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COLLECTIONS
Commentaries, Word
Studies, Devotionals, Sermons, Illustrations
Old and New Testament. |
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Sojourners of the Dispersion |
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‘Peter, an Apostle of Jesus Christ, to the strangers scattered...’ — 1
Peter 1:1.
THE words rendered ‘strangers
scattered’ are literally ‘sojourners of the Dispersion,’ and are so
rendered in the Revised Version. The Dispersion was the recognised name
for the Jews dwelling in Gentile countries; as, for instance, it is
employed in John’s Gospel, when the people in Jerusalem say, ‘Whither will
this man go that we shall not find Him? Will he go to the Dispersion
amongst the Greeks?’ Obviously, therefore the word here may refer to the
scattered Jewish people, but the question arises whether the letter
corresponds to its apparent address, or whether the language which is
employed in it does not almost oblige us to see here a reference, not to
the Jew, but to the whole body of Christian people, who, whatever may be
their outward circumstances, me, in the deepest sense, in the foundations
of their life, if they be Christ’s, ‘strangers of the Dispersion.’
Now if we look at the letter we find
such words as these — ‘The times of your ignorance’ — ‘your vain manner of
life handed down from your fathers’ — ‘in time past were not a people’ —
‘the time past may suffice to have wrought the will of the Gentiles’ — all
of which, as you see, can only be accommodated to Jewish believers by a
little gentle violence, but all of which find a proper significance if we
suppose them addressed to Gentiles, to whom they are only applicable in
the higher sense of the words to which I have referred. If we understand
them so, we have here an instance of what runs all through the letter; the
taking hold of Jewish ideas for the purpose of lifting them into a loftier
region, and transfiguring them into the expression of Christian truth. For
example, we read in it: ‘Ye are an elect race, a royal priesthood, a holy
nation’; and again: ‘Ye are built up a spiritual house, to be a holy
priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices.’ These and other similar
passages are instances of precisely the same transference of Jewish ideas
as I find, in accordance with many good commentators, in the words of my
text.
So, then, here is Peter’s notion of
—
I. What the Christian Life is.
All those who really have faith in Jesus Christ are ‘strangers of the
Dispersion’; scattered throughout the world, and dwelling dispersedly in
an order of things to which they do not belong, ‘seeking a city which hath
foundations.’ The word ‘strangers’ means, originally, persons for a time
living in an alien city. And that is the idea that the Apostle would
impress upon us as true for each of us, in the measure in which our
Christianity is real. For, remember, although all men maybe truly spoken
of as being ‘pilgrims and sojourners upon the earth’ by reason of both the
shortness of the duration of their earthly course and the disproportion
between their immortal part and the material things amongst which they
dwell, Peter is thinking of something very different from either the
brevity of earthly life or the infinite necessities of an immortal spirit
when he calls his Christian brethren strangers. Not because we are men,
not because we are to die soon, and the world is to outlast us; not
because other people will one day live in our houses and read our books
and sit upon our chairs, and we shall be forgotten, but because we are
Christ’s people are we here sojourners, and must regard this as not our
rest Not because our immortal seal cannot satisfy itself, however it
tries, upon the trivialities of earth any more than a human appetite can
on the husks that the swine do eat, but because new desires, tastes,
aspirations, affinities, have been kindled in us by the new life that has
flowed into us; therefore the connection that other men have with the
world, which makes some of them altogether ‘men of the world, whose
portion is in this life,’ is for us broken, and we are strangers,
scattered abroad, solitary, not by reason of the inevitable loneliness in
which, after all love and companionship, every soul lives; not by reason
of losses or deaths, but by reason of the contrariety between the
foundation of our lives, and the foundation of the lives of the men round
us; therefore we stand lonely in the midst of crowds; strangers in the
ordered communities of the world.
Ah, there is no solitude so utter as
the solitude of being the only man in a crowd that has a faith in his
heart, and there is no isolating power like the power of rending all ties
that true attachment with Jesus Christ has. ‘Think not that I am come to
bring peace on earth, but a sword’ — to set a man against his own
household, if they be not of the household of faith. These things are the
inevitable issues of religion — to make us strangers, isolated in the
midst of this world.
And now let us think of —
II. Some of the plain consequent duties that arise from this
characteristic of the Christian Life.
Let me put them in the shape of one
or two practical counsels. First let us try to keep up, vivid and sharp, a
sense of separation. I do not mean that we should withdraw ourselves from
sympathies, nor from services, nor from the large area of common ground
which we have with our fellows, whether they be Christians or no — with
our fellow-citizens; with those who are related to us by various bends, by
community of purpose, of aim, of opinion, or of affection. But just as
Abraham was willing to go down into the plain and fight for Lot, though he
would not go down and live in Sodom, and just as he would enter into
relations of amity with the men of the land, and yet would not abandon his
black camels’-hair tent, pitched beneath the terebinth tree, in order to
go into their city and abide with them, so one great part of the wisdom of
a Christian man is to draw the line of separation decisively, and yet to
keep true to the bond of union. Unless Christian people do make a distinct
effort to keep themselves apart from the world and its ways, they will get
confounded with these, and when the end comes they will be destroyed with
them.
Sometimes voyagers find upon some lonely island an English castaway, who
has forgotten home, and duty, and everything else, to luxuriate in an easy
life beneath tropical skies, and has degraded himself to the level of the
savage islanders round him. There are professing Christians — perhaps in
my audience — who, like that poor castaway, have ‘forgotten the imperial
palace whence they came,’ and have gone down and down and down, to live
the fat, contented, low lives of the’ men who find their good upon earth
and not in heaven. Do you, dear brethren, try to keep vivid the sense that
you belong to another community. As Paul puts it, with a metaphor drawn
from Gentile instead of from Jewish life, as in our text, ‘Our citizenship
is in heaven.’ Philippi, to the Christian Church of which that was said,
was a Roman colony; and the characteristics of a Roman colony were that
the inhabitants were enrolled as members of the Roman tribes, and had
their names on the register of Rome, and were governed by its laws. So we,
living here in an outlying province, have our names written in the ‘Golden
Book’ of the citizens of the new Jerusalem. Do not forget, if I might use
a very homely illustration, what parish your settlement is in; remember
what kingdom you belong to.
Again, if we are strangers of the Dispersion, let us live by our own
country’s laws, and not by the codes that are current in this foreign land
where we are settled for a time. You remember what was the complaint of
the people in Persia to Esther’s king? ‘There is a people whose laws are
different from all the peoples that be upon the earth.’ That was an
offence that could not be tolerated in a despotism that ground everything
down to the one level of a slavish uniformity. It will be well for us
Christian people if men look at us, and say, ‘Ah, that man has another
rule of conduct from the one that prevails generally. I wonder what is the
underlying principle of his life; it evidently is not the same as mine.’
Live by our King’s law. People in
our colonies, at least the officials, set wonderful store by the
approbation of the Colonial Office at home. It does not matter what the
colonial newspapers say, it is ‘what will they say in Downing Street?’ And
if a despatch goes out approving of their conduct, neighbours may censure
and sneer as they list. So we Christians have to report to Home, and have
so to live ‘that whether present or absent’ — in a colony or in the mother
country — ‘we may be well pleasing unto Him.’
Keep up the honour and advance the
interests of your own country. You are here, among other reasons, to
represent your King, and people take their notions of Him very
considerably from their experience of you. So see to it that you live like
the Master whom you say you serve.
The Russian Government sends out what are called military colonies,
studded along the frontier, with the one mission of extending the empire.
We are set along the frontier with the same mission. The strangers are
scattered. Congested, they would be less useful; dispersed, they may push
forward the frontiers. Seed in a seed-basket is not in its right place;
but sown broadcast over the field, it will be waving wheat in a month or
two. ‘Ye are the salt of the earth’ — salt is sprinkled over what it is
intended to preserve. You are the strangers of the Dispersion, that you
may be the messengers of the Evangelisation.
Lastly, let us be glad when we
think, and let us often think, of —
III. The Home in Glory.
That is a beautiful phrase which
pairs off with the one in my text, in which another Apostle speaks of the
ultimate end as ‘our gathering together in Christ.’ All the scattered
ones, like chips of wood in a whirlpool, drift
gradually closer and closer, until they unite in a solid mass in the
centre. So at the last the ‘strangers’ are to be brought and settled in
their own land, and their lonely lives are to be filled with happy
companionship, and they to be in a more blessed unity than now.
‘Fellow-citizens with the saints and of the household of God.’ If we,
dwelling in this far-off land, were habitually to talk, as Australians do
of coming to England of ‘going home,’ though born in the colony, it would
be a glad day for us when we set out on the journey. If Christian people
lived more by faith, as they profess to do, and less by sight, they would
oftener think of the home-coming and the union; and would be happy when
they thought that they were here but for awhile, and when they realised
these two blessed elements of permanence and of companionship, which
another Apostle packs into one sentence, along with that which is greater
than them both, ‘so shall we ever be with the Lord.’
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By, Through, Unto |
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‘... Kept by the power of God through
faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time.’ — 1 Peter 1:5.
THE Revised Version
substitutes ‘guarded’ for ‘kept,’ and the alteration, though slight, is
important, for it not only more accurately preserves the meaning of the word
employed, but it retains the military metaphor which is in it. The force of
the expression will appear if I refer, in a sentence, to other cases in
which it is employed in the New Testament. For instance, we read that the
governor of Damascus ‘kept the city with a garrison,’ which is the same
word, and in its purely metaphorical usage Paul employs it when he says that
‘the peace of God shall keep’ — guard, garrison — ‘your hearts and minds in
Christ Jesus.’ We have to think of some defenceless position, some unwalled
village out in the open, with a strong force round it, through which no
assailant can break, and in the midst of which the weakest can sit secure.
Peter thinks that every Christian has assailants whom no Christian by
himself can repel, but that he may, if he likes, have an impregnable ring of
defence drawn round him, which shall fling back in idle spray the wildest
onset of the waves, as a breakwater or a cliff might do.
Then there is another
very beautiful and striking point to be made, and that is the connection
between the words of my text and those immediately preceding. The Apostle
has been speaking about ‘the inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled, and
that fadeth not away,’ and he says ‘it is reserved in Heaven for you who are
kept.’ So, then, the same power is working on both sides of the veil,
preserving the inheritance for the heirs, and preserving the heirs for the
inheritance. It will not fail them, and they will not miss it. It were of
little avail to care for either of the two members separately, but the same
hand that is preparing the inheritance and making it ready for the owners is
round about the pilgrims, and taking care of them till they get home.
So, then, our Apostle
is looking at this keeping in three aspects, suggested by his three words
‘by,’ ‘through,’ ‘unto,’ which respectively express the real cause or power,
the condition or occasion on which that power works, and the end or purpose
to which it works. So these three little words will do for lines on which to
run our thoughts now — ‘by,’ ‘through,’ ‘for.’
