine revelation. Our God can surely say
what He means, and as surely He means what He says; hence, when He
speaks of Israel and Jerusalem, He does not mean the Church; and when
He speaks of the Church, He does not mean Israel or Jerusalem.
Expositors the students of Scripture should ponder this. Let no one suppose
that it is merely a question of prophetic interpretation. It is far more than
this. It is a question of the integrity, value, and power of the word of God. If
we allow ourselves to be loose and careless in reference to one class of
scriptures, we are likely to be loose and careless as to another, and then our
sense of the weight and authority of all Scripture will be sadly enfeebled.
But we must return to Josiah, and see how he recognized, according to his
measure, the great principle on which we have been dwelling. He certainly
proved no exception to the general rule, namely, that all the pious kings of
Judah had regard to the unity of the nation of Israel, and never suffered
their thoughts, their sympathies, or their operations to be confined within
any narrower range than "our twelve tribes." The twelve loaves on the pure
table were ever before the eye of God and ever before the eye of faith. Nor
was this a mere speculation—a none-practical dogma—a dead letter. No; it
was in every case a great practical, influential truth. "Josiah took away all
the abominations out of all the countries that pertained to the children of
Israel." This was acting in the fullest harmony with his pious predecessor,
Hezekiah, who "commanded that the burnt-offering and the sin-offering
should be made for all Israel".
And now, Christian reader, mark the application of all this to our own souls
at this present moment. Do you heartily believe, upon divine authority, in
the doctrine of the unity of the body of Christ? Do you believe that there is
such a body on this earth now, united to its divine and living Head in
heaven by the Holy Ghost? Do you hold this great truth from God Himself,
upon the authority of Holy Scripture? Do you, in one word, hold as a
cardinal and fundamental truth of the New Testament the indissoluble unity
of the Church of God? Do not turn round and ask, "Where is this to be
seen?" This is the question which unbelief must ever put, as the eye rests
upon Christendom's numberless sects and parties, and to which faith
replies, as the eye rests upon that imperishable sentence, "There is one body
and one Spirit." Mark the words!—"There is." It does not say there was at
one time and there shall be again "one body." Neither does it say that such a
thing exists in heaven. No; but it says, "There is one body and one Spirit"
now on this earth. Can this truth be touched by the condition of things in
the professing Church? Has God's Word ceased to be true because man has
ceased to be faithful? Will any one undertake to say that the unity of the
body was only a truth for apostolic times, and that it has no application
now, seeing that there is no exhibition of it?
Reader, we solemnly warn you to beware how you admit into your heart a
sentiment so entirely infidel as this. Rest assured it is the fruit of positive
unbelief in God's Word. No doubt, appearances argue against this truth; but
what truth is it against which appearances do not argue? And say, is it on
appearances that faith ever builds? Did Elijah build on appearances when
he erected his altar of twelve stones, according to the number of the tribes of
the sons of Jacob? Did king Hezekiah build on appearances when he issued
that fine commandment that the burnt-offering and the sin-offering should
be made for all Israel? Did Josiah build on appearances when he carried his
reformatory operations into all the countries that pertained to the children
of Israel? Surely not. They built upon the faithful word of the God of Israel.
That Word was true whether Israel's tribes were scattered or united. If God's
truth is to be affected by outward appearances, or by the actings of men,
then where are we? or what are we to believe? The fact is, there is hardly a
truth in the entire compass of divine revelation to which we could with calm
confidence commit our souls if we suffer ourselves to be affected by outward
appearances.
No, reader; the only ground on which we can believe anything is this one
eternal clause, "It is written"! Do you not admit this? Does not your whole
soul bow down to it? Do you not hold it to be a principle entirely vital? We
believe you do, as a Christian, hold, admit, and reverently believe this. Well,
then, it is written, "There is one body and one Spirit" (Eph. iv.). This is as
clearly revealed in Scripture as that "we are justified by faith," or any other
truth. Do outward appearances affect the saving, fundamental doctrine of
justification by faith? Are we to call in question this precious truth because
there is so little exhibition of its purifying power in the lives of believers?
Who could admit such a fatal principle as this? What a complete upturning
of all the foundations of our faith is necessarily involved in the admission of
this most mischievous line of reasoning! We believe because it is written in
the Word, not because it is exhibited in the world. Doubtless it ought to be
exhibited, and it is our sin and shame that it is not. To this we shall
afterward refer more fully; but we must insist upon the proper ground of
belief, namely, divine revelation; and when this is clearly seen and fully
admitted, it applies as distinctly to the doctrine of the unity of the body as it
does to the doctrine of justification by faith.
