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INDEX
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COLLECTIONS
Commentaries,
Word Studies, Devotionals, Sermons, Illustrations
Old and New Testament. |
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EPHESIANS 1
SERMONS BY ALEXANDER MACLAREN |
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SAINTS
AND FAITHFUL
by Alexander Maclaren
'The saints which are at Ephesus and
the faithful in Christ Jesus.' - Ephesians 1:1.
THAT is Paul's way of describing a
church. There were plenty of very imperfect Christians in the community at
Ephesus and in the other Asiatic churches to which this letter went: As we
know, there were heretics amongst them, and many others to whom the
designation of 'holy' seemed inapplicable. But Paul classes them all under
one category, and describes the whole body of believing people by these
two words, which must always go together if either of them is truly
applied, 'saints' and 'faithful.'
Now I think that from this simple
designation we may gather two or three very obvious indeed, and very
familiar and old-fashioned, but also very important, thoughts.
I. A Christian is a saint.
We are accustomed to confine the
word to persons who tower above their brethren in holiness and manifest
godliness and devoutness. The New Testament never does anything like that.
Some people fancy that nobody can be a saint unless he wears a special
uniform of certain conventional sanctities. The New Testament does not
take that point of view at all, but regards all true believers in Jesus
Christ as being, therein and thereby, saints.
Now, what does it mean by that? The
word at bottom simply signifies separation. Whatever is told off from a
mass for a specific purpose would be called, if it were a thing, 'holy.'
But there is one special kind of separation which makes a person a saint,
and that is separation to God, for His uses, in obedience to His
commandment, that He may employ the man as He will. So in the Old
Testament the designation 'holy' was applied quite as much to the high
priest's mitre or to the sacrificial vessels of the Temple as it was to
the people who used them. It did not imply originally, and in the first
place, moral qualities at all, but simply that this person or that thing
belonged to God. But then you cannot belong to God unless you are like Him
There can be no consecration to God except the heart is being purified. So
the ordinary meaning of holiness, as moral purity and cleanness from sin,
necessarily comes from the original meaning, separation and devotion to
the service of God.
Thus we get the whole significance
of Christian holiness. We are to belong to God, and to know that we do
belong to Him. We are to be separated from the mass of people and things
that have no consciousness of ownership and do not yield themselves up to
Him for His use. But we cannot belong to Him, and be devoted to His
service, unless we are being made day by day pure in heart, and like Him
to whom we say that we belong. A human being can only be God's by the
surrender of heart and will, and through the continual appropriation into
his own character and life, of righteousness and purity like that which
belongs to God. Holiness is God's stamp upon a man, His 'mark,' by which
He says, - This man belongs to Me. As you write your name in a book, so
God writes His name on His property, and the name that He writes is the
likeness of His own character.
Note, again, that in God's church
there is no aristocracy of sanctity, nor does the name of saint belong
only to those who live high above the ordinary tumults of life and the
secularities of daily duty. You may be as true a saint in a factory - ay!
and a far truer one - than in a hermitage. You do not need to cultivate a
mediaeval or Roman Catholic type of ascetic piety in order to be called
saints. You do not need to be amongst the select few to whom it is given
here upon earth, but not given without their own effort, to rise to the
highest summits of holy conformity with the divine will. But down amongst
all the troubles and difficulties and engrossing occupations of our
secular work, you may be living saintly lives; for the one condition of
being holy is that we should know whose we are and whom we serve, and we
can carry the consciousness of belonging to Him into every corner of the
poorest, most crowded, and most distracted life, recognising His presence
and seeking to do His will The saint is the man who says, 'O Lord, truly I
am Thy servant; Thou hast loosed my bonds.' Because He has loosed my
bonds, the bonds that held me to my sins. He has therein fastened me with
far more stringent bonds of love to the sweet and free service of His
redeeming love. All His children are His saints.
