THE END OF THE COMMANDMENT
1 Timothy 1:5 — ‘Now, the
end of the commandment is love, out of a prom heart, and of a good
conscience, and of faith unfeigned.’
THE Apostle has just said that he
left Timothy in Ephesus, in order to check some tendencies there which
were giving anxiety. Certain teachers had appeared, the effect of whose
activity was to create parties, to foster useless speculations, and to
turn the minds of the Ephesian Christians away from the practical and
moral side of Christianity. In opposition to these, the Apostle here lays
down the broad principle that God has spoken, not in order to make acute
theologians, or to provide materials for controversy, but in order to help
us to love. The whole of these latest letters of the Apostle breathe the
mellow wisdom of old age, which has learned to rate brilliant
intellectualism, agility, incontroversial fence and the like, far lower
than homely goodness. And so, says Paul, ‘the end of the commandment is
love.’
Now he here states, not only the
purpose of the divine revelation, but gives us a summary, but yet
sufficient, outline of the method by which God works towards that purpose.
The commandment is the beginning, love is the end or aim. And between
these two there are inserted three things, a ‘pure heart,’ a ‘good
conscience,’ ‘ faith unfeigned.’ Now of these three the two former are
closely connected, and the third is the cause, or condition, of both of
them. It is, therefore, properly named last as being first in order, and
therefore last reached in analysis. When you track a stream from its mouth
to its source, the fountain-head is the last thing that you come to. And
here we have, as in these great lakes in Central Africa — out of which
finally the Nile issues — the stages of the flow. There are the twin
lakes, a ‘good conscience’ and a ‘pure heart.’ These come from ‘unfeigned
faith,’ which lies higher up in the hills of God; and they run down into
the love which is the ‘end of the commandment.’ The faith lays hold on the
commandment, and so the process is complete. Or, if you begin at the top,
instead of at the bottom, God gives the word; faith grasps the word, and
thereby nourishes a ‘ pure heart’ and a ‘good conscience,’ and thereby
produces a universal love. So, then, we have three steps to look at here.
I. First of all,
what God speaks to us for.
‘The end of the commandment is love.’
Now, I take it that the word
‘commandment’ here means, not this or that specific precept, but the whole
body of Christian revelation, considered as containing laws for life. And
to begin with, and only to mention, it is something to get that point of
view, that all which God says, be it promise, be it self-manifestation, be
it threatening, or be it anything else, has a preceptive bearing, and is
meant to influence life and conduct. I shall have a word or two more to
say about that presently, but note, just as we go on, how remarkable it
is, and how full of lessons, if we will ponder it, that one name for the
Gospel on the lips of the man who had most to say about the contrast
between Gospel and Law is ‘commandment,’ Try to feel the stringency of
that aspect of evangelical truth and of Christian revelation.
Then I need not remind you how here
the indefinite expression ‘love’ must be taken, as I think is generally
the ease in the New Testament, when the object on which the love rests is
not defined, as including both of the twin commandments, of which the
second, our Master says, is like unto the first, love to God and love to
man. In the Christian idea these two are one. They are shoots from the one
root. The only difference is that the one climbs and the other grows along
the levels of earth. There is no gulf set in the New Testament teaching,
and there ought to be none in the practice and life of a Christian man,
between the love of God and the love of mare They are two aspects of one
thing.
Then, if so, mark how, according to
the Apostle’s teaching here, in this one thought of a dual-sided love, one
turned upwards, one turned earthwards, there lies the whole perfection of
a human soul. You want nothing more if you are ‘ rooted and grounded in
love.’ That will secure all goodness, all morality, all religion,
everything that is beautiful, and everything that is noble. And all this
is meant to be the result of God’s speech to us.
So, then, two very plain practical
principles may be deduced and enforced from this first thought. First, the
purpose of all revelation and the test of all religion is — character and
conduct.
It is all very well to know about
God, to have our minds filled with true thoughts about Him, His nature,
and dealings with us. Orthodoxy is good, but orthodoxy is a means to an
end. There should be nothing in a man’s creed which does not act upon his
life. Or, if I may put it into technical words, all a man’s credenda
should be his agenda; and whatsoever he believes should come straight into
his life to influence it, and to shape character. Here, then, is the
warning against a mere notional orthodoxy, and against regarding Christian
truth as being intended mainly to illuminate the understanding, or to be a
subject of speculation and discussion. There are people in all
generations, and there are plenty of them to-day, who seem to think that
the great verities of the Gospel are mainly meant to provide material for
controversy —
‘As if religion
were intended
For nothing else but to be mended’
and that they have done all that can
be expected when they have tried to apprehend the true bearing of this
revelation, and $o contend against misinterpretations. This is the curse
of religious controversy, that it blinds men to the practical importance
of the truths for which they are fighting. It is as if one were to take
some fertile wheat-land, and sand it all over, and roll it down, and make
it smooth for a gymnasium, where nothing would grow. So the temper which
finds in Christian truth simply a ‘ministration of questions,’ as my text
says, mars its purpose, and robs itself of all the power and nourishment
that it might find there.
No less to be guarded against is the
other misconception which the clear grasp of our text would dismiss at
once, that the great purpose for which God speaks to us men, in the
revelation of Jesus Christ, is that we. may, as we say, be ‘forgiven,’ and
escape any of the temporal or eternal consequences of our wrongdoing. That
is a purpose, no doubt, and men will never rise to the apprehension of the
loftiest purposes, nor penetrate to a sympathetic perception of the inmost
sweetness of the Gospel, unless they begin with its redemptive aspect,
even in the narrowest sense of that word. But there are a miserable number
of so-called and of real Christians in this world, and in our churches
to-day, who have little conception that God has spoken to them for
anything else than to deliver them from the fear of death, and from the
incidence on them of future condemnation. He has spoken for this purpose,
but the ultimate end of all is that we may be helped to love Him, and so
to be like Him. The aim of the commandment is love, and if you ever are
tempted to rest in intellectual apprehensions, or to pervert the truth of
God into a mere arena on which you can display your skill of fence and
your intellectual agility, or if ever you are tempted to think that all is
done when the sweet message of forgiveness is sealed upon a man’s heart,
remember the solemn and plain words of my text — the final purpose of all
is that we may love God and man.
But then, on the other side, note
that no less distinctly is the sole foundation of this love laid in God’s
speech. My text, in its elevation of sentiment and character and conduct
above doctrine, falls in with the prevailing tendencies of this day; but
it provides the safeguards which these tendencies neglect. Notice that
this favourite saying of the most advanced school of broad thinkers, who
are always talking about the decay of dogma, and the unimportance of
doctrine as compared with love, is here uttered by a man who was no
sentimentalist, but to whom the Christian system was a most distinct and
definite thing, bristling all over with the obnoxious doctrines which are
by some of us so summarily dismissed as of no importance. My very text
protests against the modern attempt wrench away the sentiments and
emotions produced in men, by the reception of Christian truth, from the
truth which it recognises as the only basis on which they can be produced.
It declares that the ‘commandment’ must come first, before love can
follow; and the rest of the letter, although, as I say, it decisively
places the end of revelation as being the moral and religious perfecting
of men into assimilation with the divine love, no less decisively demands
that for such a perfecting there shall be laid the foundation of the truth
as it is revealed in Jesus Christ.
And that is what we want to-day in
order to make breadth wholesome, and if only we will carry with us the two
thoughts, the commandment and love, we shall not go far wrong. But what
would you think of a man that said, ‘I do not want any foundations. I want
a house to live in’? And pray how are you going to get your house without
the foundations? Or would he be a wise man who said, ‘Oh, never mind about
putting grapes into the vine vat, and producing fermentation; give me the
wine!’ Yes! But you must have the fermentation first. The process is not
the result, of course, but there is no result without the process. And
according to New Testament teaching, which, I am bold to say, is verified
by experience, there is no deep, all-swaying, sovereign, heart-uniting
love to God which is not drawn from the acceptance of the truth as it is
in Jesus Christ.
II. And so I come,
secondly, to note the purifying which is needed prior to such love.
Our text, as I said, divides the
process into stages; or, if I may go back to a former illustration, into
levels. And on the level immediately above the
love, down into which the waters of the twin lakes glide, are a pure heart
and a good conscience. These are the requisites for all real and operative
love. Now they are closely connected, as it seems to me, more closely so
than with either the stage which precedes or that which follows. They are,
in fact, two twin thoughts, very closely identified, though not quite
identical.
A pure heart is one that has been
defecated and cleansed from the impurities which naturally attach to human
affections. A ‘good conscience’ is one which is void of offence towards
God and man, and registers the emotions of a pure heart. It is like a
sheet of sensitive paper that, with a broken line, indicates how many
hours of sunshine in the day there have been. We need not discuss the
question as to which of these two great gifts and blessings which sweeten
a whole life come first. In the initial stages of the Christian life I
suppose the good conscience precedes the pure heart. For forgiveness which
calms the conscience and purges it of the perilous stuff which has been
injected into it by our corruptions — forgiveness comes before cleansing,
and the conscience is calm before the heart is purified. But in the later
stages of the Christian life the order seems to be reversed, and there
cannot be in a man a conscience that is good unless there is a heart that
is pure.