PART V
We feel it to be of real moment to insist upon this principle, namely, that the
only ground on which we can believe any doctrine is its being revealed in the
divine Word. It is thus we believe all the great truths of Christianity. We
know nothing and can believe nothing of what is spiritual, heavenly, or
divine, save as we find it revealed in the word of God. How do I know I am a
sinner? Because Scripture hath declared that "all have sinned." No doubt I
feel that I am a sinner; but I do not believe because I feel, but I feel because
I believe, and I believe because God has spoken. Faith rests upon divine
revelation, not on human feelings or human reasonings. "It is written" is
quite sufficient for faith. It can do with nothing less, but it asks nothing
more. God speaks: faith believes. Yes, it believes simply because God
speaks. It does not judge God's Word by outward appearances, but it judges
outward appearances by the word of God.
Here we have distinctly laid down the perfect and indissoluble unity of the
Church of God, the body of Christ, on precisely the same authority as any
other truth commonly received amongst us; so that there is just as much
ground for calling in question the deity of Christ as there is for calling in
question the unity of the body. The one is as true as the other; and both are
divinely true, because divinely revealed. We believe that Jesus Christ is God
over all, blessed forever, because Scripture tells us so; we believe that there
is one body because Scripture tells us so. We do not reason in the one case,
but believe and bow; nor should we reason in the other case, but believe and
bow. "There is one body and one Spirit."
Now, we must bear in mind that this truth of the unity of the body is not a
mere abstraction—a barren speculation—a powerless dogma. It is a
practical, formative, influential truth, in the light of which we are called to
walk, to judge ourselves and all around us. It was so with the faithful in
Israel of old. The unity of the nation was a real thing to them, and not a
mere theory to be taken up or laid down at pleasure. It was a great
formative, powerful truth. The nation was one in God's thoughts; and if it
was not manifestly so, the faithful had only to take the place of self-
judgment, brokenness of spirit, and contrition of heart. Witness the case of
Hezekiah, Josiah, Daniel, Nehemiah, and Ezra. It never once occurred to
these faithful men that they were to give up the truth of Israel's unity
because Israel had failed to maintain it. They did not measure the truth of
God by the actings of men; but they judged the actings of men, and
themselves likewise, by the truth of God. This was the only true way to act.
If the manifested unity of Israel was marred through man's sin and folly, the
true-hearted members of the congregation owned and mourned over the sin,
confessed it as their own, and looked to God. Nor was this all. They felt their
responsibility to act on the truth of God whatever might be the outward
condition of things.
This, we repeat, was the meaning of Elijah's altar of twelve stones, erected in
the face of Jezebel's eight hundred false prophets, and despite the division of
the nation in man's view. (1 Kings xviii.) This, too, was the meaning of
Hezekiah's letters sent to "all Israel" to invite them to "come to the house of
the Lord at Jerusalem, to keep the passover unto the Lord God of Israel."
Nothing can be more touching than the spirit and style of these letters. "Ye
children of Israel, turn again unto the Lord God of Abraham, Isaac, and
Israel, and He will return to the remnant of you that are escaped out of the
hand of the kings of Assyria. And be not ye like your fathers and like your
brethren, which trespassed against the Lord God of their fathers, who
therefore gave them up to desolation, as ye see. Now, be ye not stiff-necked,
as your fathers were, but yield yourselves unto the Lord, and enter into His
sanctuary, which He hath sanctified forever; and serve the Lord your God,
that the fierceness of His wrath may turn away from you. For if ye turn
again unto the Lord, your brethren and your children shall find compassion
before them that lead them captive, so that they shall come again into this
land; for the Lord your God is gracious and merciful, and will not turn away
His face from you" (2 Chron. xxx. 6-9).
What was all this but simple faith acting on the grand, eternal, immutable
truth of the unity of the nation of Israel? The nation was one in the purpose
of God, and Hezekiah looked at it from the divine standpoint, as faith ever
does, and he acted accordingly. "So the posts passed from city to city,
through the country of Ephraim and Manasseh, even unto Zebulun; but
they laughed them to scorn, and mocked them." This was very sad, but it is
only what we must expect. The actings of faith are sure to call forth the
scorn and contempt of those who are not up to the standard of God's
thoughts. Doubtless these men of Ephraim and Manasseh regarded
Hezekiah's message as a piece of presumption or wild extravagance. Perhaps
the great truth that was acting with such power on his soul, forming his
character and ruling his conduct, was in their judgment a myth, or at best a
valueless theory—a thing of the past—an institution of bygone ages, having
no present application. But faith is never moved by the thoughts of men,
and therefore Hezekiah went on with his work, and God owned and blessed
him. He could afford to be laughed at and turned into ridicule, while he
beheld divers of Asher and Manasseh and Zebulun humbling themselves
and coming to Jerusalem. Hezekiah and all who thus humbled themselves
under the mighty hand of God reaped a rich harvest of blessing, while the
mockers and scorners were left in the barrenness and deadness with which
their own unbelief had surrounded them.