I. In the first place, what are we guarded for?
‘Guarded... unto
salvation.’ Now that great word ‘salvation’ was a new and strange one to
Peter’s readers — so new and strange that probably they did not understand
it in its full nobleness and sweep. Our understanding of it, or, at least,
our impression of it, is weakened by precisely the opposite cause. It has
become so tarnished and smooth-rubbed that it creates very little definite
impression. Like a bit of seaweed lifted out of the sunny waves which opened
its fronds and brightened its delicate colours, it has become dry and hard
and sapless and dim. But let me try for one moment to freshen it for our
conceptions and our hearts. Salvation has in it the double idea of being
made safe, and being made sound. Peril threatening to slay, and sickness
unto death, are the implications of the conditions which this great word
presupposes. The man that needs to be saved needs to be rescued from peril
and needs to be healed of a disease. And if you do not know and feel that
that is you, then you have not learned the first letters of the alphabet
which are necessary to spell ‘salvation.’ You, I, every man, we are all sick
unto death, because the poison of self-will and sin is running hot through
all our veins, and we are all in deadly peril because of that poison — peril
of death, peril arising from the weight of guilt that presses upon us, peril
from our inevitable collision with the Divine law and government which make
for righteousness.
And so salvation
means, negatively, the deliverance from all the evils, whether they be evils
of sorrow or evils of sin, which can affect a man, and which do affect us
all in some measure. But it means far more than that, for God’s salvation is
no half-and-half thing, contented, as some benevolent man might be, in a
widespread flood or disaster, with rescuing the victims and putting them
high up enough for the water not to reach them, and leaving them there
shivering cold and starving. But when God begins by taking away evils, it is
in order that He may clear a path for flooding us with good. And so
salvation is not merely what some of you think it is, the escape from a
hell, nor only what some of you more nobly take it to be, a deliverance from
the power of sin in your hearts; but it is the investiture of each of us
with every good and glory, whether of happiness or of purity, which it is
possible for a man to receive and for God to give. It is the great word of
the New Testament, and they do a very questionable service to humanity who
weaken the grandeur and the greatness of the Scriptural conception of
salvation, by weakening the darkness and the terribleness of the Scriptural
conception of the dangers and the sicknesses from which it delivers.
But, then, there is
another point that I would suggest raised by the words of my text in their
connection. Peter is here evidently speaking about a future manifestation of
absolute exemption from all the ills that flesh and spirit are heir to, and
radiant investure with all the good that humanity can put on, which lies
beyond the great barrier of this mortal life. And that complete salvation,
in its double aspect, is obviously the end for which all that guarding of
life is lavished upon us, as it is the end for which all the discipline of
life is given to us, and as it is the end for which the bitter agony and
pain of the Christ on the Cross were freely rendered. But that ultimate and
superlative perfection has its roots and its beginning here. And so in
Scripture you find salvation sometimes regarded as a thing in the past
experience of every Christian man which he received at the very beginning of
his course, and sometimes you have it treated as being progressive, running
on continually through all his days; and sometimes you have it treated, as
in my text, as laid up yonder, and only to be reached when life is done
with. But just a verse or two after my text we read that the Christian man
here, on condition of his loving Jesus Christ and believing in Him, rejoices
because he here and now ‘receives the end of his faith, even the salvation
of his soul.’ And so there are the two things — the incipient germ to-day,
the full-foliaged fruit-bearing tree planted in the higher house of the
Lord.
These two things are
inseparably intertwined. The Christian life in its imperfection here, the
partial salvation of to-day demands, unless the universe is a chaos and
there is no personal God the centre of it, a future life, in which all that
is here tendency, shall be realised possession, and in which all that here
but puts up a pale and feeble shoot above the ground, shall grow and blossom
and bear fruit unto life eternal. ‘Like the new moon with a ragged edge,
e’en in its imperfections beautiful,’ all the characteristics of Christian
life on earth prophesy that the orb is crescent, and will one day round
itself into its pure silvery completeness. If you see a great wall in some
palace, with slabs of polished marble for most of its length, and here and
there stretches of course rubble shoved in, you would know that that was not
the final condition, that the rubble had to be cased over, or taken out and
replaced by the lucent slab that reflected the light, and showed, by its
reflecting, its own mottled beauty. Thus the very inconsistencies, the
thwarted desires, the broken resolutions, the aspiration that never can
clothe themselves in the flesh of reality, which belong to the Christian
life, declare that this is but the first Stage of the structure, and point
onwards to the time when the imperfections shall be swept away, ‘and for
brass He will bring gold, for iron He will bring silver,’ and then the
windows shall be set ‘in agates, and the gates in carbuncles, and all the
borders in pleasant stones.’ Perfect salvation is obviously the only issue
of the present imperfect salvation.
That is what you are
‘kept’ for. That is what Christ died to bring you. That is what God, like a
patient workman bringing out the pattern in his loom by many a threw of a
sharp-pointed shuttle, and much twisting of the threads into patterns, is
trying to make of you, and that is what Christ on the Cress has died to
effect~ Brethren, let us think more than we do, not only of the partial
beginnings here, but of that perfect salvation for which Christian men are
being ‘kept’ and guarded, and which, if you and I will observe the
conditions, is as sure to come as that X, Y, Z follow A, B, C. That is what
we are kept for.
II. Notice what we
are guarded by.
‘The power of God,’
says Peter, laying hold of the most general expression that he can find, not
earing to define ways and means, but pointing to the one great force that is
sure to do it.
Now if we were to
translate with perfect literality, we should read, not by the power of God,
but in the power of God. And whilst it is quite probable that what Peter
meant was ‘by,’ I think it adds great force and beauty to the passage, and
is entirely accordant with the military metaphor, which I have already
pointed out, if we keep the simple local sense of the word, and read,
‘guarded in the power of God.’ And that suggests a whole stream of
Scriptural representations, both in the Old and in the New Testament. Let me
recall one or two. ‘The name of the Lord is a strong tower; the righteous
runneth into it and is safe.’ ‘He that dwelleth in the secret place of the
Most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty.’ ‘Israel shall dwell
safely,’ says one of the old prophets, ‘in unwalled villages, for I will be
a wall of fire round about her.’ The psalmist said, ‘The Angel of the Lord
encampeth round about them that fear Him.’ And all these representations
concur in this one thought, that we are safe, enclosed in God, and that He,
by His power, compasses us about. And so no foe can get at us who cannot
break down or climb over the encircling wall of defence. An army in an
enemy’s country will march in hollow square, and put its most precious
treasures, or its weaker members, its sick, its women, its children, its
footsore, into the mid-die there, and with a line of lances on either side,
and stalwart arms to wield them, the feeblest need fear no foe. We ‘are kept
in the power of God unto salvation.’
But do not forget how,
far beyond the psalmist and prophet, and in something far more sublime and
wonderful than a poetic figure, the New Testament catches up the same
phrase, and gives us, as the condition of vitality, as the condition of
fertility, as the condition of tranquillity, as the condition of security,
the same thing — ‘in Christ.’ Remember His very last words prior to His
great intercessory prayer, in which He spoke about keeping those that were
given Him in His name. And just before that He said to them, ‘In the world
ye shall have tribulation, but in Me ye shall have peace.’ Kept, guarded as
behind the battlements of some great fort, which has in its centre a quiet,
armoured chamber into which no noise of battle, nor shout of foeman, can
ever come. ‘In Christ,’ though the world is all in arms without, ‘ye shall
have peace.’ ‘Guarded in the power of God unto salvation.’
III. Lastly, what
we are kept through.
‘Through faith.’ Now
there we come across another of the words which we know so well that we do
not understand them. You all think that it is the right thing for me to
preach about ‘faith.’ I daresay some of you have never tried to apprehend
what it means. And I daresay there are a great many of you to whom the
utterance of the word suggests that I am plunging into the bathos and
commonplaces of the pulpit. Perhaps, if you would try to understand it, you
would find it was a bigger thing than you fancied. What is faith? I will
give you another expression that has not so many theological accretions
sticking to it, and which means precisely the same thing — trust. And we all
know that we do not trust with our heads, but with our hearts and wills. You
may believe undoubtedly, and have no faith at all, for it is the heart and
the will that go forth, and clutch at the thing trusted; or, as I should
rather say, at the person trusted; for, at bottom, what we trust is always a
person, and even when we ‘trust to nature,’ it is because, more or less
clearly, we feel that somehow or other at the back of nature there is a Will
and an Intelligence that are working and trustworthy. However, that is a
subject that I do not need to touch upon here. Faith is trust, trust in a
Person, trust that, like the fabled goddess rising, radiant and aspiring to
the heavens, out of the roll of the tempestuous ocean, springs from the
depths of absolute self-distrust and diffidence. There is a spurious kind of
faith which has no good in it, just because it did not begin with going down
into the depths of one’s own heart, and finding out how rotten and hopeless
everything was there. My friend, no man has a vigorous Christian faith who
has not been very near utter despair. ‘Out of the depths have I cried unto
Thee.’ The zenith, which is the highest point in the sky above us, is always
just as far aloft as the nadir, which is the lowest point in the sky at the
Antipodes, is beneath us. Your faith is measured by your self-despair.
Further, why is it
that I must have faith in order to get God’s power at work in me? Many
people seem to think that faith is appointed by God as the condition of
salvation out of mere arbitrary selection and caprice. Not at all. If God
could save you without your faith, He would do it. He does not, because He
cannot. Why must I have faith in order that God’s power may keep me? Why
must you open your window in order to let the fresh air in? Why must you
pull up the blind in order to let the light in? Why must you take your
medicine or your food if you want to be cured or nourished? Why must you
pull the trigger if your revolver is to go off? Unless I trust God,
distrusting myself, and the spark of faith is struck out of the rock of my
heart by the sharp steel in the midst of the darkness of despair, God cannot
pour out upon me His power. There is nothing arbitrary about it. It is
inseparable from the very nature of the case. If you do not want Him, you
cannot have Him. If you do not know that you need Him, you cannot have Him.
If you do not trust that He will come to you and help you, you will not have
Him.
So then, brother, your
faith, my faith, anybody’s faith is nothing of itself. It is only the valve
that opens and lets the steam rush in. It is only the tap you turn to let
Thirlmere come into your basins. It is not you that saves yourself. It is
not your faith that keeps you, any more than it is the outstretched hand
with which a man, ready to stumble, grasps the hand of a stalwart, steadfast
man on the pavement by his side that keeps him up. It is the other man’s
hand that holds you up, but it is your hand that lays hold of him. It is God
that saves, it is God that guards, it is God that is able to keep us from
falling, and to give us an inheritance among all them that are sanctified.