But however that may be — and it
does not affect the general question before us — mark how distinctly Paul
lays down here the principle that you will get no real love of God or man
out of men whose hearts are foul, and whose consciences are either torpid
or stinging them. I need not dwell upon that, for it is plain to anybody
that will think for a moment that all sin separates between a man and God;
and that from a heart all seething and bubbling, like the crater of a
volcano, with foul liquids, and giving forth foul odours, there can come
no love worth calling so to God, nor any benevolence worth calling so to
man. Wherever there is sin, unrecognised, unconfessed, unpardoned, there
is a black barrier built up between a man’s heart and the yearning heart
of God on the other side. And until that barrier is swept away, until the
whole nature receives a new set, until it is delivered from the love of
evil, and from its self-centred absorption, and until conscience has taken
into grateful hands, if I might so say, the greatest of all gifts, the
assurance of the divine forgiveness, I, for one, do not believe that deep,
vital, and life-transforming love to God is possible. I know that it is
very unfashionable, I know it is exceedingly narrow teaching, but it seems
to me that it is Scriptural teaching; and it seems to me that if we will
strip it of the exaggerations with which it has often been surrounded, and
recognise that there may be a kind of instinctive and occasional
recognition of a divine love, there may be a yearning after a clear light,
and fuller knowledge of it, and yet all the while no real love to God,
rooted in and lording over and moulding the life, we shall not find much
in the history of the world, or in the experience of ourselves or of
others, to contradict the affirmation that you need the cleansing of
forgiveness, and the recognition of God’s love in Jesus Christ, before you
can get love worth calling so in return to Him in men’s hearts.
Brethren, there is much to-day to
shame Christian men in the singular fact which is becoming more obvious
daily, of a divorce between human benevolence and godliness. It is a
scandal that there should Be so many men in the world who make no
pretensions to any sympathy with your Christianity, and who set you an
example of benevolence, self-sacrifice, enthusiasm for humanity, as it is
called. I believe that the one Basis upon which there can be solidly built
benevolence to men is devotion to God, because of God’s great love to us
in Jesus Christ. But I want to stir, if ! might not say sting, you and
myself into a recognition of our obligations to mankind, more stringent
and compelling than we have ever felt it, by this phenomenon of modern
life, that a divorce has been proclaimed between philanthropy and
religion. The end of the commandment is love, out of a pure heart, and of
a good conscience.
III. Lastly, notice the condition of
such purifying. To recur to my former illustration, we have to go up
country to a still higher level What feeds the two reservoirs that feed
the love? What makes the heart pure and the conscience good? Paul answers,
‘faith unfeigned’; not mere intellectual apprehension, not mere
superficial or professed, but deep, genuine, and complete faith which has
in it the element of reliance as well as the element of credence. Belief
is not all that goes to make faith. Trust is not all that goes to make
faith. Belief and trust are indissolubly wedded in the conception of it.
Such a faith, which knows what it lays hold of — for it lays hold upon
definite truth, and lays hold on what it knows, for it trusts in Him whom
the truth reveals — such a faith makes the heart pure and the conscience
good.
And how does it do so? By nothing in
itself. There is no power in my faith to make me one bit better than I am.
There is no power in it to still one accusation of conscience. It is only
the condition on which the one power that purges and that calms enters
into my heart and works there. The power of faith is the power of that
which faith admits to operate in my life. If we open our hearts the fire
will come in, and it will thaw the ice, and melt out the foulness from my
heart. It is important for practice that we should clearly understand that
the great things which the Bible says of faith it says of it only because
it is the channel, the medium, the condition, by and on which the real
power, which is Jesus Christ Himself, acts upon us. It is not the window,
but the sunshine, that floods this building with light. It is not the
opened hand, but the gift laid in it, that enriches the pauper. It is not
the poor leaden pipe, but the water that flows through it, that fills the
cistern, and cleanses it, whilst it fills. It is not your faith, but the
Christ whom your faith brings into your heart and conscience, that purges
the one, and makes the other void of offence towards God and man.
So, brethren, let us learn the
secret of all nobility, of all power, of all righteousness of character
and conduct. Put your foot on the lowest round of the ladder, and then
aspire and climb, and you will reach the summit. Take the first step, and
be true to it after you have taken it, and the last will surely come. He
that can say, ‘We have known and believed the love that God hath to us,’
will also be able to say, ‘We love Him because He first loved us.’ ‘And
this commandment have we of God, that he who loves God loves his brother
also’

THE GOSPEL OF THE GLORY OF THE HAPPY GOD
1 Timothy 1:11 - ‘The
glorious gospel of the blessed God.’
TWO remarks of an expository
character will prepare the way for our consideration of this text. The
first is, that the proper rendering is that which is given in the Revised
Version — ‘the gospel of the glory,’ not the ‘glorious gospel.’ The
Apostle is not telling us what kind of thing the Gospel is, but what it is
about. He is dealing not with its quality, but with its contents. It is a
Gospel which reveals, has to do with, is the manifestation of, the glory
of God.
Then the other remark is with
reference to the meaning of the word ‘blessed.’ There are two Greek words
which are both translated’ blessed’ in the New Testament. One of them, the
more common, literally means ‘ well spoken of,’ and points to the action
of praise or benediction; describes what a man is when men speak well of
him, or what God is when men praise and magnify His name. But the other
word, which is used here, and is only applied to God once more in
Scripture, has no reference to the human attribution of blessing and
praise to Him, but describes Him altogether apart from what men say of
Him, as what He is in Himself, the ‘blessed,’ or, as we might almost say,
the ‘happy’ God. If the word happy seems too trivial, suggesting ideas of
levity, at turbulence, of possible change, then I do not know that we can
find any better word than that which is already employed in my text, if
only we remember that it means the solemn, calm, restful, perpetual
gladness that fills the heart of God.
So much, then, being premised, there
are three points that seem to me to come out of this remarkable expression
of my text. First, the revelation of God in Christ, of which the Gospel is
the record, is the glory of God. Second, that revelation is, in a very
profound sense, an element in the blessedness of God. And, lastly, that
revelation is the good news for men. Let us look at these three points,
then, in succession.
I. Take, first,
that striking thought that the revelation of God in Jesus Christ is the
glory of God.
The theme, or contents, or purpose
of the whole Gospel, is to set forth and make manifest to men the glory of
God.
Now what do we mean by ‘the glory’? I think, perhaps, that question may be
most simply answered by remembering the definite meaning of the word in
the Old Testament. There it designates, usually, that supernatural and
lustrous light which dwelt between the Cherubim, the symbol of the
presence and of the self-manifestation of God. So that we may say, in
brief, that the glory of God is the sum-total of the light that streams
from His self-revelation, considered as being the object of adoration and
praise by a world that gazes upon Him.
And if this be the notion of the
glory of God, is it not a startling contrast which is suggested between
the apparent contents and the real substance of that Gospel? Suppose a
man, for instance, who had no previous knowledge of Christianity, being
told that in it he would find the highest revelation of the glory of God.
He comes to the book, and finds that the very heart of it is not about
God, but about a man; that this revelation of the glory of God is the
biography of a man; and more than that, that the larger portion of that
biography is the story of the humiliations, and the sufferings, and the
death of the man. Would it not strike him as a strange paradox .that the
history of a man’s life was the shining apex Of all revelations of the
glory of God? And yet so it’s, and the Apostle, just because to him the
Gospel was the story of the Christ who lived and died, declares that in
this story of a human life, patient, meek, limited, despised, rejected,
and at last crucified, lies, brighter than all other flashings of the
divine light, the very heart of the lustre and palpitating centre and
fontal source of all the radiance with which God has flooded the world.
The history of Jesus Christ is the glory of God. And that involves two or
three considerations on which I dwell briefly.
One of them is this: Christ, then,
is the self-revelation of God. If, when we deal with the story of His life
and death, we are dealing simply with the biography of a man, however
pure, lofty, inspired he may be, then I ask what sort of connection there
is between that biography which the four Gospels gives us, and what my
text says is the substance of the Gospel? What force of logic is there in
the Apostle’s words: God commendeth His love toward us in that whilst we
were yet sinners Christ died for us,’ unless there is some altogether
different connection between the God who commends His love and the Christ
who dies to commend it, than exists between a mere man and God? Brethren!
to deliver my text, and a hundred other passages of Scripture, from the
charge of being extravagant nonsense, and clear, illogical non sequiturs,
you must believe that in that man Christ Jesus ‘we behold His glory — the
glory of the only begotten of the Father’; and that when we look — haply
not without some touch of tenderness and awed admiration in our hearts —
upon His gentleness, we have to say, ‘the patient God’; when we look upon
His tears we have to say, ‘the pitying God’; when we look upon His Cross
we have to say, the ‘redeeming God’; and gazing upon the Man, to see in
Him the manifest divinity. Oh! listen to that voice,’ He that hath seen Me
hath seen the Father,’ and bow before the story of the human life as being
the revelation of the indwelling God.
And then, still further, my text
suggests that this self-revelation of God in Jesus Christ is the very
climax and highest point of all God’s revelations to men. I believe that
the loftiest exhibition and conception of the divine character which is
possible to us must be made to us in the form of a man. I believe that the
law of humanity, for ever, in heaven as on earth, is this, that the Son is
the revealer of God; and that no loftier — yea, at bottom, no other —
communication of the divine nature can be made to man than is made in
Jesus Christ.
But be that as it may, let me urge
upon you this thought, that in that wondrous story of the life and death
of our Lord Jesus Christ the very high-water mark of divine
self-communication has been touched and reached. All the energies of the
divine nature are embodied there. The ‘riches, both of the wisdom and of
the knowledge of God,’ are in the Cross and Passion of our Saviour. ‘To
declare at this time His righteousness’ Jesus Christ came to die. The
Cross is ‘the power of God unto salvation.’ Or, to put it into other
words, and avail oneself of an illustration, we know the old story of the
queen who, for the love of an unworthy human heart, dissolved pearls in
the cup and gave them to him to drink. We may say that God comes to us,
and for the love of us, reprobate and unworthy, has melted all the jewels
of His nature into that cup of blessing which He offers to us, saying:
‘Drink ye all of it.’ The whole Godhead, so to speak, is smelted down to
make that rushing river of molten love which flows from the Cross of
Christ into the hearts of men-Here is the highest point of God’s
revelation of Himself.