And let the reader mark the force of those words of Hezekiah, "If ye turn
again unto the Lord, your brethren and your children shall find compassion
before them that lead them captive." Does not this approach very near to
that precious truth of the New Testament times, that we are members one of
another, and that the conduct of one member affects all the rest? Unbelief
might raise the question as to how this could possibly be—as to how the
actings of one could possibly affect others far away; yet so it was in Israel,
and so it is now in the Church of God. Witness the case of Achan, in Joshua
vii. There, one man sinned; and, so far as the narrative informs us, the
whole congregation was ignorant of the fact; and yet we read that "the
children of Israel committed a trespass in the accursed thing." And again,
"Israel hath sinned." How could this be? Simply because the nation was one,
and God dwelt among them. This, plainly, was the ground of a double
responsibility, namely, a responsibility to God, and a responsibility to the
whole assembly and to each member in particular. It was utterly impossible
for any one member of the congregation to shake off this high and holy
responsibility. A person living at Dan might feel disposed to question how
his conduct could affect a man living at Beersheba; yet such was the fact,
and the ground of this fact lay in the eternal truth of Israel's indissoluble
unity and Jehovah's dwelling in the midst of His redeemed assembly. (See
Exodus xv. 2, and the many passages which speak of God's dwelling in the
midst of Israel.)
Now, reason could never grasp a truth like this. It lay entirely beyond the
ken of the most powerful human intellect. Faith alone could receive it and
act upon it, and it is of the deepest interest to see that the faithful in Israel
ever recognized it and acted upon it. Why did Hezekiah send letters to "all
Israel"? Why did he expose himself to scorn and ridicule in so doing? Why
did he command that "the burnt-offering and the sin-offering should be
made for all Israel"? Why did Josiah carry his reformatory operations into all
"the countries that pertained to the children of Israel"? Because those men
of God recognized the divine truth of Israel's unity, and they did not think of
throwing this grand reality overboard because so few saw it or sought to
carry it out. "The people shall dwell alone;" and "I, the Lord, will dwell
among the children of Israel." These imperishable truths shine, like most
precious gems of heavenly lustre, all along the page of Old Testament
Scripture; and we invariably find that, just in proportion as any one was
living near to God—near to the living and ever-gushing fountain of life and
light and love—just in proportion as he entered into the thoughts, purposes,
sympathies, and counsels of the God of Israel, did he apprehend and seek to
carry out that which God had declared to be true of His people, though His
people had proved so untrue to Him.
And now, Christian reader, we would ask you a very plain and pointed
question, which is this: Do you not recognize in the unity of the Jewish
nation the foreshadowing of a higher unity now existing in that one body of
which Christ is the Head? We trust you do. We fondly hope that your whole
moral being bows down, with reverent submission, to the mighty truth,
"There is one body." But then we can well imagine that you feel yourself not
a little perplexed and confounded when you cast your eye around you
through the length and breadth of the professing Church, in search of any
positive expression of this unity. You see Christians scattered and divided—
you see innumerable sects and parties; and what perhaps puzzles you most
of all, you see those who profess to believe and act upon the truth of the
unity of the body divided amongst themselves, and presenting anything but
a spectacle of unity and harmony. All this, we confess, is very perplexing to
one who looks at it from a merely human standpoint. We are not the least
surprised at people being stumbled and hindered by these things. Still the
foundation of God standeth sure. His truth is perfectly indestructible; and if
we gaze with admiration upon the faithful worthies of a bygone age who
believed and confessed the unity of Israel when there was not a trace of that
unity visible to mortal eyes, why should we not heartily believe and diligently
carry out the higher unity of the one body? "There is one body and one
Spirit," and herein lies the basis of our responsibility to one another and to
God. Are we to surrender this all-important truth because Christians are
scattered and divided? God forbid. It is as real and as precious as ever, and
it ought to be as formative and as influential. We are bound to act upon the
truth of God, irrespective of consequences, and utterly regardless of outward
appearances. It is not for us to say, as so many do, "The case is hopeless:
everything has gone to pieces. It is impossible to carry out the truth of God
amid the heaps of rubbish which lie around us. The unity of the body was a
thing of the past; it may be a thing of the future, but it cannot be a thing of
the present. The idea of unity must be abandoned as thoroughly Utopian, it
cannot be maintained in the face of Christendom's numberless sects and
parties. Nothing remains now but for each one to look to the Lord for
himself, and to do the best he can, in his own individual sphere, and
according to the dictates of his own conscience and judgment."