He will do it if we turn to Him, and ask and expect Him to do it. If you
will comply with the conditions and not else, He will fulfil His premise and
accomplish His purpose. But my unbelief can thwart Omnipotence, and hinder
Christ’s all-loving purpose, just as on earth we read that ‘He could there
do no mighty works because of their unbelief.’ I am sure that there are
people here who all their lives long have been thus hampering Omnipotence
and neutralising the love of Christ, and making His sacrifice impotent and
His wish to save them vain. Stretch out your hands as this very Peter once
did, crying, ‘Lord, save, or I perish’; and He will answer, not by word
only, but by act: ‘According to thy faith be it unto thee.’ Salvation, here
and hereafter, is God’s work alone. It cannot be exercised towards a man who
has not faith. It will certainly be exercised towards any man who has.
Help us, O Lord, we
beseech Thee, to live the lives which we live in the flesh by the faith of
the Son of God. And may we know what it is to be in Him, strengthened within
with might by His spirit. |
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Sorrowful, Yet Always Rejoicing |
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‘Wherein ye greatly rejoice, though now
for a season, if need be, ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations.’
— 1 Peter 1:6.
You will remember the
great saying of our Lord’s in the Sermon on the Mount, in which He makes the
last of the beatitudes, that which He pronounces upon His disciples, when
men shall revile them and persecute them, and speak all manner of evil
falsely against them for His sake, and bids them rejoice and be exceeding
glad, for great is their reward in Heaven.
Now it seems to me
that in the words of my text there is a distinct echo of that saying of
Christ’s. For not only is the whole context the same, but a somewhat unusual
and very strong word which our Lord employs is also employed here by Peter.
‘Rejoice and be exceeding glad,’ said Christ. ‘Ye rejoice greatly,’ said the
Apostle, and he is echoing his Master’s word. Then with regard to the
context; Christ proposes to His followers this exceeding gladness as evoked
in their hearts by the very thing that might seem to militate against it —
viz., men’s antagonism. Similarly, Peter, throughout this whole letter, and
in my text, is heartening the disciples against impending persecution, and,
like his Lord, he bids them face it, if not ‘with frolic welcome,’ at all
events with undiminished and undimmed serenity and cheerfulness. Christ
based the exhortation on the thought that great would be their reward in
Heaven. Peter points to the salvation ready to be revealed as being the
ground of the joy that he enjoined. So in the words and in the whole strain
and structure of the exhortation the servant is copying his Master.
But, of course,
although the immediate application of these words is to Churches fronting
the possibility and probability of actual persecution and affliction for the
sake of Jesus Christ, the principle involved applies to us all. And the
worries and the sorrows of our daily life need the exhortation here, quite
as much as did the martyr’s pains. White ants will pick a carcass clean as
soon as a lion will, and there is quite as much wear and tear of Christian
gladness arising from the small frictions of our daily life as from the
great strain and stress of persecution.
So our Apostle has a
word for us all. Now it seems to me that in this text there are three things
to be noticed: a paradox, a possibility, a duty. ‘In which ye rejoice,
though now for a season, if need be, ye are in heaviness through manifold
temptations.’ Look at these three points.
I. This paradox.
Two emotions
diametrically opposed are to be contained within the narrow room of one
disposition and temper. ‘Ye greatly rejoice .... Ye are in heaviness.’ Can
such a thing be? Well! let us think for a moment. The sources of the two
conflicting emotions are laid out before us; they may be constantly
operative in every life. On the one hand, ‘in which ye greatly rejoice.’ Now
that ‘in which’ does not point back only to the words that immediately
precede, but to the whole complex clause that goes before. And what is the
‘which’ that is there? These things; the possession of a new life — ‘Blessed
be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath begotten us again!’
— the springing up in a man’s heart of a strange new hope, like a new star
that swims into the sky, and sheds a radiance all about it — ‘Begotten unto
a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead’; a new
wealth — an ‘inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not
away; a new security — guarded by the power of God through faith unto
salvation.’ These things belong, ipso facto, and in the measure of his
faith, to every Christian man, a new life, a new hope, a new wealth, and a
new security; and in their conjoint action, all four of them brought to bear
upon a man’s temper and spirit, will, if he is realising them, make him
glad.
Then, on the other
hand, we have other fountains pouring their streams into the same reservoir.
And just as the deep fountains which are open to us by faith will, if we
continue to exercise that faith, flood our spirits with sweet waters, so
these other fountains will pour their bitter floods over every heart more or
less abundantly and continually. ‘Now for a season, if need be, ye are in
heaviness through manifold temptations.’ There are confluent streams that
one has sometimes seen, where a clear river joins, and flows in the same bed
with, one all foul with half-melted ice, and the two run side by side for a
space, scarcely mingling their waters. Thus the paradox of the Christian
life is that within the same narrow banks may flow the sunny and the turbid,
the clear and the dark, the sorrow that springs from earthly fountains, the
joy that pours from the heavenly heights.
Now notice that this
is only one case of the paradox of the whole Christian life. For the
peculiarity of it is that it owns two; — it belongs to, and is exposed to,
all the influences of the forces and things of time, whilst in regard to its
depths, it belongs to, and is under the influence of, ‘the things that are
unseen and eternal’; so that you have the external life common to the
Christian and to all other people, and then you have the life ‘hid with
Christ in God, ‘the roots of it going down through all the superficial soil,
and grappling the central rock of all things. Thus a series of paradoxes and
perennial contradictions describes the twofold life that every believing
spirit lives, ‘as unknown and yet well known, as dying and, behold we live,
as sorrowful yet always rejoicing, as poor yet making rich, as having
nothing and yet possessing all things.’
Remember, too, that
according to Peter’s conception neither of these two sources pours out a
flood which obliterates or dams back the other. They are to coexist. The joy
is not to deprive the heaviness of its weight, nor the sorrow of its sting.
There is no artificial stoicism about Christianity, no attempt to
sophisticate one’s self out of believing in the reality of the evils that
assail us, or to forbid that we shall feel their pain and their burden. Many
good people fail to get the good of life’s discipline, because they have
somehow come to think that it is wrong to weep when Christ sends sorrows,
and wrong to feel, as other men feel, the grip and bite of the manifold
trials of our earthly lives. ‘Weep for yourselves,’ for the feeling of the
sorrow is the precedent condition to the benefit from the sorrow, and it
yields ‘the peaceable fruit of righteousness to them that are exercised
thereby.’
But, on the other
hand, the black stream is not to bank up the sunny one, or prevent it from
flowing into the heart, ay! and flowing over, the other. And so the
coexistence of the joys that come from above, and the sorrows that spring
from around, and some of them from beneath, is the very secret of the
Christian life.
II. Further,
consider the blessed possibility of this paradox.
Can two conflicting
emotions live in a man’s heart at once? Rather, we might ask, are there ever
emotions in a man’s heart that are not hemmed in by conflicting ones? Is
there ever such a thing in the world’s experience as a pure joy, or as a
confidence which has no trace of fear in it? Are there any pictures without
shadows? They are only daubs if they are. Instead of wondering at this
co-existence of joy and sorrow, we must recognise that it is in full accord
with all our experience, which never brings a joy, but, like the old story
of the magic palace, there is one window unlighted, and which never brings a
sorrow so black and over-arching so completely the whole sky, but that
somewhere, if the eye would look for it, there is a bit of blue. The
possibility of the paradox is in accordance with all human experience.
But then, you say, ‘my
feelings of joy or sorrow are very largely a matter of temperament, and
still more largely a matter of responding to the facts round about me. And I
cannot pump up emotions to order; and if I could they would be factitious,
artificial, insincere, and do me more harm than good.’ Perfectly true. There
are a great many ugly names for manufactured emotions, and none of them a
bit too ugly. Peter does not wish you to try to get up feeling to order. It
is the bane of some type of Christianity that that is done. You cannot thus
manufacture emotion. No; but I will tell you what you can do. You can
determine what you will think about most, and what you will look at most,
and if you settle that, that will settle what you feel. And so, though it is
by a roundabout way, we can regulate our emotions. A man travelling in a
railway train can choose which side of the carriage he will lookout at,
either the one where the sunshine is falling full on the front of each
grass-blade and tree, or the side where it is the shadowed side of each that
is turned to him. If he will look out of the one window, he will see
everything verdant and bright, and if he will look out at the other, there
will be a certain sobriety and dulness over the landscape. You can settle
which window you are going to look out at. If the one — ‘in which ye greatly
rejoice.’ If the other — ‘ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations.’
You have seen patterns wrought in black and white, you may focus your eye so
as to get white on a black ground, or black on a white ground, just as you
like. You can do that with your life, and either fix upon the temptations
and the heaviness as the main thing, or you can fix upon the new life, and
the new wealth, and the new hope, and the new security as the main things.
If you do the one, down you will go into the depths of gloom, and if you do
the other, up you will spring into the ethereal heights of sober and
Christian gladness.
So then, brethren,
this possibility depends on these things, the choice of our main object of
contemplation, and that breaks up into two thoughts about which I wish to
say a word. The reason why so many Christian people have only religion
enough to make them gloomy, or to weight them with a sense of burdens and
unfulfilled aspirations and broken resolutions, and have not enough to make
them glad, is mainly because they do not think enough about the four things
in which they might ‘greatly rejoice.’ I believe that most of us would be
altogether different people, as professing Christians, if we honestly tried
to keep the mightiest things uppermost, and to fill heart and mind far more
than we do with the contemplation of these great facts and truths which,
when once they are beheld and cleaved to, are certain to minister gladness
to men’s souls. These great truths which you and I say we believe, and which
we profess to live by, will only Work their effect upon us, so long as they
are present to our minds and hearts. You can no more expect Christian
verities to keep you from falling, or to strengthen you in weakness, or to
gladden you in sorrow, if you are not thinking about them, than you can
expect the most succulent or most nutritive food to nourish you if you do
not eat it. As long as Christ and His grace are present in our hearts and
minds by thought, so long, and not one moment longer, do they minister to us
the joy of the Lord. You switch off from the main current, and out go all
the lights, and when you switch off from Christ out goes the gladness.
Then another thing I
would point out is that the possibility of this co-existence of joy and of
heaviness depends further on our taking the right point of view from which
to look at the sources of the heaviness. Notice how beautifully, although
entirely incidentally, and without calling attention to it, Peter here
minimises the ‘manifold temptations’ which he does expect, however minimised,
will make men heavy. He calls them ‘temptations.’ Now that is rather an
unfortunate word, because it suggests the idea of something that desires to
drag a man into sin. But suppose, instead of ‘temptations,’ with its
unfortunate associations, you were to substitute a word that means the same
thing, and is free from that association — viz., ‘trial, ’ — you would get
the right point of view. As long as I look at my sorrows mainly in regard to
their power to sadden me, have not got to the right point of view for them.