The Old Testament ritual had one
sacrifice which carried this truth in it. It is the first prescribed in
the Book of Leviticus, the ceremonial book - namely, the burnt offering.
Its especial meaning was this, that the whole man is to be laid upon God's
altar and there consumed in the fire of a divine love. It began with
expiation, as all sacrifices must, and on the footing of expiation there
followed the transformation, by the fire of God, from gross earthliness
into vapour and odour which went up in wreaths of fragrance acceptable to
God. So we are to be laid upon the divine altar. So, because we have been
accepted in the Beloved, and have received the atonement for our sins
through His great sacrifice, we are to be consecrated to His service and,
touched by the fire which He sends down, we are to be changed into a sweet
odour acceptable to Him as were 'the saints which are in Ephesus.'
II. Further, Christian men are
saints because they are believers.
'The saints' and 'the faithful' are
not two sets of people, but one. The Apostle starts, as it were, on the
surface, and goes down; takes off the uppermost layer and lets us see what
is below it; begins with the flowers or the fruit, and then carries us to
the root. The saints are saints because they are first of all faithful.
'Faithful' here, of course, does not mean, as it usually does in our
ordinary language, 'true' and 'trusty,' 'reliable' and 'keeping our word,'
but it means simply 'believing'; having faith, not in the sense of
fidelity, but in the sense of trust.
So, then, here is Paul's notion -
and it is not only Paul's notion, it is God's truth - that the only way by
which a man ever comes to realise that he belongs to God, and to yield
himself in glad surrender to His uses, and so to become pure and holy like
Him whom He loves and aspires to, is by humble faith in Jesus Christ. If
you want to talk in theological terminology, sanctification follows upon
faith. It is when we believe and trust in Jesus Christ that all the great
motives begin to tell upon life and heart, which deliver us from our
selfishness, which bind us to God, which make it a joy to do anything for
His service, which kindle in our hearts the flame of fructifying and
consecrating and transforming love. Faith, the simple reliance of a
desperate and therefore trusting heart upon Jesus Christ for all that it
needs, is the foundation of the loftiest elevation and attainment of the
Christian character. We begin down there that we may set the shining
topstone of 'Holiness to the Lord' upon the heaven-pointing summit of our
lives.
Note how here Paul sets forth the object of our faith and the blessedness
of it. I do not think I am forcing too much meaning into his words when I
ask you to notice with what distinct emphasis and intentional fulness he
employs the double name of our Lord here to describe the object upon which
our faith fixes, 'Faithful in Christ Jesus. ' We must lay hold Of the
Manhood, and we must lay hold of the office. We must rest our soul's
salvation on Him as our brother, Jesus who was incarnate in sinful flesh
for us; and we must. also rest it on Him as God's anointed, who came in
human flesh to fulfil the divine loving-kindness and purposes, and in that
flesh to die. A faith in a Jesus who was not a Christ would not sanctify;
a faith in a Christ who is not Jesus would be impalpable and impotent. We
must take the two together, believing and feeling that we lay hold upon a
loving Man, 'bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh'; and also upon Him
who in His very humanity is the Messenger and Angel of God's covenant; the
Christ for whom the way has been being prepared from the beginning, and
who has some to fulfil all the purposes of the divine heart.