And my text implies, still further,
that the true living, flashing centre of the glory of God is the love of
God. Christendom is more than half heathen yet, and it betrays its
heathenism not least in its vulgar conceptions of the divine nature and
its glory. The majestic attributes which separate God from man, and make
Him unlike His creatures, are the ones which people too often fancy belong
to the glorious side of His character. They draw distinctions between
‘grace’ and ‘glory,’ and think that the latter applies mainly to what I
might call the physical and the metaphysical, and less to the moral,
attributes of the divine nature. We adore power, and when it is expanded
to inanity we think that it is the glory of God. But my text delivers us
from all such misconceptions. If we rightly understand it, then we learn
this, that the true heart of the glory is tenderness and love. Of power
that weak man hanging on the Cross is a strange embodiment; hut if we
learn that there is something more godlike in God than power, then we can
say, as we look upon Jesus Christ: ‘Lo! this is our God. We have waited
for Him, and He will save us.’ Not in the wisdom that knows no growth, not
in the knowledge which has no border-land of ignorance ringing it round
about, not in the unwearied might of His arm, not in the exhaustless
energy of His being, not in the unslumbering watchfulness of His
all-seeing eye, not in that awful presence wheresoever creatures are; not
in any or in all of these lies the glory of God, but in His love. These
are the fringes of the .brightness; this is the central blaze. The Gospel
is the Gospel of the glory of God, because it is all summed up in the one
word — ‘God so loved the world that He gave His only Begotten Son.’
II. Now, in the
next place, the revelation of God in Christ is an element in the
blessedness of God.
We are come here into places where
we see but very dimly, and it becomes us to speak very cautiously. Only as
we are led by the divine teaching may we affirm at all. But it cannot be
unwise to accept in simple literality utterances of Scripture, however
they may seem to strike us as strange. And so I would say — the
philosopher’s God may Be all-sufficient and unemotional the Bible’s God
‘delighteth in mercy; rejoiceth in His gifts, and is glad when men accept
them. It is something, surely, amid all the griefs and sorrows of this
sorrow-haunted and devil-hunted world, to rise to this lofty region and to
feel that there is a living personal joy at the heart of the universe. If
we Went no further, to me there is infinite beauty and mighty consolation
and strength in that one thought — the happy God. He is not, as some ways
of representing Him figure Him to be, what the older astronomers thought
the sun was, a great cold orb, black and frigid at the heart, though the
source and centre of light and warmth to the system. But He Himself is
joy, or if we dare not venture on that word, which brings with it earthly
associations, and suggests the possibility of alteration — He is the
blessed God. And the Psalmist saw deeply into the divine nature, who, not
contented with hymning His praise as the possessor of the fountain of
life, and the light whereby we see light, exclaimed in an ecstasy of
anticipation, ‘Thou makest us to drink of the rivers of Thy pleasures.’
But there is a great deal more than
that here, if not in the word itself, at least in its connection, which
connection seems to suggest that, howsoever the divine nature must be
supposed to be blessed in its own absolute and boundless perfectness, an
element in the blessedness of God Himself arises from His
self-communication through the Gospel to the world. All love delights in
imparting. Why should not God’s? On the lower level of human affection we
know that it is so, and on the highest level we may with all reverence
venture to say, The quality of that mercy... ‘is twice blest,’ and that
divine love ‘blesseth Him that gives and them that take.’
He created a universe because He
delights in His works, and in having creatures on whom He can lavish
Himself. He ‘rests in His love, and rejoices over us with singing’ when we
open our hearts to the reception of His light, and learn to know Him as He
has declared Himself in His Christ. The blessed God is blessed because He
is God. But He is blessed too because He is the loving and, therefore, the
giving God.
What a rock-firmness such a thought
as this gives to the mercy and the love that He pours out upon us! If they
were evoked by our worthiness we might well tremble, but when we know,
according to the grand words familiar to many of us, that it is His nature
and property to be merciful, and that He is far gladder in giving than we
can be in receiving, then we may be sure that His mercy endureth for ever,
and that it is the very necessity of His being — and He cannot turn His
back upon Himself — to love, to pity, to succour, and to bless.
III. And so,
lastly, the revelation of God in Christ is good news for us all.
‘The Gospel of the glory of the
blessed God.’ How that word ‘Gospel’ has got tarnished and enfeebled by
constant use and unreflective use, so that it slips glibly off my tongue
and falls without producing any effect upon your hearts ! It needs to be
freshened up by considering what really it means. It means this: here are
we like men shut up in a beleaguered city, hopeless, helpless, with no
power to Break out or to raise the siege; provisions failing, death
certain. Some of you older men and women remember how that was the case in
that awful siege of Paris, in the Franco-German War, and what expedients
were adopted in order to get some communication from without, And here to
us, prisoned, comes, as it did to them, a despatch borne under a dove’s
wing, and the message is this: — God is love; and that you may know that
He is, He has sent you His Son who died on the Cross, the sacrifice for a
world’s sin. Believe it, and trust it, and all your transgressions will
pass away.
My brother, is not that good news?
Is it not the good news that you need — the news of a Father, of pardon,
of hope, of love, of strength, of purity, of heaven? Does it not meet our
fears, our forebodings, our wants at every point? It comes to you. What do
you do with it? Do you welcome it eagerly, do you clutch it to your
hearts, do you say, ‘This is my Gospel’? Oh! let me Beseech you, welcome
the message; do not turn away from the word from heaven, which will bring
life and blessedness to all your hearts! Some of you have turned away long
enough, some of you, perhaps, are fighting with the temptation to do so
again even now. Let me press that ancient Gospel upon your acceptance,
that Christ the Son of God has died for you, and lives to bless and help
you. Take it and live! So shall you find that, ‘as cold water to a thirsty
soul,’ so. is this best of all news from the far country.

THE GOSPEL IN SMALL
‘This is a faithful saying, and
worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save
sinners.’ — 1 Timothy 1:15.
CONDENSATION is a difficult art.
There are few things drier and more unsatisfactory than small books on
great subjects, abbreviated statements of large systems. Error lurks in
summaries, and yet here the whole fulness of God’s communication to men is
gathered into a sentence; tiny as a diamond, and flashing like it. My text
is the one precious drop of essence, distilled from gardens full of
fragrant flowers. There is an old legend of a magic tent, which could be
expanded to shelter an army, and contracted to cover a single man. That
great Gospel which fills the Bible and overflows on the shelves of crowded
libraries is here, without harm to its power, folded up into one saying,
which the simplest can understand sufficiently to partake of the salvation
which it offers.
There are five of these ‘faithful
sayings’ in the letters of Paul, usually called ‘the pastoral epistles.’
It seems to have been a manner with him, at that time of his life, to
underscore anything which he felt to be especially important by attaching
to it this label. They are all, with one exception, references to the
largest truths of the Gospel. I turn to this one, the first of them now,
for the sake of gathering some lessons from it.
I. Note, then,
first, here the Gospel in a nutshell.
‘Christ Jesus came into the world to
save sinners.’ Now, every word there is weighty, and might be, not beaten
out, but opened out into volumes. Mark who it is that comes — the solemn
double name of that great Lord, ‘Christ Jesus.’ The former tells of His
divine appointment and preparation, inasmuch as the Spirit of the Lord God
is upon Him, anointing Him to proclaim good tidings to the poor, and to
open the prison doors to all the captives, and asserts that it is He to
whom prophets and ritual witnessed, and for whose coming prophets and
kings looked wearily through the ages, and died rejoicing even to see afar
off the glimmer of His day. The name of Jesus tells of the child born in
Bethlehem, who knows the experience of our lives by His own, and not only
bends over our griefs with the pity and omniscience of a God, but with the
experience and sympathy of a man.
‘Christ Jesus came.’ Then He was before He came. His own will impelled His
feet, and brought Him to earth.
‘Christ Jesus came to save.’ Then
there is disease, for saving is healing; and there is danger, for saving
is making secure.
‘Christ Jesus came to save sinners’
— the universal condition, coextensive with the ‘ world’ into which, and
for which, He came. And so the essence of the Gospel, as it lay in Paul’s
mind, and had been verified in his experience, was this — that a divine
person had left a life of glory, and in wonderful fashion had taken upon
Himself manhood in order to deliver men from the universal danger and
disease. That is the Gospel which Paul believed, and Which he commends to
us as ‘a faithful saying.’
Well, then, if that be so, there are
two or three things very important for us to lay to heart. The first is
the universality-of sin. That is the thing in which we are all alike, dear
friends. That is the one thing about which any man is safe in his estimate
of another. We differ profoundly. The members of this congregation,
gathered accidentally together, and perhaps never to be all together
again, may Be at the antipodes of culture, of condition, of circumstances,
of modes of life; but, just as really below all the diversities there lies
the common possession of the one human heart, so really and universally
below all diversities there lies the black drop in the heart, and ‘we all
have sinned and come short of the glory of God.’ It is that truth which I
want to lay on your hearts as the first condition to understanding
anything about the power, the meaning, the blessedness of the Gospel which
we say we believe.
And what does Paul mean by this
universal indictment? If you take the vivid autobiographical sketch in the
midst of which it is embedded, you will understand. He goes on to say, ‘of
whom I am chief.’ It was the same man that said, without supposing that he
was contradicting this utterance at all, ‘touching the righteousness which
is in the law’ I was ‘blameless.’ And yet, ‘I am chief.’ So all true men
who have ever shown us their heart, in telling their Christian faith, have
repeated Paul’s statement; from Augustine in his wonderful Confessions, to
John Bunyan in his Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners. And then
prosaic men have said, ‘What profligates they must have been, or what
exaggerators they are now!’ No. Sewer gas of the Worst sort has no smell;
and the most poisonous exhalations are only perceptible by their effects.