Such is, in substance, the language of hundreds of the true people of God;
and as is their language, so is their practical career. But we must speak
plainly, and we have no hesitation in saying that this language savors of
sheer unbelief in that great cardinal verity of the unity of the body; and,
moreover, that we have just as much warrant for rejecting the precious
doctrine of Christ's deity, of His perfect humanity, or of His vicarious
sacrifice, as we have for rejecting the truth of the perfect unity of His body,
inasmuch as this latter rests upon precisely the same foundation as the
former, namely, the eternal truth of God—the absolute statement of Holy
Scripture. What right have we to set aside any one truth of divine revelation?
What authority have we to single out any special truth from the word of God
and say that it no longer applies? We are bound to receive all truth, and to
submit our souls to its authority. It is a dangerous thing to admit for a
moment the idea that any one truth of God is to be set aside, on the plea
that it cannot be carried out. It is sufficient for us that it is revealed in the
Holy Scriptures: we have only to believe and to obey. Does Scripture declare
that there is "one body"? Assuredly it does. This is enough. We are
responsible to maintain this truth, cost what it may; we can accept nothing
else—nothing less—nothing different. We are bound, by the allegiance which
we owe to Christ the Head, to testify, practically, against everything that
militates against the truth of the indissoluble unity of the Church of God,
and to seek earnestly and constantly a faithful expression of that unity.
True, we shall have to contend with false unity on the one hand and false
individuality on the other; but we have only to hold fast and confess the
truth of God, looking to Him, in humility of mind and earnest purpose of
heart, and He will sustain us in the path, let the difficulties be what they
may. No doubt there are difficulties in the way—grave difficulties, such as
we in our own strength cannot cope with. The very fact that we are told to
"endeavor to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace" is sufficient to
prove that there are difficulties in the way; but the grace of our Lord Jesus
Christ is amply sufficient for all the demands that may be made upon us in
seeking to act upon this most precious truth.
And we would here call the reader's attention to two very distinct lines of
truth flowing out of two distinct titles of our blessed Lord, namely, Headship
and Lordship. He is Head of His body the Church, and He is Lord of all, Lord
of each. Now, when we think of Christ as Lord, we are reminded of our
individual responsibility to Him, in the wide range of service to which He, in
His sovereignty, has graciously called us. Our reference must be to Him in
all things. All our actings, all our movements, all our arrangements, must be
placed under the commanding influence of that weighty sentence (often,
alas! lightly spoken and penned), "If the Lord will." And, moreover, no one
has any right to thrust himself between the conscience of a servant and the
commandment of his Lord. All this is divinely true, and of the very highest
importance. The Lordship of Christ is a truth the value of which cannot
possibly be overestimated.
But we must bear in mind that Christ is Head as well as Lord;—He is Head
of a body, as well as Lord of individuals. These things must not be
confounded. We are not to hold the truth of Christ's Lordship in such a way
as to interfere with the truth of His Headship. If we merely think of Christ as
Lord, and ourselves as individuals responsible to Him, then we shall ignore
His Headship, and lose sight of our responsibility to every member of that
body of which He is Head. We must jealously watch against this. We cannot
look at ourselves as isolated, independent atoms; if we think of Christ as
Head, then we must think of all His members, and this opens up a wide
range of practical truth. We have holy duties to discharge to our fellow-
members, as well as to our Lord and Master; and we may rest assured that
no one walking in communion with Christ can ever lose sight of the grand
fact of his relationship to every member of His body. Such an one will ever
remember that his walk and ways exert an influence upon Christians living
at the other side of the globe. This is a wondrous mystery, but it is divinely
true. "If one member suffer, all the members suffer with it" (1 Cor. xii. 26).
You cannot reduce the body of Christ to a matter of locality: the body is one,
and we are called to maintain this practically in every possible way, and to
bear a decided testimony against everything which tends to hinder the
expression of the perfect unity of the body, whether it be false unity or false
individuality. The enemy is seeking to associate Christians on a false
ground, and gather them around a false centre; or, if he cannot do this, he
will send them adrift upon the wide and tumultuous ocean of a desultory
individualism. We are throughly persuaded, before God, that the only
safeguard against both these false and dangerous extremes is divinely
wrought faith in the grand foundation-truth of the unity of the body of
Christ.