They are meant to sadden me, they are meant to pain, they are meant to bring
the tears, they are meant to weight the heart and press down the spirits,
but what for? To test what I am made of, and by testing to bring out and
strengthen what is good, and to cast out and destroy what is evil. We shall
never understand, even so much as it is possible for us to understand, and
that is not very much, of the mystery of pain until we come to recognise
that its main purpose is to help in making character. And when you think of
your sorrows, disappointments, losses, when you think of your pains and
sickness, and all the ills that flesh is heir to, principally as being
‘trials,’ in the deep sense of that word — viz., a means of testing you, and
thereby helping you, bettering you, and building up character — then it is
more possible to blend the sorrow that they produce with the joy to which
they may lead. The Apostle adds the other thought of the transitoriness of
sorrow, and yet further, the other of its necessity for the growth of
humanity. So they are not only to be felt, not only to be wept over, not
only to make us sad, but they are to be accepted, and used as means by which
we may be perfected. And when once you get occupied in trying to get all the
good that is in it out of a grief, you will be astonished to find how the
bitterness that was in it was diminished.
We may have the oil on
the water, calming, though not ending, its agitation. We may carry our own
atmosphere with us, and like the diver that goes down into depths of the
sea, and cannot be reached by the hungry water around his crystal bell, and
has communication with the upper air, where the light of the sun is, so you
and I, down at the slimy bottom, and with the waste of water all around us,
which if it could get at us would choke us, may walk at liberty, in peace
and gladness. And so, ‘though the labour of the olive shall gall and the fig
tree not blossom, though the flocks be cut off from the folds and the herd
from the stalls,’ we -may joy in the Lord, and ‘rejoice in the God of our
salvation.’
III. Now lastly, we
have here a duty.
Peter takes it for
granted that these good people, who had persecution hanging over them, were
still rejoicing greatly in the Lord. He does not feel it necessary to enjoin
it upon them. It is a matter of course in their Christian life. And you will
find that all through the New Testament this same tone is adopted which
recognises gladness as being, on the one hand, an inseparable characteristic
of the Christian experience, and on the other hand as being a thing that is
a Christian man’s duty to cultivate. Now I do not believe that the most of
Christian people have ever looked at the thing in that light at all. If joy
has come to them, they have been thankful for it, but they have very, very
seldom felt that, ‘if they are not glad, there is something wrong. And a
great many of us, I am sure, have never recognised the fact that it is our
duty to ‘rejoice in the Lord always.’ Have you realised it? I do not mean
have you tried to get up, as I have been saying, factitious emotions, but
have you felt that if you are doing what, as Christian men or women, it is
your plain duty to do, there will come into your hearts this joy of the
Lord. I have told you why you are not happier Christians, why so many of us
have, as I said, only got religion enough to make you gloomy and burdened.
It is because you do not think enough about Jesus Christ, and what He has
given you, and what He is doing for you and in you. It is because your have
not the new life in strong experience and possession, and because you have
not the new hope springing in your hearts, and because you have not the new
wealth realised often in present possession, and because you have not the
new security which He is ready to give you. It is your duty, Christian man
and woman, to be a joyful Christian, and if you are not, then the negligence
is sin.
It is a hard duty. It
is not easy to turn away from that which is torturing flesh or sense or
natural desires or human affections, and to realise the unseen. It is not
easy, but it is possible. And, like all other difficult things, it is worth
doing. For there is nothing more helpful, more recommendatory, of our
Christianity to other people, and more certain to tell on the vigour and
efficiency of our Christian service, than that we should be rejoicing in the
Lord, and living in the possession of the experience of Christ’s joy which
He has left for us.
There is one other
thing I must say. I have been talking about the co-existence of joy and
sorrows. In one form or another that co-existence is universal. The
difference is this. A Christian man has superficial sorrows and central
gladness, and other men have superficial gladness and central sorrow. ‘Even
in laughter the heart is sorrowful.’ Many of you know what that means — the
black aching centre, full of unrest, grimly unparticipant of the dancing
delights going on about it, like some black rock that stands up in the midst
of a field flooded with sunshine, and gay with flowers. ‘The end of that
mirth is heaviness.’ Better a surface sadness and a core of joy than the
opposite, a skin of verdure over the scarcely cold lava. Better a transient
sorrow with an eternal joy than the opposite, mirth, ‘like the crackling of
thorns under a pot,’ which dies down into a doleful ring of black ashes in
the pathless desert. Choose whether you will have joy dwelling with and
conquering sorrow, or unrest and sorrow, darkening and finally shattering
your partial and fleeting joys. |
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The True Gold and Its Testing |
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‘That the trial of your faith, being much
more precious than of gold that perisheth though it Be tried with fire,
might Be found unto praise and honour and glory...’ — 1 Peter 1:7.
THE Apostle is fond of
that word ‘precious.’ In both his letters he uses it as an epithet for
diverse things. According to one translation, he speaks of Christ as
‘precious to you which believe.’ He certainly speaks of ‘the precious blood
of Christ,’ and of ‘exceeding great and precious promises,’ and here in my
text, as well as in the Second Epistle, he speaks about ‘precious faith.’ It
is a very wide general term, not expressing anything very characteristic
beyond the one notion of value. But in the text, according to our Authorised
Version, it looks at first sight as if it were not the faith, hut the trial
of the faith that the Apostle regards as thus valuable. There are
difficulties of rendering which I need not trouble you with. Suffice it to
say that, speaking roughly and popularly, the ‘trial of your faith’ here
seems to mean rather the result of that trial, and might be fairly
represented by the slightly varied expression, ‘your faith having been
tried, might be found,’ etc.
I must not be tempted
to discourse about the reasons why such a rendering seems to express the
Apostle’s meaning more fully, but, taking it for granted, there are just
three things to notice — the true wealth, the testing of the wealth, and the
discovery at last of the preciousness of the wealth.
I. Peter pits
against each other faith that has been tried, and ‘gold that perisheth’;
He puts away all the
other points of comparison and picks out one, and that is that the one lasts
and the other does not.
Now I must not be
seduced into going beyond the limits of my text to dilate upon the other
points of contrast and pre-eminence; but I would just notice in a sentence
that everybody admits, yet next to nobody acts upon, the admission that
inward good is far more valuable than outward good. ‘Wisdom is more precious
than rubies,’ say people, and yet they will choose the rubies, and take no
trouble to get the wisdom. Now the very same principles of estimating value
which set cultivated understandings and noble hearts above great possessions
and large balances at the bankers, set the life of faith high above all
others. And the one thought which Peter wishes to drive into our heads and
hearts is that there is only one kind of wealth that will never be separated
from its possessor. Nothing is truly ours that remains outside of us.
‘Twas mine, ‘tis his, and has been slave to thousands.’
Nothing that is there
whilst I am here is really mine. I do not own it if it is possible that I
shall lose it. And so with profound meaning our Lord speaks about ‘that
which is another’s in comparison with ‘that which is your own.’ It is
another’s because it passes, like quicksilver under pressure, from hand to
hand, and no man really holds it, but it leaps away from his grasp. And if a
man retains it all his days, still, according to the grim old proverb,
‘shrouds have no pockets,’ and when he dies his hands open, or sometimes
they clutch together, but there is nothing inside the palms, and they only
close upon themselves. Dear brethren, if there is anything that can be
filched away from us, anything about which it is true that, on the one hand,
‘moth and rust’ — natural processes — ‘do corrupt’ it, on the other hand,
‘thieves break through and steal’ — accidents of human conduct can deprive
us of it, then we may call it ours, but it is not ours. It possesses us, if
we are devoted to it as our best good, and fighting and toiling, and
sometimes lying and cheating, and flinging the whole fierce energy of our
nature into first gripping and then holding it; it possesses us; we do not
possess it. But if there is anything that can become so interwoven and
interlaced with the very fibres of a man’s heart that they and it cannot be
parted, if there is anything that empty hands will clasp the closer, because
they are emptied of earth’s vanities, then that is truly possessed by its
possessor. And our faith, which will not be trodden in the grave, but will
go with us into the world beyond, and though it be lost in one aspect, in
sight, it will be eternal as trust, will be ours, imperishable as ourselves,
and as God. Therefore, do not give all the energy of your lives to amassing
the second-best riches. Seek the highest things most. ‘Covet earnestly the
best gifts,’ and let the coveting regulate your conduct. And do not be put
off with wealth that will fail you sooner or later.
II. Note, again,
the testing of the wealth.
I need not dwell upon
that very familiar metaphor of the furnace for gold, and the fining-pot for
silver, only remember that there are two purposes for which metallurgists
apply fire to metals. The one is to test them, and the other is to cleanse
them, or, to use technical words, one is for the purpose of assaying them,
and the other is for the purpose of refining them. And so, linking the words
of my text. with the words of the previous verse, we find that the Apostle
lays it down that the purpose of all the diverse trials, or ‘temptations’ as
he calls them, that come to us, is this one thing, that our faith should be
‘tried,’ and ‘found, unto praise and honour and glory.’ The fire carries
away the dross; it makes the pure metal glow in its lustre. It burns up the
‘wood, hay, stubble’; it makes the gold gleam and the precious stones
coruscate and flash.
And so note this
general notion here of the intention of all life’s various aspects being to
test character is specialised into this, that it is meant to test faith,
first of all. Of course it is meant to test many other things. A man’s whole
character is tested by the experiences of his daily life, all that is good
and all that is evil in him, and we might speak about the effect of life’s
discipline upon a great many different sides of our nature. But here the
whole stress is put upon the effect of life in testing and clarifying and
strengthening one part of a Christian’s character, and that is his faith.
Why does Peter pick out faith? Why does he not say ‘trial of your hope,’ of
your ‘love,’ of your ‘courage,’ of half a dozen other graces? Why ‘the trial
of your faith?’ For this reason, because as the man’s faith is, so is the
man. Because faith is the tap-root, in the view of the New Testament, of all
that is good and strong and noble in humanity. Because if you strengthen a
man’s trust you strengthen everything that comes from it. Reinforce the
centre and all is reinforced. Your faith is the vital point from which your
whole life as Christians is developed, and whatever strengthens that
strengthens you. And, therefore, although everything that befalls you calls
for the exercise of, and therefore tests, and therefore, rightly undergone,
strengthens a great many various virtues and powers and beauties in a human
character, the main good of it all is that it deepens, if the man is right,
his simple trust in God manifested by his trust in and love to Jesus Christ;
and so it reinforces the faith which works by love, and thus tends to make
all things in life good and fair.
Now if thus the main
end of life is to strengthen faith, let us remember that we have to give a
wider meaning to the word ‘trials’ than ‘afflictions.’ Ah! there is as sharp
a trial of my faith in prosperity as in any adversity. People say, ‘It is
easy to trust God when things are going well with us.’ That is quite true.