What made Paul think himself the chief of sinners was not that he had
broken the commandments, for he might have said, and in effect did say,
‘All these have I kept from my youth up,’ but that, through all the
respectability and morality of his early life there ran this streak — an
alienation of heart, in the pride of self-confidence, from God, and an
ignorance of his own wretchedness and need. Ah! brethren, I do not need to
exaggerate, nor to talk about ‘splendid vices,’ in the untrue language of
one of the old saints, but this I seek to press on you: that the deep,
universal sin does not lie in the indulgence of passions, or the breach of
moralities, but it lies here — ‘thou hast left Me, the fountain of living
water.’ That is what I charge on myself, and on every one of you, and I
beseech you to recognise the existence of this sinfulness beneath all the
surface of reputable and pure lives. Beautiful they may be; God forbid
that I should deny it: beautiful with many a strenuous effort after
goodness, and charming in many respects, but yet vitiated by this, ‘The
God in whose hand thy breath is, and whose are all thy ways, thou hast not
glorified.’ That is enough to make a man brush away all the
respectabilities and proprieties and graces, and look at the black reality
beneath, and wail out ‘of whom I am chief.’
But, further, Paul’s condensed
summary of the Gospel implies the fatal character of this universal sin.
‘He comes to save,’ says he. Now what answers to ‘save’ is either disease
or danger. The word is employed in the original in antithesis to both
conditions. To save is to heal and to make safe.
And I need not remind you, I
suppose, of how truly the alienation from God, and the substitution for
Him of self or of creature, is the sickness of the whole man. But the end
of sickness uncured is death. We ‘have no healing medicine,’ and the
‘wound is incurable’ by the skill of any earthly chirurgeon. The notion of
sickness passes, therefore, at once into that of danger: for unhealed
sickness can only end in death. Oh! that my words could have the waking
power that would startle some of my complacent hearers into the
recognition of the bare facts of their lives and character, and of the
position in which they stand on a slippery inclined plane that goes
straight down into darkness!
You do not hear much about the
danger of sin from some modern pulpits. God forbid that it should be the
staple of any; but God forbid that it should be excluded from any! Whilst
fear is a low motive, self-preservation is not a low one; and it is to
that that I now appeal. Brethren, the danger of every sin is, first, its
rapid growth; second, its power of separating from God; third, the
certainty of a future — ay! and present — retribution.
To me, the proof of the fatal effect
of sin is what God had to do in order to stop it. Do you think that it
would be a small, superficial cut which could be stanched by nothing else
but the pierced hand of Jesus Christ? Measure the intensity of danger by
the cost of deliverance, and judge how grave are the wounds for the
healing of which stripes had to be laid on Him- Ah! if you and I had not
been in danger of death, Jesus Christ would not have died. And if it be
true that the Son of God laid aside His glory, and came into the world and
died on the Cross for men, out of the very greatness of the gift, and the
marvellousness of the mercy, there comes solemn teaching as to the
intensity of the misery and the reality and awfulness of the retribution
from which we were delivered by such a death. Sin, the universal
condition, brings with it no slight disease and no small danger.
Further, we may gather from this
condensed summary where the true heart and essence of the
Christian-revelation is. You will never Understand it until you are
contented to take the point of view which the New Testament takes, and
give all weight and gravity to the fact of man’s transgression and the
consequences thereof. We shall never know what the power and the glory of
the revelation of God in Jesus Christ is until we recognise that, first
and foremost, it is the mighty means by which man’s ruin is repaired,
man’s downrush is stopped, sin is forgiven and capable of being cleansed.
Only when we think of the Gospel of Jesus Christ as being, first and
foremost, the redemption of the world by the great act of incarnation and
sacrifice, do we come to be in a position in any measure to estimate its
superlative worth. And, for my part, I believe that almost all the
mistakes and errors and evaporations of Christianity into a mere dead
nothing which have characterised the various ages of the Church come
mainly from this, that men fall to see how deep and how fatal are the
wounds of sin, and so fall to apprehend the Gospel as being mainly and
primarily a system of redemption. There are many other most beautiful
aspects about it, much else in it, that is lovely and of good report, and
fitted to draw men’s hearts and admiration; but all is rooted in this, the
life and death of Jesus Christ, the sacrifice by whom we are forgiven, and
in whom we are healed.
And if you strike that out, you have
a dead nothing left — an eviscerated Gospel.
I believe that we all need to be reminded of that to-day, as we always do,
but mainly to-day, when we hear from so many lips estimates, favourable or
unfavourable to Christianity and its mission in the world, which leave out
of sight, or minimise into undue insignificance, or shove into a backward
place, its essential characteristic, that it is the power of God through
Christ, His Son Incarnate, dying and rising again for the salvation of
individual souls from the penalty, the guilt, the habit, and the love of
their sins, and only secondarily is it a morality, a philosophy, a social
lever. I take for mine the quaint saying of one ,of the old Puritans,
‘When so many brethren are preaching to the times, it may be allowed one
poor brother to preach for eternity.’
‘This is a faithful saying, that
Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners.’
II. Now, secondly,
note the reliableness of this condensed Gospel.
When a man in the middle of some
slight plank, thrown across a stream, tests it with a stamp of his foot,
and calls to his comrades, ‘ It is quite firm,’ there is reason for their
venturing upon it too. That is exactly what Paul is doing here. How does
he know that it is ‘a faithful saying’? Because he has proved it in his
own experience, and found that in his case the salvation which Jesus
Christ was said to effect has been effected. Now there are many other
grounds of certitude besides this, but, after all, it is worth men’s while
to consider how many millions there have been from the beginning who would
be ready to join chorus with the Apostle here, and to say, ‘One thing I
know, that whereas I was blind, now I see.’ My experience cannot be your
certitude; but if you and I are suffering from precisely the same disease,
and I have tested a cure, my experiences should have some weight with you.
And so, brethren, I point you to all the thousands who are ready to say,
‘This poor man cried, and the Lord heard him, and saved him.’ Are there
any who give counter-evidence; that say, ‘We have tried it. It is all a
sham and imagination. We have asked this Christ of yours to forgive us,
and He has not. We have asked Him to cleanse us, and He has not. We have
tried Him, and He is an impostor, and we will have no more to do with
Him.’ There are people, alas who have gone back to their wallowing in the
mire, but it was not Because Christ had failed in His promises, hut
because they did not care to have them fulfilled any more. Jesus Christ
does not promise that His salvation shall work against the will of men who
submit themselves to it.
But it is not only Because of that consentient chorus of many voices — the
testimony of which wise men will not reject — that the word is ‘a faithful
saying.’ This is no place or time to enter upon anything like a
condensation of the Christian evidence; but, in lieu of everything else, I
point to one proof. There is no fact in the history of the world Better
attested, and the unbelief of which is more unreasonable, than the
Resurrection of Jesus Christ. And if Christ rose from the dead — and you
cannot understand the history of the world unless He did, nor the
existence of the Church either — if Jesus Christ rose from the dead, it
seems to me that almost all the rest follows of necessity r the influx of
the supernatural, the unique character of His career, the correspondence
of the end with the beginning, the broad seal of the divine confirmation
stamped upon His claims to be the Son of God and the Redeemer of the
world. All these things seem to me to come necessarily from that fact. And
I say, given the consentient witness of nineteen centuries, given the
existence of the Church, given the effects of Christianity in the world,
given that upon which they repose — the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from
the dead — the conclusion is sound, ‘This is a faithful saying... that He
came into the world to save sinners.’
Men talk, nowadays, very often as if
the progress of science and new views as to the evolution of creatures or
of mankind had effected the certitude of the Gospel. It does not seem to
me that they have in the smallest degree. ‘The foundation of God standeth
sure,’ whatever may become of some of the superstructures which men have
built upon it. They may very probably be blown away. So much the better if
we get the rock to build upon once more. A great deal is going, but not
the Gospel Do not let us be afraid, or suppose that it will suffer. Do not
let us dread every new speculation as if it was going to finish
Christianity, but recognise this — that the fact of man’s sin and, blessed
be God! the fact of man’s redemption stands untouched by them all; and
to-day, as of old, Jesus Christ is, and is firmly manifested to be, the
world’s Saviour. Whatsoever refuge may be swept away by any storms,’
Behold, I lay in Zion for a foundation, a stone, a tried corner-stone, a
sure foundation: He that believeth shall not be confounded.’
III. Lastly,
notice the consequent wisdom and duty of acceptance.
‘Worthy of all acceptation,’ says
Paul Yes, of course, if it is reliable. That word of the Lord which is
‘sure, making wise the simple,’ deserves to be received. Now this phrase,
‘all acceptation,’ may mean either of two things: it may either mean
worthy of being welcomed by all men, or by the whole of each man.
This Gospel deserves to be welcomed
by every man, for it is fitted for every man, since it deals with the
primary human characteristic of transgression. Brethren! we need different
kinds of intellectual nutriment, according to education and culture. We
need different kinds of treatment, according to condition and
circumstance. The morality of one age is not the morality of another.
Much, even of right and wrong, is local and temporary; but black man and
white, savage and civilised, philosopher and fool, king and clown, all
need the same air to breathe, the same water to drink, the same sun for
light and warmth, and all need the same Christ for redemption from the
same sin, for safety from the same danger, for snatching from the same
death. This Gospel is a Gospel for the world, and for every man in it.
Have you taken it for yours? If it is ‘worthy of all acceptation,’ it is
worthy of your acceptation. If you have not, you are treating Him and it
with indignity, as if it was a worthless letter left in the post-office
for you, which you knew was there, but which you did not think valuable
enough to take the trouble to go for. The gift lies at your side. It is
less than truth to say that it is ‘worthy of being accepted.’ Oh! it is
infinitely more than that.