PART VI
It may here be proper to inquire what is the suited attitude of the Christian
in view of the grand foundation-truth of the unity of the body. That it is a
truth distinctly laid down in the New Testament cannot possibly be
questioned. If any reader of these pages be not fully established in the
knowledge and hearty belief of this truth, let him prayerfully study 1
Corinthians xii. and xiv., Ephesians ii. and iv., Colossians ii. and iii. He will
find the doctrine referred to in a practical way in the opening of Romans xii;
though it is not the design of the Holy Ghost, in that magnificent epistle, to
give us a full unfolding of the truth respecting the Church. What we have to
look for there is rather the soul's relationship with God through the death
and resurrection of Christ. We might pass through the first eleven chapters
of Romans and not know that there is such a thing as the Church of God,
the body of Christ; and when we reach chap. xii., the doctrine of the one
body is assumed, but not dwelt upon.
There is, then, "one body" actually existing on this earth, formed by the "one
Spirit," and united to the living Head in heaven. This truth cannot be
gainsaid. Some may not see it; some may find it very hard to receive it, in
view of the present condition of things; but nevertheless it remains a
divinely established truth that "there is one body," and the question is, how
are we individually affected by this truth? It is as impossible to shake off the
responsibility involved therein as it is to set aside the truth itself. If there is
a body of which we are members, then do we, in every truth, stand in a holy
relationship to every member of that body on earth, as well as to the Head in
heaven; and this relationship, like every other, has its characteristic
affections, privileges, and responsibilities.
Such is the divine order, as laid down in 1 Cor. xii. and xiv.; Eph. ii. and iv.
and assumed in Rom. xii. Indeed, we cannot study the New Testament and
not see this blessed truth. We find in various cities and towns saints
gathered by the Holy Ghost in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ; as, for
example, at Rome, Corinth, Ephesus, Philippi, Colosse, and Thessalonica.
These were not independent, isolated, fragmentary assemblies, but parts of
the one body, so that a member of the Church in one place was a member of
the Church everywhere. Doubtless, each assembly, as guided by the one
Spirit, and under the one Lord, acted in all local matters, such as receiving
to communion, or putting away any wicked person from their midst; meeting
the wants of their poor, and such like; but we may be quite assured that the
act of the assembly at Corinth would be recognized by all other assemblies,
so that if any one was separated from communion there, he would, if
known, be refused in all other places; otherwise it would be a plain denial of
the unity of the body. We have no reason to suppose that the assembly at
Corinth communicated or conferred with any other assembly previous to the
putting away of "the wicked person" in chap. v., but we are bound to believe
that that act would be duly recognized and sanctioned by every assembly
upon the earth, and that any assembly knowingly receiving the
excommunicated man would have cast a slur upon the assembly at Corinth,
and practically denied the unity of the body.
Thus it was with the pious and devoted king Josiah, whose life and times
have suggested this entire line of thought. He found the book of the law, and
discovered in its sacred pages an order of things wholly different from what
he saw around him. How did he act? Did he content himself by saying, "The
case is hopeless: the nation is too far gone: ruin has set in, and it is utterly
vain to think of aiming at the divine standard; we must only let things
stand, and do the best we can"? Nay, reader, such was not Josiah's
language or mode of action; but he humbled himself before God, and called
upon others to do the same. And not only so, but he sought to carry out the
truth of God. He aimed at the very loftiest standard, and the consequence
was, that "from the days of Samuel the prophet, there was no passover like
to Josiah's kept in Israel; neither did all the kings of Israel keep such a
passover."
Such was the result of faithful reference and adherence to the word of God,
and thus it will ever be, for "God is a rewarder of them that diligently seek
Him." Look at the actings of the remnant that returned from Babylon in the
days of Ezra and Nehemiah. What did they do? They set up the altar of God;
they built the temple, and repaired the walls of Jerusalem. In other words,
they occupied themselves with the true worship of the God of Israel, and
with the grand centre or gathering-point of His people. This was right. It is
what faith always does, regardless of circumstances. If the remnant had
looked at circumstances, they could not have acted. They were a poor
contemptible handful of people, under the dominion of the uncircumcised
Gentiles. They were surrounded by active enemies on all sides, who,
instigated by the enemy of God, of His city, of His people, left nothing
undone to hinder them in their blessed work. These enemies ridiculed them,
and said, "What do these feeble Jews? Will they fortify themselves? will they
sacrifice? will they make an end in a day? will they revive the stones out of
the heaps of the rubbish which are burned?" Nor was this all; not only had
they to contend with powerful foes without, there was also internal
weakness, for "Judah said, The strength of the bearers of burdens is
decayed, and there is much rubbish, so that we are not able to build the
wall." (Neh. iv.) All this was very depressing. It was very different from the
brilliant and palmy days of Solomon. His burden-bearers were many and
strong, and there was no rubbish covering the great stones and costly with
which he built the house of God, nor any contemptuous foe to sneer at his
work. And yet, for all that, there were features attaching to the work of Ezra
and Nehemiah which are not to be found in the days of Solomon. Their very
feebleness, the piles of rubbish which lay before them, the proud and
insulting enemies who surrounded them—all these things conspired to add
a peculiar halo of glory to their work. They built and prospered, and God
was glorified, and He declared in their ears these cheering words: "The glory
of this latter house shall be greater than of the former, saith the Lord of
Hosts: and in this place will I give peace, saith the Lord of Hosts." (Hag. ii.