But it is a great deal easier to stop trusting God, or thinking about Him,
when things are going well with us, and we do not seem to need Him so much,
as in the hours of darkness. You remember the old story about the traveller,
when the sun and the wind tried which could make him take off his cloak; and
the sun did it. Some of us, I daresay, have found out that the faith which
gripped God when we felt we needed Him, because we had not anything else but
Him, is but too apt to lose hold of Him when fleeting delights and apparent
treasures come and whisper invitations in our hearts. There are diseases
that are proper to the northern, dark, ice-bound regions of the earth. Yes!
and there are a great many more that belong to the tropics; as there is such
a thing as sunstroke, which is, perhaps, as dangerous as the cramping cold
from the icebergs of the north. Some of us should understand what that
Scripture means: ‘Because they have no changes, therefore they fear not
God.’ Prosperity, untroubled lives, lives even as the lives of those of the
majority of mankind now, have their own most searching trials of faith.
But on the other hand,
if there are ‘ships that have gone down at sea, when heaven was all
tranquillity,’ there come also dark and nights of wild tempest when we have
to lay to and ride out the gale with a tremendous strain on the cable. Our
sorrows, our disappointments, our petty annoyances, and the great
irrevocable griefs that sooner or later darken the very earth, are all to be
classified under this same purpose, ‘that the trial of your faith... might
be found unto praise and honour and glory.’ And so, I beseech you, open your
eyes to the meaning of life, and do not suppose that you have found the last
word to say about it when you say ‘I am afflicted,’ or ‘I am at ease.’ The
affliction and the ease, like two wheels in some great machine working in
opposite directions, fit with their cogs into one another and move something
beyond them in one uniform direction. And affliction and ease cooperate to
this end, that we might be partakers of His holiness.
I believe experience
teaches the most of us, if we will lay its lessons to heart, that the times
when Christian people grow most in the divine life is in their times of
sorrow. One of the old divines says, ‘Grace grows best in winter’; and there
are edible plants which need a touch of frost before they are good to eat.
So it is with our faith. Only let us take care that the fire does not burn
it up, as ‘wood, hay, stubble,’ but irradiates it and glorifies it, as
‘gold, silver, and precious stones.’
III. Now a word,
lastly, about the ultimate discovery.
‘Might be found unto
praise and honour and glory.’ Note these three words, which I think are
often neglected, and sometimes misunderstood — ‘praise, honour, glory.’
Whose? People sometimes say ‘God’s,’ since His people’s ultimate salvation
redounds to His praise; but it is much better to understand the praise as
given to the Christians whose faith has stood the testing fires. ‘Well done,
good and faithful servant’ — is not that praise from lips, praise from which
is praise indeed? As Paul says, ‘then shall every man have praise of God.’
We are far too much afraid of recognising the fact that Jesus Christ in
Heaven, like Jesus Christ on earth, will praise the deeds that come from
love to Him, though the deeds themselves may be very imperfect. Do you
remember ‘She hath wrought a good work on Me,’ said about a woman that had
done a perfectly useless thing, which was open to a great many very shrewd
objections? But Jesus Christ accepted it. Why? Because it was the pure
utterance of a loving heart. And, depend upon it, though we have to say
‘Unclean! unclean! We are unprofitable servants,’ He will say ‘Come! ye
blessed of My Father.’ Praise from Christ is praise indeed.
‘Honour.’ That
suggests bystanders, a public opinion, if I may so say; it suggests ‘have
thou authority over ten cities,’ and that men will have their deeds round
them as a halo, in that other world. As ‘praise’ suggests the redeemed man’s
relation to his Lord, so ‘honour’ suggests the redeemed man’s relation to
the fellow-citizens of the New Jerusalem. ‘Glory’ speaks of the man himself
as transfigured and lifted up into the light and lustre of communion with,
and conformity to, the image of the Lord. ‘Then shall we appear with Him in
glory. Then shall the righteous blaze forth like the sun in My heavenly
Father’s Kingdom.
‘Shall be found.’ Ah!
there will be many surprises yonder. Do you remember that profound
revelation of our Master when He represents those on whom He lavishes His
eulogies as the Judge, as turning to Him and saying, ‘Lord! when saw we Thee
in... prison and visited thee?’ They do not recognise themselves or their
acts in Christ’s account of them. They have found that their lives were
diviner than they knew. There will be surprises there. As one of the
prophets represents the ransomed Israel, to her amazement, surrounded by
clinging troops of children, and asking, ‘These! Where have they been? I was
left alone,’ so many a poor, humble soul, fighting along in this world,
having no recognition on earth, and the lowliest estimate of all its own
actions, will be astonished at the last when it receives ‘praise, and
honour, and glory, at the appearing of Jesus Christ.’ |
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Joy In Believing |
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‘In Whom, though now ye see Him not, yet believing, ye rejoice with joy
unspeakable and full of glory.’ — 1 Peter 1:8.
THE Apostle has just
previously been speaking about the great and glorious things which are to
come to Christians on the appearing of Jesus Christ, and that naturally
suggests to him the thought of the condition of believing souls during the
period of the Lord’s absence and comparative concealment. Having lifted his
readers’ hopes to that great Future, when they would attain to ‘praise and
honour and glory’ at Christ’s appearing, he drops to the present and to
earth, and recalls the disadvantages and deprivations of the present
Christian experience as well as its privileges and blessings. ‘Whom having
not seen, ye love,’ that is a very natural thought in the mind of one whose
love to Jesus rested on the ever-re-membered blessed experience of years of
happy companionship, when addressing those who had no such memories. It
points to an entirely unique fact. There is nothing else in the world
parallel to that strange, deep personal attachment which fills millions of
hearts to this Man who died nineteen centuries ago, and which is utterly
unlike the feelings that any men have to any other of the great names of the
past. To love one unseen is a paradox, which is realised only in the
relation of the Christian soul to Jesus Christ.
Then the Apostle goes
on with what might at first seem a mere repetition of the preceding thought,
but really brings to view another strange anomaly. ‘In Whom, though now ye
see Him not, yet believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of
glory.’ Love longs for the presence of the beloved, and is restless and
defrauded of its gladness so long as absence continues. But this strange
love, which is kindled by an unseen Man, does not need His visible presence
in order to be a fountain of joy unspeakable and full of glory. Thus the
Apostle takes it for granted that every one who believes knows what this joy
is. It is a large assumption, contradicted, I am afraid, by the average
experience of the people that at this day call themselves Christians.
We notice —
I. The
All-sufficient Ground or Source of this Glad Emotion.
‘In whom,’ with all the disabilities and pains and absence, ‘yet believing,’
you can put out a long arm of faith across the gulf that lies, not only
between to-day and eighteen centuries ago, but the deeper and more
impassible gulf that lies between earth and heaven, and clasp Christ with a
really firm grasp, which will fill the hand, and which we shall feel has
laid hold of something, or rather has laid hold of a living person and a
loving heart. That is faith. The Apostle uses a very strong form of
expression here, which is only very partially represented by our English
version. He does not say only ‘in whom believing,’ but ‘towards whom’;
putting emphasis upon the effort and direction of the faith, rather than
upon the repose of the heart when it has found its object and rests upon
Him. And so the conception of the true Christian attitude is that of a
continual outgoing of Trust and its child Love; of Desire and its child
Possession; and of Expectation and its child Fruition towards that unseen
Christ. It is much to believe Him, it is more to believe in Him; it is — I
was going to say — most of all to believe towards Him. For in this region,
quite as much as, and I think more than, in the one to which the saying was
originally applied, ‘search is better than attainment.’ Our condition must
always be that of ‘forgetting the things that are behind’; and however much
we may realise the union with the unseen Christ in the act of resting upon
Him, that must never be suffered to interfere with the longing for the
larger possession of myself, and fuller consequent likeness to Him, which is
expressed in that great though simple phrase of my text ‘believing towards
Him.’ Such a continual outgoing of effort, as well as the rest and
blessedness of reposing on Him, is indispensable for all true gladness. For
the in-tensest activity of our whole being is essential to the real joy of
any part of it, and we shall never know the rapture of which humanity, even
here and now, is capable until we gather our whole selves, heart, will, and
all our practical, as well as our intellectual, powers in the effort to make
more of Christ our own, and to minimise the distance between us to a mere
vanishing point. ‘Believing towards whom ye rejoice.’
That act of trust,
however inadequate the object upon which it rests, and however mistaken may
be our conceptions of that on which we lean, always brings a gladness which
is real, until disappointment disillusionises and saddens us. There is
nothing that so sheds peace over the heart as reliance, absolute and quiet,
upon some object worthy of trust. It is blessed to trust one another until,
as is too often the case, we find that what we thought to be an oak against
which we leaned is but a broken reed that has no pith in it, and no
possibility of support. So far as it goes, all trust is blessed, but the
most blessed is simple reliance upon, and aspiration after, Jesus Christ.
Ever to yearn for Him, not with the yearning of those who have no
possession, but with that of those who, having a little, desire to have
more, is to bring into our lives the one solid and sufficient good without
which there is no gladness, and with which there can be no unmingled sorrow,
wrapping the whole man in its ebon folds. For this Christ is enough for all
my nature and for the satisfaction of every desire. In Him my mind finds the
truth; my will the law; my love the answering love; my hope its object; my
fears their dissipation; my sins their forgiveness; my weaknesses their
strength; and, to all that I am, what He is answers, as fulness to
emptiness, and as supply to need. So, ‘believing towards Him, we rejoice.’
But note that the joy
is strictly contemporaneous with the faith. Tear away electric wire from the
source of energy, and the light goes out instantly. It is as another Apostle
says, ‘in believing’ that we have ‘joy and peace.’ And that is why so many
of us know little of it. Yesterday’s faith will not contribute to to-day’s
gladness, any more than yesterday’s meals will satisfy to-day’s hunger.
Present joy depends upon present faith, and the measure of the one is the
measure of the other.
Notice again —
II. The
Characteristics of the Christian Gladness.
‘Unspeakable,’ and, as
the word ought to be rendered, not ‘full of glory’ but ‘glorified.’
Unspeakable. Still waters run deep. It is poor wealth that can be counted;
it is shallow emotion that can be crammed into the narrow limits of any
human vocabulary. Fathers and mothers, parents and children, husbands and
wives, know that. And the depths of the joy that a believing soul has in
Jesus Christ are not to be spoken. Perhaps it is better that it should not
be attempted to speak them.
‘Not easily forgiven
Are those, who, setting wide the doors that bar
The secret bridal chambers of the heart.
Let in the day.’
It is in shallow
streams that the sunlight gleams on the pebbles at the bottom. The abysses
of ocean are dark, and have never been searched by its light. I suspect the
depth of the emotion which bubbles over into words, and finds no difficulty
in expressing itself. The joy which can be manifested in all its extent has
a very small extent. Christian joy is unspeakable, too, because just as you
cannot teach a blind man what colour is like, and cannot impart to anybody
the blessedness of wedded love, or parental affection, by ever so much
talking — and, therefore, the poetry of the world is never exhausted — so
there is only one way of conveying to a man what is the actual joy of
trusting in Christ, and that is, that he himself should trust Him. We may
talk till Doomsday, and then, as the Queen of Sheba said, when she came to
Solomon, ‘the half hath not been told.’