It is, also, ‘worthy of all
acceptation’ in the sense of worthy of being accepted into all a man’s
nature, because it will fit it all and bless it all. Some of us give it a
half welcome. We take it into our heads, and then we put a partition
between them and our hearts, and keep our religion on the other side, so
that it does not influence us at all. It is worthy of being received by
the understanding, to which it will bring truth absolute; of being
received by the will, to which it will bring the freedom of submission; of
being received by the conscience, to which it will bring quickening; of
being received by the affections, to which it will bring pure and perfect
love. For hope, it will bring a certainty to gaze upon; for passions, a
curb; for effort, a spur and a power; for desires, satisfaction; for the
whole man, healing and light.
Brother! take it. And, if you do,
begin where it begins, with your sins; and be contented to be saved as a
sinner in danger and sickness, who can neither defend nor heal yourself.
And thus coming, you will test the rope and find it hold; you will take
the medicine and know that it cures; and, by your own experience, you will
be able to say, ‘This is a faithful saying, Jesus Christ came into the
world to save sinners.’

THE CHIEF OF SINNERS
‘Of whom I am chief.’ — 1 Timothy
1:15.
THE less teachers of religion talk
about themselves the better; and yet there is a kind of personal
reference, far removed from egotism and offensiveness. Few such men have
ever Spoken more of themselves than Paul did, and yet none have been truer
to his motto: ‘We preach not ourselves, but Christ Jesus.’ For the scope
of almost all his personal references is the depreciation of self, and the
magnifying of the wonderful mercy which drew him to Jesus Christ. Whenever
he speaks of his conversion it is with deep emotion and with burning
cheeks. Here, for instance, he adduces himself as the typical example of
God’s long-suffering If he were saved none need despair.
I take it that this saying of the
Apostle’s, ‘Of whom I am chief,’ paradoxical and exaggerated as it seems
to many men, is in spirit that which all who know themselves ought to
re-echo; and without which there is little strength in Christian life.
I. And so I ask
you to note, first, what this man thinks of himself.
‘Of whom I am chief.’ Now, if we set
what we know of the character of Saul of Tarsus before he was a Christian
by the side of that of many who have won a bad supremacy in wickedness,
the words seem entirely strange and exaggerated. But, as I have often had
to say, the principle of the Apostle’s estimate is to be found in his
belief that, not the outward manifestation of evil in specific acts of
immorality, or flagrant breaches of commandment, but the inward principle
from which the deeds flowed, is the measure of a man’s criminality, and
that, according to the uniform teaching of Scripture, the very root of
sin, and that which is common to all the things that the world’s
conscience and ordinary morality designate as wrong, is to be found here,
that self has become the centre, the aim, and the law instead of God.
‘This is the condemnation, said ‘Paul’s Master — not that men have done
so-and-so and so-and-so, but — ‘that light is come into the world, and men
love darkness.’ That is the root of evil.
‘When the Comforter is come.’ said
Paul’s Master, ‘He will convince the world of sin.’ Because they have
broken the commandments? Because they have been lustful, ambitious,
passionate, murderous, profligate, and so on? No! Because they believe not
in Me.’
The common root of all sin is
alienation of heart and will from God. And it is by the root, and not by
the black clusters of poisonous berries that have come from it, that men
are to be judged. Here is the mother-tincture. You may colour it in
different ways, and you may flavour it with different essences, and you
will get a whole pharmacopoeia of poisons out of it. But the mother-poison
of them all is this, that men turn away from the light, which is God; and
for you and me is God in Christ.
So this man, looking back from the
to-day of his present devotion and love to the yesterdays of his
hostility, avails himself indeed of the palliation, ‘I did it ignorantly,
in unbelief,’ but yet is smitten with the consciousness that whilst as
touching the righteousness that is of the law he was blameless, his
attitude to that incarnate love was such as now, he thinks, stamps him as
the worst of men.
Brethren, there is the standard by
which we have to try ourselves. If we get down below the mere surface of
acts, and think, not of what we do, but of what we are, we shall then, at
any rate, have in our hands the means by which we can truly estimate
ourselves.
But what have we. to say about that word ‘chief’? Is not that
exaggeration? Well, yes and no. For every man ought to know the weak and
evil places of his own heart better than he does those of any besides. And
if he does so know them, he will understand that the ordinary
classification of sin, according to the apparent blackness of the deed, is
very superficial and misleading. Obviously, the worst of acts need not be
done by the worst of men, and it does not at all follow that the man who
does the awful deed stands out from his fellows in the same bad
preeminence in which his deed stands out from theirs.
Take a concrete case. Go into the
slums of Manchester, and take some of the people there, battered almost
out of the semblance of humanity, and all crusted over and leprous with
foul-smelling evils that you and I never come within a thousand miles of
thinking it possible that we should do. Did you ever think that it is
quite possible that the worst harlot, thief, drunkard, profligate in your
back streets may be more innocent in their profligacy than you are in your
respectability; and that we may even come to this paradox, that the worse
the act, as a rule, the less guilty the doer? It is not such a paradox as
it looks, because, on the one hand, the presence of temptation, and, on
the other hand, the absence of light, make all the difference. And these
people, who could not have been anything else, are innocent in degradation
as compared with you, with all your education and culture, and
opportunities of going straight, and knowledge of Christ and His love. The
little transgressions that you do are far greater than the gross ones that
they do. ‘But for the grace of God, there goes John Bradford,’ said the
old preacher, when he saw a man going to the scaffold. And you and I, if
we know ourselves, will not think that we have an instance of
exaggeration, but only of the object nearest seeming the largest, when
Paul said’ Of whom I am chief.’
Only go and look for your sin in the
way they look for Guy Fawkes at the House of Commons before the session.
Take a dark lantern, and go down into the cellars, and if you do not find
something there that will take all the conceit out of you, it must be
because you are very short-sighted, or phenomenally self-complacent.
What does it matter though there be
vineyards on the slopes of Vesuvius, and bright houses nestling at its
base, and beauty lying all around like the dream of a god, if, when a man
cranes his neck over the top of the crater, he sees that that cone, so
graceful on the outside, is seething with fire and sulphur? Let us look
down into the crater of our own hearts, and what we see there may well
make us feel as Paul did when he said, ‘Of whom I am chief.’
Now, such an estimate is perfectly
consistent with a clear recognition of any good that may be in the
character and manifest in life. For the same Paul who says, ‘Of whom I am
chief,’ says, in the almost contemporaneous letter sent to the same
person, ‘I have fought a good fight; I have finished my course; I have
kept the faith’; and he is the same man who asserted, ‘In nothing am I
behind the very chiefest apostles, though I be nothing.’ The true
Christian estimate of one’s own evil and sin does not in the least
interfere with the recognition of what God strengthens one to do, or of
the progress which, by God’s grace, may have been made in holiness and
righteousness. The two things may lie side by side with perfect harmony,
and ought to do so, in every Christian heart.
But notice one more point. The
Apostle does not say ‘I was,’ but ‘I am chief.’ What! A man who could say,
in another connection, ‘If any man be in Christ Jesus, he is a new
creature; old things are passed away’ — the man who could say, in another
connection, ‘I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me; and the life
which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God’ —
does he also say, ‘I am chief’? Is he speaking about his present? Are old
sins bound round a man’s neck for evermore? If they be, what is the
meaning of the Gospel that Jesus Christ redeems us from our sins? Well, he
means this. No lapse of time, nor any gift of divine pardon, nor any
subsequent advancement in holiness and righteousness, can alter the fact
that I, the very same I that am now rejoicing in God’s salvation, am the
man that did all these things; and, in a very profound sense, they remain
mine through all eternity. I may be a forgiven sinner, and a cleansed
sinner, and a sanctified sinner, but I am a sinner — not I was. The
imperishable connection between a man and his past, which may be so
tragical, and, thank God, may be so blessed, even in the case of
remembered and confessed sin, is solemnly hinted at in the words before
us. We carry with us ever the fact of past transgression, and no
forgiveness, nor any future ‘perfecting of holiness in the fear’ and by
the grace ‘of the Lord’ can alter that fact. Therefore, let us beware lest
we bring upon our souls any more of the stains which, though they be in a
blessed and sufficient sense blotted out, do yet leave the marks where
they have fallen for ever.
II. Note how this
man comes to such an estimate of himself.
He did not think so deeply and
penitently of his past at the beginning of his career, true and deep as
his repentance, and valid and genuine as his conversion were. But as he
advanced in the love of Jesus Christ, his former active hostility became
more monstrous to him, and the higher he rose, the clearer was his vision
of the depth from which he had struggled; for growth in Christian holiness
deepens the conviction of prior imperfection.
If God has forgiven my sin the more
need for me to remember it. ‘Thou shalt he ashamed and confounded, and
never open thy mouth any more because of thy transgressions, when I am
pacified towards thee for all that thou hast done.’ If you, my brother,
have any real and genuine hold of God’s pardoning mercy, it will bow you
down the more completely on your knees in the recognition of your own sin.
The man who, as soon as the pressure of guilt and danger which is laid
upon him seems to him to be lifted off, springs up like some elastic
figure of indiarubber, and goes on his way in jaunty forgetfulness of his
past evil, needs to ask himself whether he has ever passed from death unto
life. Not to remember the old sin is to be
blind. The surest sign that we are pardoned is the depth of our habitual
penitence. Try yourselves, you Christian people who are so sure of your
forgiveness, try yourselves by that test, and if you find that you are
thinking less of your past evil, be doubtful whether you have ever entered
into the genuine possession of the forgiving mercy of your God.
And then, still further, this penitent retrospect is the direct result of
advancement in Christian characteristics. We are drawn to begin some study
or enterprise by the illusion that there is but a little way to go. ‘Alps
upon alps arise’ when once we have climbed a short distance up the hill,
and it has become as difficult to go back as to go forward.