9.)
"Is God for me? I fear not, though all against me rise;
There is ample encouragement for our souls in the word of God. If we look at
Josiah, just before the captivity, what do we see? A man simply taking the
Word as his guide—judging himself and all around by its light—rejecting all
that was contrary to it, and seeking, with earnest purpose of heart, to carry
out what he found written there. And what was the result? The most blessed
passover that had been celebrated since the days of Samuel.
Finally, if we look at the remnant, after the captivity, what do we see? Men,
in the face of appalling difficulties, rebuilding that city which was, and shall
be, God's earthly centre. And what was the result? The joyous celebration of
the feast of tabernacles, which had not been known since the days of
Joshua the son of Nun.
Now, if we take any of the above interesting cases, and inquire as to the
effect of their looking at surrounding circumstances, what answer shall we
get? Take Daniel, for instance. Why did he open his window toward
Jerusalem? Why look toward a city of ruins? Why call attention to a spot
which only bore testimony to Israel's sin and shame? Would it not be better
to let the name of Jerusalem sink into oblivion? Ah? we can guess at
Daniel's reply to all such inquiries. Men might smile at him too, and deem
him a visionary enthusiast; but he knew what he was doing. His heart was
occupied with God's centre, the city of David, the grand gathering-point for
Israel's twelve tribes. Was he to give up God's truth because of outward
circumstances? Surely not. He could not consent to lower the standard even
the breadth of a hair. He would weep, and pray, and fast, and chasten his
soul before God, but never lower the standard. Was he going to give up
God's thoughts about Zion because Israel had proved unfaithful? Not he.
Daniel knew better than this. His eye was fixed on God's eternal truth, and
hence, though he was in the dust because of his own sins and his people's,
yet the divine banner floated above his head, in its unfading glory.
Just so now, dear Christian reader, we are called to fix the gaze of faith
upon the imperishable truth of the one body; and not only to gaze upon it,
but seek to carry it out in our feeble measure. This should be our one
definite and constant aim. We should ever and only seek the expression of
the unity of the body. We are not to ask, "How can this be?" Faith never
says, "How?" in the presence of divine revelation; it believes and acts. We are
not to surrender the truth of God on the plea that we cannot carry it out.
The truth is revealed, and we are called to bow to it. We are not called to
form the unity of the body. Very many seem to think that this unity is a
something which they themselves are to set up or form in some way or
another. This is a mistake. The unity exists. It is the result of the presence
of the Holy Ghost in the body, and we have to recognize it, and walk in the
light of it. This will give great definiteness to our course. It is always
immensely important to have a distinct object before the heart, and to work
with direct reference thereto. Look at Paul, that most devoted of workmen.
What was his aim?—for what did he work? Hear the answer in his own
words: "I now rejoice in my sufferings for you, and fill up that which is
behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for His body's sake, which is
the Church: whereof I am made a minister, according to the dispensation of
God which is given to me for you, to fulfil the word of God; even the mystery
which hath been hid from ages and from generations, but now is made
manifest to His saints: to whom God would make known what is the riches
of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles; which is Christ in you, the
hope of glory: whom we preach, warning every man, and teaching every man
in all wisdom; that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus;
whereunto I also labor, striving according to His working, which worketh in
me mightily" (Col. i. 24-29).
Now, this was a great deal more than the mere conversion of souls, precious
as that is, most surely. Paul preached the gospel with a direct view to the
body of Christ; and this is the pattern for all evangelists. We should not rest
in the mere fact that souls are quickened; we should keep before our minds
their incorporation, by the one Spirit, into the one body. This would
effectually preserve us from sect-making—from preaching to swell the ranks
of a party—from seeking to get persons to join this, that, or the other
denomination. We should know nothing whatever but the one body, because
we find nothing else in the New Testament. If this be lost sight of, the
evangelist will not know what to do with souls when they are converted. A
man may be used in the conversion of hundreds—a most precious work
indeed—precious beyond all expression,—and if he does not see the unity of
the body, he must be at sea as to their further course. This is very serious,
both as to himself and them, and also as to the testimony for Christ.
May God's Spirit lead all Christians to see this great truth in all its bearings.