‘He must be loved
ere that to y,
He will seem worthy of your love.’
It is unspeakable
gladness springing from the possession of an unspeakable gift.
‘Glorified.’
There is nothing more ignoble than the ordinary joys of men. They are too
often like the iridescent scum on a stagnant pond, fruit and proof of
corruption. They are fragile and hollow, for all the play of colour on them,
like a soap bubble that breaks of its own tenuity, and is only a drop of
dirty water. Joy is too often ignoble, and yet, although it is by no means
the highest conception of what Christ’s Gospel can do for us, it is blessed
to think that it can take that emotion, so often shameful, so often
frivolous, so often lowering rather than elevating, and can lift it into
loftiness, and transfigure it, and glorify it and make it a power, a power
for good and for righteousness, and for ‘whatsoever things are lovely and of
good report’ in our lives. And that is what trusting towards Christ will do
for our gladnesses.
Lastly, in one word,
let me lay upon your consciences, as Christian people —
III. The Obligation
of Gladness.
Peter takes it for
granted that all these brethren to whom he is writing have experience of
this deep and ennobled joy. He does not say, ‘You ought to rejoice,’ but he
says, ‘You do rejoice.’ And yet a verse or two before he said, ‘Ye are in
heaviness through manifold temptations.’ So, then, he was not blinking the
hard, painful facts of anybody’s troubled life. He was not away upon the
heights Serenely contemptuous of the grim possibilities that lurk down in
the dark valleys. He took in all the burdens and the pains and the anxieties
and the harassments, and the losses, and the bleeding hearts and the cares
that can burden any of us. And he said, in spite of them all, ‘Ye rejoice.’
Do you? I am afraid
there is no more irrefragable proof of the unreality of an enormous
proportion of the Christian profession of this day than the joyless lives —
in so far as their religion contributes to their joy — of hosts of us. We
have religion enough to make us miserable, we have religion enough to make
us uncomfortable about doing things that we would like to do. We are always
haunted by the feeling that we are falling so far below our professions, and
we are either miserable when we bethink ourselves, or, more frequently,
indifferent, accordingly. And the whole reason of such experience lies here,
we have not an adequately strong and continued trust in Jesus Christ working
righteousness in our lives, nobleness in our characters, and so lifting us
above the regions where mists and malaria lie. Let us get high enough up,
and we shall find clear sky.
You call yourselves
Christians. Does your religion bring any gladness to you? Does it burn
brightest in the dark, like the pillar of cloud before the Israelites?
‘Greek fire’ burned below the water, and so was in high repute. Our gladness
is a poor affair if it is at the mercy of temperaments or of circumstances.
Jesus Christ comes to cure temperaments, and to enable us to resist
circumstances. So I venture to say that, whatever may be our condition in
regard to externals, or whatever may be our tendencies of disposition, we
are bound, as a piece of Christian duty, to try to cultivate this joyful
spirit, and to do it in the only right way, by cultivating the increase of
our faith in Jesus Christ. ‘Rejoice in the Lord always’; the man who said
that was a prisoner, with death looking into his eyeballs. As he said it, he
felt that his friends in Philippi might think the exhortation overstrained,
and so he repeated it, to show that he recognised the apparent impossibility
of obeying it, and yet deliberately enjoined it; ‘and again I say, rejoice.’ |
|
Christ and His Cross the Centre of the Universe |
|
Of which salvation the prophets have
inquired and searched diligently.., the things which are now reported unto
you.., which things the angels desire to look into.’ — 1 Peter 1:10,11, 12.
I HAVE detached these
three clauses from their surroundings, not because I desire to treat them
fragmentarily, but because we thereby throw into stronger relief the
writer’s purpose to bring out the identity of the Old and the New
Revelation, the fact that Christ and His sufferings are the centre of the
world’s history, to which all that went before points, from which all that
follows after flows; and that not only thus does He stand in the midst of
humanity, but that from Him there ran out influences into other orders of
beings, and angels learn from Him mysteries hitherto unknown to them. The
prophets prophesy of the grace which comes in the sufferings of Christ and
the glory that should follow, and the same Spirit which taught them teaches
the preachers of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. They that went before had for
their deepest message the proclamation, ‘He will come’; they that follow
after have for their deepest message, ‘He has come.’ And angels listen to,
and echo, the chorus, from all the files that march in front, and all that
bring up the rear, ‘Hosanna! Blessed be Him that cometh in the name of the
Lord.’
My purpose, then, is
just to try to bring before you the magnificent unity into which these texts
bind all ages, and all worlds, planting Jesus Christ and His Cross in the
centre of them all. There are four aspects here in which the writer teaches
us to regard this unity: Jesus and the Cross are the substance of prophecy,
the theme of Gospel preaching, the study of angels, and presented to each of
us for our individual acceptance. Now, let us look briefly at these four
points.
I. First, then,
Christ and His Cross is the substance of prophecy.
Now, of course, we
have to remember that general statements have to be interpreted widely, and
without punctilious adherence to the words; and we have also to remember
that great mischief has been done, and great discredit cast, on the whole
conception of ancient revelation by the well-meaning, but altogether
mistaken, attempts of good people to read the fully developed doctrine of
Jesus Christ and His sacrifice into every corner of the ancient revelation.
But whilst I admit all that, and would desire to emphasise the fact, I think
that in this generation, and to-day, there is a great deal more need to
insist upon the truth that the inmost essence and deepest purpose of the
whole Old Testament system is to create an attitude of expectance, and to
point onwards, with ever-growing distinctness, to one colossal and
mysterious figure in which the longings of generations shall be fulfilled,
and the promises of God shall be accomplished. The prophet was more than a
foreteller, as is being continually insisted upon nowadays. There were
prophets who never uttered a single prediction. Their place in Israel was to
be the champions of righteousness, and — I was going to say — the knights of
God, as against law and ceremonial and externalism. But, beyond that, there
underlie the whole system of prophecy, and there come sparkling and flashing
up to the surface every now and then, bright anticipations, not only of a
future kingdom, but of a personal King, and ‘not only of a King, but a
sufferer. All the sacrifices, almost all the institutions, the priesthood
and the monarchy included, had this on-ward-looking aspect, and Israel as a
whole, in the proportion in which it was true to the spirit of its calling,
stood a-tiptoe, as it were, looking down the ages for the coming of the Hope
of the Covenant that had been promised to the fathers. The prophets, I might
say, were like an advance-guard sent before some great monarch in his
progress towards his capital, who rode through the slumbering villages and
called, ‘He comes! He comes! The King cometh meek and having salvation,’ and
then passed on.
Now, all that is to be
held fast to-day. I would give all freedom to critical research, and loyally
accept the results of it, so far as these are established, and are not mere
hypotheses, with regard to the date and the circumstances of the
construction of the various elements of that Old Testament. But what I
desire especially to mark is that, with the widest freedom, there must be
these two things conserved which Peter here emphasises, the real inspiration
of the prophetic order, and its function to point onwards to Jesus. And so
long as you keep these truths, as long as you believe that God spoke through
prophets, as long as you believe that the very heart of their message was
the proclamation of Jesus Christ, and that to bear witness to Him was the
function, not only of prophet, but of priest and king and nation, then you
are at liberty to deal as you like with mere questions of origin and of
date. But if, in the eagerness of the chase after the literary facts of the
origin of the Old Testament, we forget that it is a unity, that it is a
divine unity, that it is a progressive revelation, and that ‘the testimony
of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy,’ then I venture to say that the most
uncritical, old-fashioned reader of the Old Testament that found Jesus
Christ in the Song of Solomon, and in the details of the Tabernacle, and in
all the minutiae of worship and sacrifice, was nearer to the living heart of
the thing than the most learned scholar that has been so absorbed in the
inquiries as to how and when this, that, and the other bit of the Book was
written, that he fails to see the one august figure that shines out, now
more and now less dimly, and gives unity to the whole. ‘To Him gave all the
prophets witness.’ And when Peter declared, as he did in my text, that
ancient Israel, by its spokesmen and its organs, testified beforehand of the
sufferings of Christ, he is but echoing what he had learned from his Master,
who turns to some of us with the same rebuke with which He met His disciples
after the Resurrection: ‘O fools, and slow of heart to believe all that the
prophets have spoken.’ The Old and the New are a unity, and Christ and His
Cross are the substance and the centre of both.
II. Note here
Christ and His Cross, the theme of Gospel preaching.
If you will glance at
your leisure over the whole context from which I have picked these clauses
as containing its essence, you will find that the Apostle speaks of the
things which the prophets foretold as being the same as ‘those which are now
reported unto you by them that have preached the Gospel unto you, with the
Holy Ghost sent down from heaven.’ I must not take for granted that you are
all referring to your Bibles, but I should like to point out, as the basis
of one or two things that I wish to say, the remarkable variety of phrase
employed in the text to describe the one thing. First, Peter speaks of it as
‘salvation,’ then he speaks of it in the next clause as ‘the grace that
should come unto you.’ Then, in the next phrase, he designates it more
particularly as ‘the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow.’
Now, if we put these designations together — salvation, grace, Christ’s
sufferings, the subsequent glory — we come to this, that the facts of
Christ’s life, death, resurrection, and ascension are the great vehicle
which brings to men God’s grace, that that grace has for its purpose and its
effect man’s salvation, and that these facts are the Gospel which Christian
preachers have to proclaim.
Now notice what
follows from such thoughts as these. To begin with, the Gospel is not a
speculation, is not. a theology, still less a morality, not a declaration of
principles, but a history of fact, things that were done on this earth of
ours, and that the Apostle’s Creed which is worked into the service of the
Anglican Church is far nearer the primitive conception of the Gospel than
are any of the more elaborate and doctrinal ones which have followed. For we
have to begin with the facts that Christ lived, died, was buried, rose again
from the dead... ascended into Heaven, and sitteth at the right hand of God.
Whatever else the Gospel is, that is the kernel and the basis of it all. Out
of these facts will come all manner of doctrines, philosophies of religion,
theologies, revelations about God and man. Out of them will come all ethics,
the teaching of duty, the exhibition of a pattern of conduct, inspiration to
follow the model that is set before us. Out of them will come, as I believe,
guidance and light for social and economical and political questions and
difficulties. But what we have to lay hold of, and what we preachers have to
proclaim, is the story of the life, and eminently the story of the death.