So it is in the Christian life — the
sign of growing perfection is the growing consciousness of imperfection. A
spot upon a clean palm is more conspicuous than a diffuse griminess over
all the hand, One stain upon a white robe spoils it which would not be
noticed upon one less lustrously clean. And so the more we grow towards
God in Christ, and the more we appropriate and make our own His
righteousness, the more we shall Be conscious of our deficiencies, and the
less we shall be prepared to assert virtues for ourselves.
Thus it comes to pass that
conscience is least sensitive when it is most needed, and most swift to
act when it has least to do. So it comes to pass, too, that no man’s
acquittal of himself can be accepted as sufficient; and that he is a fool
in self-knowledge who says, ‘I am not conscious of guilt, therefore I am
innocent.’ ‘I know nothing against myself, yet am I not hereby justified:
but He that judgeth me is the Lord.’ The more you Become like Christ the
more you will find out your unlikeness to Him.
III. Lastly, note
what this judgment of himself did for this man.
I said in the beginning of my
remarks that it seemed to me that without the reproduction of this
estimate of ourselves there would be little strong Christian life in us.
It seems to me that that continual remembrance which Paul carried with him
of what he had been, and of Christ’s marvellous love in drawing him to
Himself, was the very spring of all that was noble and conspicuously
Christian in his career. And I venture to say, in two or three words, what
I think you and I will never have unless we have this lowly self-estimate.
Without it there will be no intensity of cleaving to Jesus Christ. If you
do not know that you are ill, you will not take the medicine. If you do
not believe that the house is on fire, you will not mind the escape. The
life-buoy lies unnoticed on the shelf above the berth as long as the sea
is calm and everything goes well. Unless you have been down into the
depths of your own heart, and seen the evil that is there, you will not
care for the redeeming Christ, nor will you grasp Him as a man does who
knows that there is nothing between him and ruin except that strong hand.
We must be driven to the Saviour as well as draw,, to Him if there is to
be any reality or tightness in the clutch with which we hold Him. And if
you do not hold Him with a firm clutch you do not hold Him at all.
Further, without this lowly estimate
there will be no fervour of grateful love. That is the reason why so much
both of orthodox and heterodox religion amongst us to-day is such a tepid
thing as it is. It is because men have never felt either that they need a
Redeemer, or that Jesus Christ has redeemed them. I believe that there is
only one power that will strike the rock of a human heart, and make the
water of grateful devotion flow out, and that is the belief in Jesus
Christ as the Redeemer of mankind, and as my Saviour. Unless that be your
faith, which it will not be except you have this conviction of my text in
its spirit and essence, there will not be in your hearts the love which
will glow there, an all-transforming power.
And is there anything in the world
more obnoxious, more insipid, than lukewarm religion? If, with marks of
quotation, I might use the coarse, strong expression of John Milton — ‘It
gives a vomit to God Himself; Because thou art neither cold nor hot, I
will spue thee out of my mouth.’
And without it there will be little
pity of, and love for, our fellows. Unless we feel the common evil, and
estimate by the intensity of its working in ourselves how sad are its
ravages in others, our charity to men will be as tepid as our love to God.
Did you ever notice that, historically, the widest benevolence to men goes
along with what some people call the ‘narrowest’ theology? People tell us,
for instance, to mark the contrast between the theology which is usually
called evangelical and the wide benevolence usually accompanying it, and
ask how the two things agree. The ‘ wide’ benevolence comes directly from
the ‘narrow’ theology. He that knows the plague of his own heart, and how
Christ has redeemed him, will go, with the pity of Christ in his heart, to
help to redeem others.
So, dear friends, ‘If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves.’ ‘
If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins,
and cleanse us from all unrighteousness’

A TEST CASE
‘Howbeit for this cause I
obtained mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ might show forth all
long-suffering, for a pattern to them which should hereafter
believe.’ — 1 Timothy 1:16.
THE smallest of God’s creatures, if
it were only a gnat dancing in a sunbeam, has aright to have its
well-being considered as an end of God’s dealings. But no creature is so
isolated or great as that it has a right to have its well-being regarded
as the sole end of God’s dealings. That is true about all His blessings
and gifts; it is eminently true about His gift of salvation He saves men
because He loves them individually, and desires to make them blessed; but
He also saves them because He desires that through them others shall be
brought into the living knowledge of His love. It is most especially true
about great religious teachers and guides.
Paul’s humility is as manifest as
his self-consciousness when he says in my text, ‘This is what I was saved
for. Not merely, not even principally, for the blessings that thereby
accrue to myself, but that in me, as a crucial instance, there should be
manifested the whole fulness of the divine love and saving power.’ So he
puts his own experience as giving no kind of honour or glory to himself,
but as simply showing the grace and infinite love of Jesus Christ. Paul
disappears as But a passive recipient; and Christ strides into the front
as the actor in his conversion and apostleship.
So we may take this point of view of
my text, and look at the story of what befell the great Apostle as being
in many different ways an exhibition of the great verities of the Gospel I
desire to signalise, especially, three points here, We see in it the
demonstration of the life of Christ; an exhibition of the love of the
living Christ; and a marvellous proof of the power of that loving and
living Lord.
I. First, then, take the
experience of this Apostle as a demonstration of the exalted life, and
continuous energy in the world, of Jesus Christ.
What was it that turned the
brilliant young disciple of Gamaliel, the rising hope of the Pharisaic
party, the hammer of the heretics, into one of themselves? The appearance
of Jesus Christ. Paul rode out of Jerusalem believing Him to be dead, and
His Resurrection a lie. He staggered into Damascus, blind but seeing, and
knowing that Jesus Christ lived and reigned. Now if you will let the man
tell you himself what he saw, or thought he saw, you come to this, that it
was a visible, audible manifestation of a corporeal Christ. For it is
extremely noteworthy that the Apostle ranks the appearance to him self, on
the road to Damascus, as in the same class with the appearances to the
other apostles which he enumerates in the great chapter in the Epistle to
the Corinthians. He draws no distinction, as far as evidential force goes,
between the appearance to Simon and to the five hundred brethren and to
the others, and that which flashed upon him and made a Christian of him.
Other men that were with him saw the light. He saw the Christ within the
blaze. Other men heard a noise; he heard audible and intelligible words in
his own speech This is his account of the phenomenon. What do you think of
his account?
There are but three possible
answers! It was imposture; it was delusion; it was truth. The theory of
imposture is out of court. ‘Do men gather grapes of thorns or figs of
thistles?’ Such a life as followed is altogether incongruous with the
notion that the man who lived it was a deceiver. A fanatic he may have
been; self-deceived he may have Been; but transparently sincere he
undeniably was. It is not given to impostors to move the world, as Paul
did and does.
Was it delusion? Well it is a
strange kind of hallucination which has such physical accompaniments and
consequences as those in the story — not wanting confirmation from
witnesses — which has come to us.
‘At midday, O king’ — in no
darkness; in no shut-up chamber, ‘at midday, O king — I heard ... I
saw...’ ‘The men that were with me’ partly shared in the vision. There was
a lengthened conversation; two senses at least were appealed to, vision
and hearing, and in both vision and hearing there were partial
participators. Physical consequences that lasted for three days
accompanied the hallucination; and the man ‘was blind, not seeing the sun,
and neither did eat nor drink.’ There must be some soil beforehand in
which delusions of such a sort can root themselves. But, if we take the
story in the Acts of the Apostles, there is not the smallest foothold for
the fashionable notion, which is entirely due to men’s dislike of the
supernatural, that there was any kind of misgiving in the young Pharisee,
springing from the influence of Stephen’s martyrdom, as he went forth
breathing out threatenings and slaughter. The plain fact is that, at one
moment he hated Jesus Christ as a bad man, and believed that the story of
the Resurrection was a gross falsehood; and that at the next moment he
knew Him to be living and reigning, and the Lord of his life and of the
world. Hallucinations do not come thus, like a thunderclap on unprepared
minds. Nor is there anything in the subsequent history of the man that
seems to confirm, but everything that contradicts, the idea that such a
revolutionary change as upset all his mental furniture, and changed the
whole current of his life, and slammed in his face the door that was wide
open to advancement and reputation, came from a delusion.
I think the hallucination theory is
out of court, too, and there is nothing left but the old-fashioned one,
that what he said he saw, he saw, and did not fancy; and that which he
said he heard, he heard; and that it was not a buzzing of a diseased nerve
in his own ears, but the actual speech of the glorified Christ. very well,
then; if that be true, what then? The old-.fashioned belief — Jesus who
died on the Cross is living, Jesus who died on the Cross is glorified,
Jesus who died on the Cross is exalted to the throne of the universe, puts
His hand into the affairs of the world as a power amongst them. Paul’s
Christology is but the rationale of the vision that led to Paul’s
conversion. It was in part because he ‘saw that Just One, and heard the
words of His mouth,’ that he declares, ‘God hath highly exalted Him, and
given Him a name that is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every
knee should bow.’ I do not say that the vision to Paul is a demonstration
of the reality of the Resurrection, but I do say that it is a very strong
confirmatory evidence, which the opponents of that truth will have much
difficulty in legitimately putting aside.
II. Secondly, let me ask
you to consider how this man’s experience is an exhibition of the love of
the living Lord.
That is the main point on which the
Apostle dwells in my text, in which he says that in him Jesus Christ
‘shows forth all long-suffering.’ The whole fulness of His patient,
pitying grace was lavished upon him. He says this because he puts side by
side his hostility and Christ’s love, what he had believed of Jesus, and
how Jesus had borne with him and loved him through all, and had drawn him
to Himself and received him. So he established by his own experience this
great truth, that the love of Jesus Christ is never darkened by one single
speck of anger, that He ‘suffereth long, and is kind’; that He meets
hostility with patient love, hatred with a larger outpouring of His
affection, and that His only answer to men’s departures from Him in heart
and feeling is more mightily to seek to draw them to Himself.