We have but glanced at it, in connection with our theme; but it demands
much serious attention at the present moment. It may be that some of our
readers are disposed to find fault with what they may deem a long
digression from the subject of "Life and Times of Josiah;" but in truth it
should not be looked on as a digression, but as a line of truth flowing
naturally out of that subject—a line, too, which cannot possibly be over-
estimated.
PART VII
In closing our remarks on "the life and times of Josiah," we shall in few
words advert, first, to the fact of his celebration of the passover; and
secondly, to the solemn close of his history. Our sketch of this truly
interesting period would unquestionably be incomplete were these things
omitted.
But Josiah did not reason like this; he simply acted upon the truth of God.
He studied the Scriptures, and rejected what was wrong and did what was
right. "Moreover, Josiah kept a passover unto the Lord in Jerusalem; and
they killed the passover on the fourteenth day of the first month." (2 Chron.
xxxv. 1). This was taking higher ground than Hezekiah had taken, inasmuch
as he kept his passover "on the fourteenth day of the second month." (Chap.
xxx. 15). In so doing, Hezekiah was, as we know, availing himself of the
provision which grace had made for cases of defilement. (See Num. ix. 9-11).
The divine order, however, had fixed "the first month" as the proper period,
and to this order Josiah was enabled to conform. In short, he took the very
highest ground, according to the truth of God, while lying low under the
deep sense of personal and national failure. This is ever the way of faith.
"And he set the priests in their charges, and encouraged them to the service
of the house of the Lord, and said unto the Levites that taught all Israel,
which were holy unto the Lord, Put the holy ark in the house which
Solomon, the son of David, king of Israel, did build: it shall not be a burden
on your shoulders; serve now the Lord your God, and His people Israel. And
prepare yourselves by the houses of your fathers, after your courses,
according to the writing of David king of Israel, and according to the writing
of Solomon his son, and stand in the holy place, according to the divisions
of the families of the fathers of your brethren the people, and after the
division of the families of the Levites. So kill the passover, and sanctify
yourselves, and prepare your brethren, that they may do according to the
word of the Lord by the hand of Moses."
Here we have Josiah taking the loftiest ground and acting on the highest
authority. The most cursory reader cannot fail to be arrested, as he scans
the lines just quoted from the inspired record, by the names of "Solomon,"
"David," "Moses," "all Israel," and above all, by the expression—so full of
dignity, weight, and power,—"That they may do according to the word of the
Lord." Most memorable words! May they sink down into our ears and into
our hearts. Josiah felt it to be his high and holy privilege to conform to the
divine standard, notwithstanding all the errors and evils which had crept in
from age to age. God's truth must stand forever. Faith owns and acts on this
precious fact, and reaps accordingly. Nothing can be more lovely than the
scene enacted on the occasion to which we are now referring. Josiah's strict
adherence to the word of the Lord is not more to be admired than his large-
hearted devotedness and liberality. "He gave to the people of the flock, lambs
and kids, all for the passover-offerings, for all that were present, to the
number of thirty thousand, and three thousand bullocks: these were of the
king's substance. And his princes gave willingly unto the people, to the
priests, and to the Levites.... So the service was prepared, and the priests
stood in their place, and the Levites in their courses, according to the king's
commandment.... And the singers, the sons of Asaph, were in their place,
according to the commandment of David, and Asaph, and Heman, and
Jeduthun the king's seer; and the porters waited at every gate; they might
not depart from their service; for their brethren the Levites prepared for
them. So all the service of the Lord was prepared the same day, to keep the
passover, and to offer burnt-offerings upon the altar of the Lord, according
to the commandment of king Josiah. And the children of Israel that were
present kept the passover at that time, and the feast of unleavened bread
seven days. And there was no passover like to that kept in Israel from the
days of Samuel the prophet; neither did all the kings of Israel keep such a
passover as Josiah kept, and the priests, and the Levites, and all Judah and
Israel that were present, and the inhabitants of Jerusalem. In the eighteenth
year of the reign of Josiah was this passover kept."