Why does Peter put in
the very centre here ‘the sufferings of Christ’? That suggests another
thought, that amongst these facts which, taken together, make the Gospel,
the vital part, the central and the indispensable part, is the story of the
Cross. Now what Christ said, not what Christ did, not what Christ was,
beautiful and helpful as all that is, but to begin with what Christ bore, is
the fact that makes the life of the Gospel. And just as He is the centre of
humanity, so the Cross is the centre of His work. Why is that? Because the
deepest need of all of us is the need to have our sins dealt with, both as
guilt and as power, and because nothing else in the whole story of Christ’s
manifestation deals with men’s sins as the fact of His death on the Cross
does, therefore the sacrifice and sufferings are the heart of the Gospel.
And so, brethren, we
have to mark that the presentation of Christian truth which slurs over that
fact of the Sacrifice and Atonement of Jesus Christ, has parted with the
vital power which makes the story into a gospel. It is no gospel to tell a
man that Jesus Christ died, unless you go on to say He ‘died for our sins
according to the Scriptures.’ And it is no gospel to talk about the beauty
of His life, and the perfectness of His example, and the sweetness of His
nature, and the depth, the wisdom, and the tenderness of His words, unless
you can say this is ‘the Lamb of God,’ ‘the Word made flesh,’ ‘who bare our
sins, and carried our sicknesses and our sorrows.’ Strike out from the
gospel that you preach ‘the sufferings of Christ,’ and you have struck out
the one thing that will draw men’s hearts, that will satisfy men’s needs,
that will bind men to Him with cords of love. ‘I, if I be lifted up, will
draw all men unto Me.’ So, wherever you get what they call an ethical gospel
which deals with moralities, and does not impart the power that will
vitalise moralities, and make them into thankful service and sacrifices, in
return for the great Sacrifice; wherever you get a gospel that falters in
its enunciation of the sufferings of Christ, and wherever you get a gospel
that secularises the Christian service of the Sabbath, and will rather
discuss the things that the newspapers discuss, and the new books that the
reviewers are talking about, and odds and ends of that sort that are thought
to be popular and attractive, you get a gospel minus the thing that, in the
Old Testament and in the New alike, stands forth in the centre of all. ‘We
preach Christ crucified’; it is not enough to preach Christ. Many a man does
that, and might as well hold his tongue. ‘We preach Christ crucified.’ And
the same august Figure which loomed before the vision of prophets, and
shines through many a weary age, stands before us of this generation; ay!
and will stand till the end of the world, as the centre, the pivot of human
history, the Christ who has died for men. The Christ that will stand in the
centre of the development of humanity is the Christ that died on the Cross.
If your gospel is not that, you have yet to learn the deepest secret of His
power.
III. Once more,
here we have Christ and His Cross as the study of angels.
‘Which things the
angels desire to look into.’ Now, the word that Peter employs there is an
unusual one in Scripture. Its force may, perhaps, be best conveyed by
referring to one of the few instances in which it is employed. It is used to
describe the attitude of Peter and John when they stooped, down and looked
into the sepulchre. Perhaps there may be a reference in Peter’s mind to that
incident, when he saw the ‘two angels.., sitting, the one at the head, and
the other at the feet, where the body of Jesus had lain.’ Perhaps, also,
there floats in his mind some kind of reference to the outspread wings and
bended heads of the brooding cherubim who sat above the Mercy-seat, gazing
down upon the miracle of love that was manifested beneath them there. But be
that as it may, the idea conveyed is that of eager desire and fixed
attention.
Now I am not going to
enlarge at all upon the thought that is here conveyed, except just to make
the one remark that people have often said, ‘Why should a race of
insignificant creatures on this little globe of ours be so dignified in the
divine procedure as that there should be the stupendous mystery of the
Incarnation, and the Death for their sakes?’ Not for their sakes only, for
the New Testament commits itself to the thought that whilst sinful men are
the only subjects of the redeeming grace of Jesus Christ, other orders of
creatures do benefit thereby, and do learn from it what else they would not
have known, of the mystery and the miracle and the majesty of the Divine
love. ‘To the principalities and the powers in heavenly places He hath made
known by the Church the manifold wisdom of God.’ And we can understand how
these other orders — what we call higher orders, which they may be or they
may not-of being, learn to know God as we learn to know Him, by the
manifestation of Himself in His acts, and how the crown of all
manifestations consists in this, that He visits the sinful sons of men, and
by His own dear Son brings them back again. The elder brethren in the
Father’s house do not grudge the ring and the robe given to the prodigals;
rather they learn therein more than they knew before of the loving-kindness
of God.
Now all that is
nowadays ignored, and it is not fashionable to speak about the interest of
angels in the success of Redemption, and a good many ‘advanced’ Christians
do not believe in angels at all, because they ‘cannot verify’ the doctrine.
I, for my part, accept the teaching, which seems to me to be a great deal
more reasonable than to suppose that the rest of the universe is void of
creatures that can praise and love and know God. I accept the teaching, and
think that Peter was, perhaps, not a dreamer when he said, ‘The angels
desire to look into these things.’ They do not share in the blessings of
redemption, but they can behold what they do not themselves experience. The
Seer in the Revelation was not mistaken, when he believed that he heard
redeemed men leading the chorus to Him that had redeemed them by His blood
out of all nations, and then heard the thunderous echo from an innumerable
host of angels who could not say ‘Thou hast redeemed us,’ but who could
bring praise and glory to Him because He had redeemed men.
IV. And now my last
point is that Christ and His Cross is, by the Gospel, offered to each of us.
Notice how
emphatically in this context the Apostle gathers together his wider
thoughts, and focusses them into a point. ‘The prophets have inquired and
searched diligently... of the grace that should come to you... To them it
was revealed, that not unto themselves, but unto us they did minister the
things, which are now reported unto you by them that have preached the
Gospel unto you.’ And so he would take his wide thoughts, as it were, and
gather all together, to a point, and press the point against each man’s
heart.
Dear brethren, these
wide views are of no avail to us unless we realise the individual relation
which Christ bears to each one of us. He bears a relation, as I have been
saying, to all humanity. All the ages belong to Him. ‘He is before all
things, and in Him all things consist.’ From His Cross there flash up rays
of light into the heavens above, and out over the whole rolling series of
the centuries, from the beginning to the end. Yes; but from His Cross there
comes a beam straight to your heart, and the Christ whom angels desire to
look into, of whom prophets prophesy and Apostles proclaim His advent, who
is the Lord of all the ages, and the Lover of mankind, comes to thee and
says ‘I am thy Saviour,’ and to thee this wide message is brought. Every eye
has the whole sunshine, and each soul may have the whole Christ. His
universal relations in time and space matter little to you, unless He has a
particular relation to yourself.
And He will never have
that in its atoning power, unless you do for yourself and by yourself the
most individual and solitary act that a human soul can do, and that is, lay
your hand on the head of ‘the Lamb... that takes away the sin of the world,’
and put your sins there. You must begin with ‘my Christ,’ which you can do
only by personal faith. And then afterwards you can come to ‘our Christ,’
the Christ of all the worlds, the Christ of all the ages. Go to Him by
yourself. You must do it as if there were not any other beings in the whole
universe but you two, Jesus and you. And when you have so gone, then you
will find that you have ‘come to the heavenly Jerusalem, to an innumerable
company of angels, to the general assembly, and Church of the first born.’
Christ and His Cross are the substance of prophecy, the theme of the Gospel,
the study of the angels.
What are they to me? |
|
Hope Perfectly |
|
‘Wherefore, gird up the loins of Four mind, be sober, and hope to the end,
for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus
Christ.’ —1 Peter 1:13.
CHRISTIANITY has
transformed hope, and given it a new importance, by opening to it a new
world to move in, and supplying to it new guarantees to rest on. There is
something very remarkable in the prominence given to hope in the New
Testament, and in the power ascribed to it to order a noble life. Paul goes
so far as to say that we are saved by it. To a Christian it is no longer a
pleasant dream, which may be all an illusion, indulgence in which is pretty
sure to sap a man’s force, but it is a certain anticipation of certainties,
the effect of which will be increased energy and purity. So our Apostle,
having in the preceding context in effect summed up the whole Gospel, bases
upon that summary a series of exhortations, the transition to which is
marked by the ‘wherefore’ at the beginning of my text. The application of
that word is to be extended, so as to include all that has preceded in the
letter, and there follows a series of practical advices, the first of which,
the grace or virtue which he puts in the forefront of everything, is not
what you might have expected, but it is ‘hope perfectly.’
I may just remark,
before going further, in reference to the language of my text, that,
accurately translated, the two exhortations which precede that to hope are
subsidiary to it, for we ought to read, ‘Wherefore, girding up the loins of
your mind, and being sober, hope.’ That is to say, these two are
preliminaries, or conditions, or means by which the desired perfecting of
the Christian hope is to be sought and attained.
Another preliminary
remark which I must make is that what is enjoined here has not reference to
the duration but to the quality of the Christian hope. It is not ‘to the
end,’ but, as the Margin of the Authorised and the Revised Version concurs
in saying, it is ‘hope perfectly.’
So, then, there are
three things here — the object, the duty, and the cultivation of Christian
hope. Let us take these three things in order.
I. The object of
the Christian hope.
Now, that is stated,
in somewhat remarkable language. as ‘the grace that is to be brought unto
you at the revelation of Jesus Christ’ We generally use that word ‘grace’
with a restricted signification to the gifts of God to men here on earth. It
is the earnest of the inheritance, rather than its fulness. But here it is
quite obvious that by the expression the Apostle means the very same thing
as he has previously designated in the preceding context by three different
phrases — ‘an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled,’ ‘praise and honour
and glory at the revelation of Jesus Christ,’ and ‘the end of your faith,
even the salvation of your souls.’ The ‘grace’ is not contrasted with the
‘glory, ’ but is another name for the glory. It is not the earnest of the
inheritance, but it is the inheritance itself. It is not the means towards
attaining the progressive and finally complete ‘salvation of your souls,’
but it is that complete salvation in all its fulness.
Now, that is an
unusual use of the word, but that it should be employed here, as describing
the future great object of the Christian hope, suggests two or three
thoughts. One is that that ultimate blessedness, with all its dim, nebulous
glories, which can only be resolved into their separate stars, when we are
millions of leagues nearer to its lustre, is like the faintest glimmer of a
new and better life in a soul here on earth, purely and solely the result of
the undeserved, condescending love of God that stoops to sinful men, and
instead of retribution bestows upon them a heaven. The grace that saved us
at first, the grace that comes to us, filtered in drops during our earthly
experience, is poured upon us in a flood at last. And the brightest glory of
heaven is as much a manifestation of the Divine grace as the first
rudimentary germs of a better life now and here. The foundation, the courses
of the building, the glittering pinnacle on the summit, with its golden
spire reaching still higher into the blue, is all the work of the same
unmerited, stooping, pardoning love. Glory is grace, and Heaven is the
result of God’s pardoning mercy.