‘Long-suffering’ means, in its true and proper sense, the patient
acceptance, without the smallest movement of indignation, of unworthy
treatment. And just as Christ on earth ‘gave His back to the smiter, and
His cheeks to them that pulled off the hair’; and let the lips of Judas
touch His, nor withdrew His face from ‘shame and spitting’; and was never
stirred to one impatient or angry word by any opposition, so now, and to
us all, with equal boundlessness of endurance, He lets men hate Him, and
revile Him, and forget Him, and turn their hacks upon Him; and for only
answer has, ‘Come unto Me all ye that labour, and are heavy laden, and I
will give you rest.’
Oh, dear brethren, we can weary out
all loves except one. By carelessness, rebelliousness, the opposition of
indifference, we can chill the affection of those to whom we are dearest.
‘Can a mother forget? Yea, she may forget,’ but you cannot provoke Jesus
Christ to cease His love. Some of you have been trying it all your days,
but you have not done it yet. There does come a time when’ the wrath of
the Lamb’ — which is a very terrible paradox — is kindled, and will fall,
I fear, on some men and women who are listening now. But not yet. You
cannot make Christ angry. ‘For this cause I obtained mercy, that in me
Jesus Christ might show forth all long-suffering, for a pattern’ — for the
same long-suffering is extended to us all
And then, in like manner, I may
remind you that out of Paul’s experience, as a cardinal instance and
standing example of Christ’s heart and dealings, comes the thought that
that long-suffering is always wooing men to itself, and making efforts to
draw them away from their own evil. In Paul’s case there was a miracle.
That difference is of small consequence. As truly as ever Christ spoke to
Paul from the heavens, so truly, and so tenderly, does He speak to every
one of us. He is drawing us all — you that yield and you that do not yield
to His attractions, by the kindliest gifts of His love, by the revelations
of His grace, by the movements of His Spirit, by the providences of our
days, by even my poor lips addressing you now — for, if I be speaking His
truth, it is not I that speak, but He that speaks in me. I beseech you,
dear friends, recognise in this old story of the persecutor turned apostle
nothing exceptional, though there be something miraculous, but only an
exceptional form of manifestation of the normal activity of the love of
Christ towards every soul. He loves, He draws, He welcomes all that come
to Him. His servant, who stood over the blind, penitent persecutor, and
said to him, ‘Brother Saul!’ was only faintly echoing the glad reception
which the elder Brother of the family gives to this and to every prodigal
who comes back; because He Himself has drawn Him.
If we will only recognise the undying truth for all of us that lies
beneath the individual experience of this apostle, we, too, may share in
the attraction of His love, in the constraining and blessed influences of
that love received, and in the welcome with which He hails us when we
turn. If this man were thus dealt with, no man need despair.
III. Lastly, we may
notice how this experience is a manifestation of the power of the living,
loving Lord.
The first and plainest thing that it
teaches us about that power is that Jesus Christ is able in one moment to
revolutionise a life. There is nothing more striking than the suddenness
and completeness of the change which passed. ‘One day is with the Lord as
a thousand years’; and there come moments in every life into which there
is crammed and condensed a whole world of experience, so as that a man
looks back from this instant to that before, and feels that a gulf, deep
as infinity, separates him from his old self.
Now, it is very unfashionable in
these days to talk about conversion at all. It is even more unfashionable
to talk about sudden conversions. I venture to say that there are types of
character and experience which will never be turned to good, unless they
are turned suddenly; while there are others, no doubt, to whom the course
is a gradual one, and you cannot tell where the dawn broadens into perfect
day. But, in the case of men who have grown up to some degree of maturity
of life, either in sensuous sin or crusted over with selfish worldliness,
or in any other way, by reason of intellectual pursuits, or others have
become forgetful of God and careless of religion — unless such men are in
a moment arrested and wheeled round at once, there is very little chance
of their ever being so at all.
I am sure I am speaking to some now
who, unless the truth of Christ comes into their minds with arresting
flash, and unless they are in one moment, into which an eternity is
condensed, changed in their purposes, will never be changed.
Do not, my friend, listen to the
talk that sudden conversion is impossible or unlikely. It is the only kind
of conversion that some of you are capable of. I remember a man, one of
the best Christian men in a humble station in life that I ever knew — he
did not live in Manchester — he had been a drunkard up to his fortieth or
fiftieth year. One day he was walking across an open field, and a voice,
as he thought, spoke to him and said, naming him, ‘If you don’t sign the
pledge to-day you will be damned!’ He turned on his heel, and walked
straight down the street to the house of a temperance friend, and said, ‘I
have come to sign the pledge.’ He signed it, and from that day to the day
of his death ‘adorned the doctrine of Jesus Christ’ his Saviour. If that
man had not been suddenly converted he would never have been converted. So
I say that this story of the text is a crucial instance of Christ’s power
to lay hold upon a man, and wheel him right round all in a moment, and
send him on a new path. He wants to do that with all of you to whom He has
not already done it. I beseech you, do not stick your heels into the
ground in resistance, nor when He puts His hand on your shoulder stiffen
your back that He may not do what He desires with you.
May we not see here, too, a
demonstration of Christ’s power to make a life nobly and blessedly new,
different from all its past, and adorned with strange and unexpected
fruits of beauty and wisdom and holiness? This man’s account of his
future, from the moment of that incident on the Damascus road to the
headman’s block outside the walls of Rome, is this: ‘If any man be in
Christ he is a new creature’; ‘I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in
me.’ Christ will do that for us all; for long-suffering was shown on the
Apostle for a pattern to them who should hereafter believe.
So, you Christian people, it is as
much your business as it was Paul’s, to be visible rhetoric, manifest
demonstrations in your lives of the truth of the Gospel. Men ought to say
about us, ‘There must be something in the religion that has done that for
these people.’ We ought to be such that our characters shall induce the
thought that the Christ who has made men like us cannot be a figment. Do
you show, Christian men, that you are grafted upon the true Vine by the
abundance of the fruit that you bring forth? Can you venture to say, as
Paul said, If you want to know what Jesus Christ’s love and power are,
look at me? Do not venture adducing yourself as a specimen of His power
unless you have a life like Paul’s to look back upon.
For us all the fountain to which
Paul had recourse is open. Why do we draw so little from it? The fire
which burned, refining and illuminating, in him may be kindled in all our
hearts. Why are we so icy? His convictions are of some value, as
subsidiary evidence to Gospel facts; his experience is of still more value
as an attestation and an instance of Gospel blessings. Believe like Paul
and you will be saved like Paul. Jesus Christ will show to you all
long-suffering. For though Paul received it all he did not exhaust it, and
the same long-suffering which was lavished on him is available for each of
us. Only you too must say like him, ‘I was not disobedient to the heavenly
vision’

THE GLORY OF THE KING
‘Now, unto the King eternal,
immortal, invisible, the only wise God, be honor and glory for ever and
ever. Amen,’ — 1 Timothy 1:17.
With this burst of irrepressible
praise the Apostle ends his reference to his own conversion as a
transcendent, standing instance of the infinite love and transforming
power of God. Similar doxologies accompany almost all his references to
the same fact. This one comes from the lips of ‘Paul the aged,’ looking
back from almost the close of a life which owed many sorrows and troubles
to that day on the road to Damascus. His heart fills with thankfulness
that overflows into the great words of my text. He had little to be
thankful for, judged according to the rules of sense; but, though weighed
down with care, having made but a poor thing of the world because of that
vision which he saw that day, and now near martyrdom, he turns with a full
heart to God, and breaks into this song of thanksgiving. There are lives
which bear to be looked back upon. Are ours of that kind?
But my object is mainly to draw your
attention to what seems to me a remarkable feature in this burst of
thanksgiving. And perhaps I shall best impress the thought which it has
given to me if I ask you to look, first, at the character of the God who
is glorified by Paul’s salvation; second, at the facts which glorify such
a God; and, last, at the praise which should fill the lives of those who
know the facts.
I. First, then, notice
the God who is glorified by Paul’s salvation.
Now what strikes me as singular
about this great doxology is the characteristics, or, to use a technical
word, the attributes, of the divine nature which the Apostle selects. They
are all those which separate God from man; all those which present Him as
arrayed in majesty, apart from human weaknesses, unapproachable by human
sense, and filling a solitary throne. These are the characteristics which
the Apostle thinks receive added lustre, and are lifted to a loftier
height of ‘honour and glory,’ by the small fact that he, Paul, was saved
from sins as he journeyed to Damascus.
It would be easy to roll out
oratorical platitudes about these specific characteristics of the divine
nature, but that would be as unprofitable as it would be easy, All that I
want to do now is just to note the force of the epithets; and, if I can,
to deepen the impression of the remarkableness of their selection.
With regard, then, to the first of
them, we at once feel that the designation of ‘the King’ is unfamiliar to
the New Testament. It brings with it lofty ideas, no doubt; but it is not
a name which the writers of the New Testament, who had been taught in the
school of love, and led by a Son to the knowledge of God, are most fond of
using. ‘The King’ has melted into ‘the Father.’ But here Paul selects that
more remote and less tender name for a specific purpose. He is ‘the King’
— not ‘eternal,’ as our Bible renders it, but more correctly ‘the King of
the Ages.’ The idea intended is not so much that of unending existence as
that He moulds the epochs of the world’s history, and directs the
evolution of its progress. It is the thought of an overruling Providence,
with the additional thought that all the moments are a linked chain,
through ‘which He flashes the electric force of His will He is ‘King of
the Ages.’