What a picture! King, princes, priests, Levites, singers, porters, all Israel,
Judah, and the inhabitants of Jerusalem—all gathered together—all in their
true place and at their appointed work, "according to the word of the
Lord,"—and all this "in the eighteenth year of the reign of Josiah," when the
entire Jewish polity was on the very eve of dissolution. Surely this must
speak to the heart of the thoughtful reader. It tells its own impressive tale,
and teaches its own peculiar lesson. It tells us that no age, no
circumstances, no influence, can ever change the truth of God or dim the
vision of faith. "The word of the Lord endureth forever," and faith grasps that
word and holds it fast in the face of everything. It is the privilege of the
believing soul to have to do with God and His eternal truth; and, moreover,
it is the duty of such an one to aim at the very loftiest standard of action,
and to be satisfied with nothing lower. Unbelief will draw a plea from the
condition of things around to lower the standard, to relax the grasp, to
slacken the pace, to lower the tone. Faith says, "No!"—emphatically and
decidedly, "No!" Let us bow our heads in shame and sorrow on account of
our sin and failure, but keep the standard up. The failure is ours: the
standard is God's. Josiah wept and rent his clothes, but he did not
surrender the truth of God. He felt and owned that he and his brethren and
his fathers had sinned, but that was no reason why he should not celebrate
the passover according to the divine order. It was as imperative upon him to
do right as it was upon Solomon, David, or Moses. It is our business to obey
the word of the Lord, and we shall assuredly be blessed in our deed. This is
one grand lesson to be drawn from the life and times of Josiah, and it is
undoubtedly a seasonable lesson for our own times. May we learn it
thoroughly. May we learn to adhere with holy decision to the ground on
which the truth of God has set us, and to occupy that ground with a larger
measure of true devotedness to Christ and His cause.
Most gladly would we linger over the brilliant and soul-stirring scene
presented in the opening verses of 2 Chronicles xxxv, but we must bring this
paper to an end, and we shall merely glance very rapidly at the solemn and
admonitory close of Josiah's history. It stands in sad and painful contrast
with all the rest of his most interesting career, and sounds in our ears a
note of warning to which we are bound to give our most serious attention.
We shall do little more than quote the passage, and then leave the reader to
reflect upon it, prayerfully and humbly, in the presence of God.
"After all this, when Josiah had prepared the temple, Necho king of Egypt
came up to fight against Charchemish by Euphrates; and Josiah went out
against him. But he sent ambassadors to him, saying, What have I to do
with thee, thou king of Judah? I come not against thee this day, but against
the house wherewith I have war; for God commanded me to make haste:
forbear thee from meddling with God, who is with me, that He destroy thee
not. Nevertheless, Josiah would not turn his face from him, but disguised
himself, that he might fight with him, and harkened not to the words of
Necho from the mouth of God, and came to fight in the valley of Megiddo.
And the archers shot at king Josiah; and the king said to his servants, Have
me away, for I am sore wounded. His servants therefore took him out of that
chariot and put him in the second chariot that he had; and they brought
him to Jerusalem, and he died, and was buried in one of the sepulchres of
his fathers. And all Judah and Jerusalem mourned for Josiah" (2 Chron.
xxxv. 20-24).
All this is very sad and humbling. We do not wish to dwell upon it further
than is absolutely needful for the purpose of instruction and admonition.
The Holy Spirit does not expatiate, but He has recorded it for our learning. It
is ever His way to give us men as they were,—to write the history of their
"deeds, first and last"—good and bad—one as well as another. He tells us of
Josiah's piety at the "first," and of his wilfulness at the "last." He shows us
that so long as Josiah walked in the light of divine revelation, his path was
illuminated by the bright beams of the divine countenance; but the moment
he attempted to act for himself—to walk by the light of his own eyes—to
travel off the straight and narrow way of simple obedience, that moment
dark and heavy clouds gathered around him, and the course that had
opened in sunshine ended in gloom. Josiah went against Necho without any
command from God—yea, he went in direct opposition to words spoken
"from the mouth of God." He meddled with strife that belonged not to him,
and he reaped the consequences.
"He disguised himself." Why do this, if he was conscious of acting for God?
Why wear a mask, if treading the divinely appointed pathway? Alas! alas!
Josiah failed in this, and in his failure he teaches us a salutary lesson. May
we profit by it. May we learn more than ever to seek a divine warrant for all
we do, and to do nothing without it. We can count on God to the fullest
extent if we are walking in His way, but we have no security whatever if we
attempt to travel off the divinely appointed line. Josiah had no command to
fight at Megiddo, and hence he could not count on divine protection. "He
disguised himself," but that did not shield him from the enemy's arrow. "The
archers shot him"—they gave him his death wound, and he fell, amid the
tears and lamentations of a people to whom he had endeared himself by a
life of genuine piety and earnest devotedness.
May we have grace to imitate him in his piety and devotedness, and to guard
against his wilfulness. It is a serious thing for a child of God to persist in
doing his own will. Josiah went to Megiddo when he ought to have tarried at
Jerusalem, and the archers shot him, and he died: Jonah went to Tarshish
when he ought to have gone to Nineveh, and he was flung into the deep:
Paul persisted in going to Jerusalem though the Spirit told him not, and he
fell into the hands of the Romans. Now, all these were true, earnest, devoted
servants of God; but they failed in these things; and though God overruled
their failure for blessing, yet they had to reap the fruit of their failure, for
"our God is a consuming fire" (Heb. xii. 29).