There is another
suggestion here to be made, springing from this eloquent use of this term,
and that is not merely the identity of the source of the Christian
experience upon earth and in the future, but the identity of that Christian
experience itself in regard of its essential character. If I may so say, it
is all of a piece, homogeneous, and of one web. The robe is without seam,
woven throughout of the same thread. The life of the humblest Christian, the
most imperfect Christian, the most infantile Christian, the most ignorant
Christian here on earth, has for its essential characteristics the very same
things as the lives of the strong spirits that move in light around the
Throne, and receive into their expanding nature the ever-increasing fulness
of the glory of the Lord. Grace here is glory in the bud; glory yonder is
grace in the fruit.
But there is still
further to be noticed another great thought that comes out of this
remarkable language. The words of my text, literally rendered, are ‘the
grace that is being brought unto you.’ Now, there have been many
explanations of that remarkable phrase, which I think is not altogether
exhausted by, nor quite equivalent to, that which represents it in our
version — viz. ‘to be brought unto you.’ That relegates it all into the
future; but in Peter’s conception it is, in some sense, in the present. It
is ‘being brought.’ What does that mean? There are far-off stars in the sky,
the beams from which have set out from their home of light millenniums
since, and have been rushing through the waste places of the universe since
long before men were, and they have not reached our eyes yet. But they are
on the road. And so in Peter’s conception, the apocalypse of glory, which is
the crowning manifestation of grace, is rushing towards us through the ages,
through the spheres, and it will be here some day, and the beams will strike
upon our faces, and make them glow with its light. So certain is the arrival
of the grace that the Apostle deals with it as already on its way. The great
thing on which the Christian hope fastens is no ‘peradventure,’ but a good
which has already begun to journey towards us.
Again, there is
another thought still to be suggested, and that is, the revelation of Jesus
Christ is the coming to His children of this grace which is glory, of this
glory which is grace. For mark how the Apostle says, ‘the grace which is
being brought to you in the revelation of Jesus Christ.’ And that revelation
to which he here refers is not the past one, in His incarnate life upon
earth, but it is the future one, to which the hope of the faithful Church
ought ever to be steadfastly turned, the correlated truth to that other one
on which its faith rests. On these two great pillars, rising like columns on
either side of the gulf of Time, ‘He has come,’ ‘He will come,’ the bridge
is suspended by which we may safely pass over the foaming torrent that else
would swallow us up. The revelation in the past cries out for the revelation
in the future. The Cross demands the Throne. That He has come once, a
sacrifice for sin, stands incomplete, like some building left unfinished
with rugged stones protruding which prophesy an addition at a future day;
unless you can add ‘unto them that look for Him will He appear the second
time without sin unto salvation.’ In that revelation of Jesus Christ His
children shall find the glory-grace which is the object of their hope.
So say all the New Testament writers. ‘When Christ, who is our life, shall
appear, then shall we also appear with Him in glory,’ says Paul. ‘The grace
that is to be brought unto you in the revelation of Jesus Christ,’ chimes in
Peter. And John completes the trio with his ‘We know that when He shall
appear we shall be like Him.’ These three things, brethren — with Christ,
glory with Him, likeness to Him — are all that we know, and blessed be God!
all that we need to know, of that dim future. And the more we confine
ourselves to these triple great certainties, and sweep aside all subordinate
matters, which are concealed partly because they could not be revealed, and
partly because they would not help us if we knew them, the better for the
simplicity and the power and the certainty of our hope. The object of
Christian hope is Christ, in His revelation, in His presence, in His
communication to us for glory, in His assimilating of us to Himself.
‘It is enough that
Christ knows all,
And we shall be with Him.’
‘The grace that is
being brought unto you in the revelation of Jesus Christ.’
II. And now notice
the duty of the Christian hope.
Hope a duty? That
strikes one as somewhat strange. I very much doubt whether the ordinary run
of good people do recognise it as being as imperative a duty for them to
cultivate hope as to cultivate any other Christian excellence or virtue. For
one man that sets himself deliberately and consciously to brighten up, and
to make more operative in his daily life, the hope of future blessedness,
you will find a hundred that set themselves to other kinds of perfecting of
their Christian character. And yet, surely, there do not need any words to
enforce the fact that this hope full of immortality is no mere luxury which
a Christian man may add to the plain fare of daily duty or leave untasted
according as he likes, but that it is an indispensable element in all
vigorous and life-dominating Christian experience.
I do not need to dwell
upon that, except just to suggest that such a vividness and continuity of
calm anticipation of a certain good beyond the grave is one of the strongest
of all motives to the general robustness and efficacy of a Christian life.
People used to say a few years ago, a great deal more than they do now, that
the Christian expectation of Heaven was apt to weaken energy upon earth, and
they used to sneer at us, and talk about our ‘other worldliness’ as if it
were a kind of weakness and defect attached to the Christian experience.
They have pretty well given that up now. Anti-Christian sarcasm, like
everything else, has its fashions, and other words of reproach and contumely
have now taken the place of that. The plain fact is that no man sees the
greatness of the present, unless he regards it as being the vestibule of the
future, and that this present life is unintelligible and insignificant
unless beyond it, and led up to by it, and shaped through it, there lies the
eternal life beyond. The low flat plain is dreary and desolate, featureless
and melancholy, when the sky above it is filled with clouds. But sweep away
the cloud-rack, and let the blue arch itself above the brown moorland, and
all glows into lustre, and every undulation is brought out, and tiny shy
forms of beauty are found in every corner. And so, if you drape Heaven with
the clouds and mists born of indifference and worldliness, the world becomes
mean, but if you dissipate the cloud and unveil heaven, earth is greatened.
If the hope of the grave that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of
Jesus Christ shines out above all the flatness of earth, then life becomes
solemn, noble, worthy of, demanding and rewarding, our most strenuous
efforts. No man can, and no man will, strike such effectual blows on things
present as the man, the strength of whose arm is derived from the conviction
that every stroke of the hammer on things present is shaping that which will
abide with him for ever.
My text not only
enjoins this hope as a duty, but also enjoins the perfection of it as being
a thing to be aimed at by all Christian people. What is the perfection of
hope? Two qualities, certainty and continuity. Certainty; the definition of
earthly hope is an anticipation of good less than certain, and so, in all
the operations of this great faculty, which are limited within the range of
earth, you get blended as an indistinguishable throng, ‘hopes and fears that
kindle hope,’ and that too often kill it. But the Christian has a certain
anticipation of certain good, and to him memory may be no more fixed than
hope, and the past no more unalterable and uncertain than the future. The
motto of our hope is not the ‘perhaps,’ which is the most that it can say
when it speaks the tongue of earth, but the ‘verily! verily!’ which comes to
its enfranchised lips when it speaks the tongue of Heaven. Your hope,
Christian man, should not be the tremulous thing that it often is, which
expresses itself in phrases like ‘Well! I do not know, but I tremblingly
hope,’ but it should say, ‘I know and am sure of the rest that remaineth,
not because of what I am, but because of what He is.’
Another element in the
perfection of hope is its continuity. That hits home to us all, does it not?
Sometimes in calm weather we catch a sight of the gleaming battlements of
‘the City which hath foundations,’ away across the sea, and then mists and
driving storms come up and hide it. There is a great mountain in Central
Africa which if a man wishes to see he must seize a fortunate hour in the
early morning, and for all the rest of the day it is swathed in clouds,
invisible. Is that like your hope, Christian man and woman, gleaming out now
and then, and then again swallowed up in the darkness? Brethren! these two
things, certainty and continuity, are possible for us. Alas! that they are
so seldom enjoyed by us.
III. And now one
last word. My text speaks about the discipline or cultivation of this
Christian hope.
It prescribes two
things as auxiliary thereto. The way to cultivate the perfect hope which
alone corresponds to the gift of God is ‘girding up the loins of your mind,
and being sober.’ Of course, there is here one of the very few reminiscences
that we have in the Epistles of the ipsissima verba of our Lord. Peter is
evidently referring to our Lord’s commandment to have ‘the loins girt and
the lamps burning, and ye yourselves like unto men that wait for their
Lord.’ I do not need to remind you of the Eastern dress that makes the
metaphor remarkably significant, the loose robes that tangle a man’s feet
when he runs, that need to be girded up and belted tight around his waist,
as preliminary to all travel or toil of any kind. The metaphor is the same
as that in our colloquial speech when we talk about a man ‘pulling himself
together.’ Just as an English workman will draw his belt a hole tighter when
he has some special task to do, so Peter says to us, make a definite effort,
with resolute bracing up and concentration of all your powers, or you will
never see the grace that is hurrying towards you through the centuries.
There are abundance of loose, slack-braced people up and down the world, in
all departments, and they never come to any good. It is a shame that any man
should have his thoughts so loosely girt and vagrant as that any briar by
the roadside can catch them and hinder his advance. But it is a tenfold
shame for Christian people, with such an object to gaze upon, that they
should let their minds be dissipated all over the trivialities of Time, and
not gather them together and project them, as I may say, with all their
force towards the sovereign realities of Eternity. A sixpence held close to
your eye will blot out the sun, and the trifles of earth close to us will
prevent us from realising the things which neither sight, nor experience,
nor testimony reveal to us, unless with clenched teeth, so to speak, we make
a dogged effort to keep them in mind.
The other preliminary
and condition is ‘being sober,’ which of course you have to extend to its
widest possible signification, implying not merely abstinence from, or
moderate use of, intoxicants, or material good for the appetites, but also
the withdrawing of one’s self sometimes wholly from, and always restraining
one’s self in the use of, the present and the material. A man has only a
given definite quantity of emotion and interest to expend, and if he flings
it all away on the world he has none left for Heaven. He will be like the
miller that spoils some fair river, by diverting its waters into his own
sluice, in order that he may grind some corn. If you have the faintest film
of dust on the glass of the telescope, or on its mirror, if it is a
reflecting one, you will not see the constellations in the heavens; and if
we have drawn over our spirits the film of earthly absorption, all these
bright glories above will, so far as we are concerned, cease to be.
So, brethren, there is
a solemn responsibility laid upon us by the gift of that great faculty of
looking before and after. What did God make you and me capable of
anticipating the future for? That we might let our hopes run along the low
levels, or that we might elevate them and twine them round the very pillars
of God’s Throne; which? I do not find fault with you because you hope, but
because you hope so meanly, and about such trivial and transitory things. I
remember I once saw a sea-bird kept in a garden, confined within high walls,
and with clipped wings, set to pick up grubs and insects. It ought to have
been away out, hovering over the free ocean, or soaring with sunlit wing to
a height where earth became a speck, and all its noises were hushed. That is
what some of you are doing with your hope, degrading it to earth instead of
letting it rise to God; enter within the veil, and gaze upon the glory of
the ‘inheritance incorruptible and undefiled.’ |
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