The other epithets are more
appropriately to be connected with the word ‘God’ which follows than with
the word ‘King’ which precedes. The Apostle’s meaning is this: ‘The King
of the ages, even the God who is,’ etc. And the epithets thus selected all
tend in the same direction. ‘Incorruptible.’ That at once parts that
mystic and majestic Being from all of which the law is decay, There may be
in it some hint of moral purity, but more probably it is simply what I may
call a physical attribute, that that immortal nature not only does not,
but cannot, pass into any less noble forms. Corruption has no share in His
immortal being.
As to ‘invisible,’ no word need be
said to illustrate that. It too points solely to the separation of God
from all approach by human sense.
And then the last of the epithets,
which, according to the more accurate reading of the text, should be, not
as our Bible has it, ‘the only wise God,’ but ‘the only God,’ lifts Him
still further above all comparison and contact with other beings.
So the whole set forth the remote
attributes which make a man feel, The gulf between Him and me is so great
that thought cannot pass across it, and I doubt whether love can live
half-way across that flight, or will not rather, like some poor land bird
with tiny wings, drop exhausted, and be drowned in the abyss before it
reaches the other side.’ We expect to find a hymn to the infinite love.
Instead of that we get praise, which might be upon the lips of many a
thinker of Paul’s day and of ours, who would laugh the idea of revelation,
and especially of a revelation such as Paul believed in, to absolute
scorn. And yet he knew what he was saying when he did not lift up his
praise to the God of tenderness, of pity, of forgiveness, of pardoning
love, but to ‘the King of the ages; the incorruptible, invisible, only
God’; the God whose honour and glory were magnified by the revelation of
Himself in Jesus Christ.
II. And so that brings
me, in the second place, to ask you to look at the facts which glorify
even such a God.
Paul was primarily thinking of his
own individual experience; of what passed when the voice spoke to him,
‘Why persecutest thou Me?’ and of the transforming power which had changed
him, the wolf, with teeth red with the blood of the saints, into a lamb.
But, as he is careful to point out, the personal allusion is lost in his
contemplation of his own history, as being a specimen and test-case for
the blessing and encouragement of all who ‘should hereafter believe upon
Him unto life everlasting.’ So what we come to is this — that the work of
Jesus Christ is that which paints the lily and gilds the refined gold of
the divine loftinesses and magnificence, and which brings honour and glory
even to that remote and inaccessible majesty. For, in that revelation of
God in Jesus Christ, there is added to all these magnificent and all but
inconceivable attributes and excellences, something that is far diviner
and nobler than themselves.
There be two great conceptions
smelted together in the revelation of God in Jesus Christ, of which
neither attains its supremest beauty except by the juxtaposition of the
other. Power is harsh, and scarcely worthy to be called divine, unless it
be linked with love. Love is not glorious unless it be braced and
energised by power. And, says Paul, these two are brought together in
Jesus; and therefore each is heightened by the other. It is the love of
God that lifts His power to its highest height; it is the revelation of
Him as stooping that teaches us His loftiness. It is because He has come
within the grasp of our humanity in Jesus Christ that we can hymn our
highest and noblest praises to ‘the King eternal, the invisible God.’
The sunshine falls upon the
snow-clad peaks of the great mountains and flushes them with a tender pink
that makes them nobler and fairer by far than when they were veiled in
clouds. And so all the divine majesty towers higher when we believe in the
divine condescension, and there is no god that men have ever dreamed of so
great as the God who stoops to sinners and is manifest in the flesh and
Cross of the Man of Sorrows.
Take these characteristics of the
divine nature as set forth in the text one by one, and consider how the
Revelation in Jesus Christ, and its power on sinful men, raises our
conceptions of them. ‘The King of the ages ‘ — and do we ever penetrate so
deeply into the purpose which has guided His hand, as it moulded and moved
the ages, as when we can say with Paul that His ‘good pleasure’ is that,’
in the dispensation of the fulness of times, He might gather together in
one all things in Christ.’ The intention of the epochs as they emerge, the
purpose of all their linked intricacies and apparently diverse movements,
is this one thing, that God in Christ may be manifest to men. and that
humanity may be gathered, like sheep round the Shepherd, into the one fold
of the one Lord. For that the world stands; for that the ages roll, and He
who is the King of the epochs hath put into the hands of the Lamb that was
slain the Book that contains all their events; and only His hand, pierced
upon Calvary, is able to open the seals, to read the Book. The King of the
ages is the Father of Christ.
And in like manner, that
incorruptible God, far away from us because He is so, and to whom we look
up here doubtingly and despairingly and often complainingly and ask, ‘Why
hast Thou made us thus, to be weighed upon with the decay of all things
and of ourselves?’ comes near to us all in the Christ who knows the
mystery of death, and thereby makes us partakers of an inheritance
incorruptible. Brethren, we shall never adore, or even dimly understand,
the blessedness of believing in a God who cannot decay nor change unless
from the midst of graves and griefs we lift our beam to Him as revealed in
the face of the dying Christ. He, though He died, did not see corruption,
and we through Him shall pass into the same blessed immunity.
‘The King... the God invisible.’ No
man hath seen God ‘at any time, nor can see Him.’ Who will honour and
glorify that attribute which parts Him wholly from our sense, and so
largely from our apprehension, as will he who can go on to say, ‘the only
begotten Son which is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared Him.’
We look up into a waste Heaven; thought and fear, and sometimes desire,
travel into its tenantless spaces. We say the blue is an illusion; there
is nothing there but blackness. But ‘he that hath seen Me hath seen the
Father.’ And we can lift thankful praise to Him, the King invisible, when
we hear Jesus saying, ‘thou hast both seen Him, and it is He that talketh
with thee.’
‘The only God.’ How that repels men from His throne! And yet, if we
apprehend the meaning of Christ’s Cross and work, we understand that the
solitary God welcomes my solitary soul into such mysteries and sacred
sweetnesses of fellowship with Himself that, the humanity remaining
undisturbed, and the divinity remaining unintruded upon, we yet are one in
Him, and partakers of a divine nature. Unless we come to God through Jesus
Christ, the awful attributes in the text spurn a man from His throne, and
make all true fellowship impossible.
So let me remind you that the
religion which does not blend together in indissoluble union these two,
the majesty and the lowliness, the power and the love, the God
inaccessible and the God who has tabernacled with us in Jesus Christ, is
sure to be almost an impotent religion. Deism in all its forms, the
religion which admits a God and denies a revelation; the religion which,
in some vague sense, admits a revelation and denies an incarnation; the
religion which admits an incarnation and denies a sacrifice; all these
have little to say to man as a sinner; little to say to man as a mourner;
little power to move his heart, little power to infuse strength into his
weakness. If once you strike out the thought of a redeeming Christ from
your
religion, the temperature will go
down alarmingly, and all will soon be frost bound.
Brethren, there is no real adoration of the loftiness of the King of the
ages, no true apprehension of the majesty of the God incorruptible,
invisible, eternal, until we see Him in the face and in the Cross of Jesus
Christ. The truths of this gospel of our salvation do not in the smallest
degree impinge upon or weaken, but rather heighten, the glory of God. The
brightest glory streams from the Cross. It was when He was standing within
a few hours of it, and had it full in view, that Jesus Christ broke out
into that strange strain of triumph, ‘Now is God glorified.’ ‘The King of
the ages, incorruptible, invisible, the only God,’ is more honoured and
glorified in the forgiveness that comes through Jesus Christ, and in the
transforming power which He puts forth in the Gospel, than in all besides.
III. Lastly, let me draw
your attention to the praise which should fill the lives of those who know
these facts.
I said that this Apostle seems
always, when he refers to his own individual conversion, to have been
melted into fresh outpourings of thankfulness and of praise. And that is
what ought to be the life of all of you who call yourselves Christians; a
continual warmth of thankfulness welling up in the
heart, and not seldom finding utterance in the words, but always filling
the life.
Not seldom, I say, finding utterance
in the words. It is a delicate thing for a man to speak about himself, and
his own religious experience. Our English reticence, our social habits,
and many other even less worthy hindrances rise in the way; and I should
Be the last man to urge Christian people to cast their pearls before
swine, or too fully to ‘Open wide the bridal chamber of the heart,’ to let
in the day. There is a wholesome fear of men who are always talking about
their own religious experiences. But there are times and people to whom it
is treason to the Master for us not to be frank in the confession of what
we have found in Him. And I think there would be less complaining of the
want of power in the public preaching of the Word if more professing
Christians more frequently and more simply said to those to whom their
words are weighty, ‘Come and hear and I will tell you what God hath done
for my soul.’ ‘Ye are my witnesses,’ saith the Lord. It is a strange way
that Christian people in this generation have of discharging their
obligations that they should go, as so many of them do, from the cradle of
their Christian lives to their graves, never having opened their lips for
the Master who has done all for them.
Only remember, if you venture to
speak you will have to live your preaching. ‘There is no speech nor
language, their voice is not heard, their sound is gone out through all
the earth.’ ‘The silent witness of life must always accompany the audible
proclamation, and in many cases is far more eloquent than it. Your
consistent thankfulness manifested in your daffy obedience, and in the
transformation of your character, will do far more than all my preaching,
or the preaching of thousands like me, to commend the Gospel of Jesus
Christ.
One last word, brethren. This
revelation is made to us all. What is God to you, friend? Is He a remote,
majestic, unsympathising, terrible Deity? Is He dim, shadowy, unwelcome;
or is He God whose love softens His power; Whose power magnifies his love?
Oh! I beseech you, open your eyes and your hearts to see that that remote
Deity is of no use to you, will do nothing for you, cannot help you, may
probably judge you, but will never heal you. And open your hearts to see
that ‘the only God’ whom men can love is God in Christ. If here we lift up
grateful praise ‘unto Him that loveth us and hath loosed us from our sins
in His blood,’ we, too, shall one day join in that great chorus which at
last will be heard saying, ‘Blessing and honour and glory and power be
unto Him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb for ever and
ever.’