And notice, too, how there is
suggested here also, the blessedness of that faith, inasmuch as it is a
faith in Christ. The New Testament speaks in diverse ways about the
relation between the believing soul and Jesus Christ. It sometimes speaks
of faith as being towards Him, and that suggests the going out of a hand
that, as it were, stretches towards what it would lay hold of. It
sometimes speaks of faith as being on Him, which suggests the idea of a
building on its foundation, or a hand leaning on a support. And it
sometimes speaks, as here, of faith being 'in Him,' which suggests the
folded wings of the dove that has found its nest, the repose of faith, the
quiet rest in the Lord, and 'waiting patiently for Him.' Such trust so
directed is the one condition of such tranquillity. Then, again, note a
Christian is all that he is because he is 'in Christ.' That phrase 'in
Him' is in some sense the keynote of this Epistle to the Ephesians. If you
will look over the letter, and pick out all the connections in which the
expression 'in Him' occurs, I think you will be astonished to see how rich
and full are its uses, and how manifold the blessings of which it is the
condition. But the use which Paul makes of it here is just this -
everything in our Christian life depends upon our being rooted and grafted
in Jesus. Dear brethren, the main weakness, I believe, of what is called
Evangelical Christianity has been that it has not always kept true to the
proportionate prominence which the New Testament gives to the two
thoughts, 'Christ for us,' and 'Christ in us.' For one sermon that you
have heard which has dwelt earnestly and believingly on the thought of the
indwelling Christ and the Christian indwelling in Him, you have heard a
hundred about the Sacrifice on the Cross for sins, and the great atonement
that was made by it. Those of you, who have listened to me from Sunday to
Sunday, know that I am not to be charged with minimizing or neglecting
that truth, but I want to lay upon all your hearts this earnest
conviction, that s gospel which throws into enormous prominence' Christ
for us,' and into very small prominence 'Christ in us,' is lame of one
foot, is lopsided, untrue to the symmetry and proportion of the Gospel as
it is revealed in the New Testament, and will never avail for the
nourishment and maturity of Christian souls. 'Christ for us' by all means,
and for evermore, but 'Christ in us,' or else He will not be 'for us.'
III. Lastly, a Christian may he a
saint, and a believer, and in Christ Jesus, though he is in Ephesus.
Many of you know that probably the
words 'in Ephesus' are no part of the original text of this epistle, which
was apparently a circular letter, in which the designation of the various
churches to which it was sent was left blank, to be filled in with the
name of each little community to which Paul's messenger from Rome carried
it. The copy from which our text was taken had probably been delivered at
Ephesus; and, at any rate, one of the copies would go there. What was
Ephesus? Satan's very headquarters and seat in Asia Minor, a focus of
idolatry, superstition, wealth, luxury springing from commerce, and moral
corruption. 'Great is Diana of the Ephesians.' The books of Ephesus were a
synonym for magical books. Many of us know how rotten to the core the
society of that great city was. And there, on the dunghill, was this
little garden of fragrant and flowering plants. They were 'saints in
Christ Jesus,' though they were 'saints in Ephesus.'
Never mind about surroundings. It is
possible for us to keep ourselves in the love of God, and in the
fellowship of His Son wherever we are, and whatever may He around us. you
and I have too to live in a big, wicked city, and to work out our religion
in a society honeycombed with corruption, because of commerce and other
influences. Do not let us forget that these people whom Paul called
'saints' and 'faithful' had a harder fight to wage than we have, with less
to hearten and strengthen them in it. Only remember if the 'saints in
Ephesus' are to be 'in Christ,' they need to keep themselves very straight
up. The carbonic acid gas is heavy and goes down to the bottom of the
cave, and if a man will walk bolt upright, he will keep his nostrils above
it; but if he stoops, he will get down into it. Walk straight up, with
your head erect, looking to the Master, and your respiratory organs will
be. above the poison. If we are to be in Christ when we are in
Ephesus, we need to keep ourselves separate and faithful, and to keep
ourselves in Christ. If the diver comes out of the diving-bell he is
drowned. If he keeps inside its crystal walls he may be on the bottom of
the ocean, but he is dry and safe. Keep in the fortress by loyal faith, by
humble realisation of His presence, by continual effort, and 'nothing
shall by any means harm you,' but 'your lives shall be holy, being hid
with Christ in God. |
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ALL
SPIRITUAL BLESSINGS
by Alexander Maclaren
'Blessed be God... who hath blessed
us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ.' - Ephesians
1:3.
IT is very characteristic of Paul's
impetuous fervour and exuberant faith that he begins this letter with a
doxology, and plunges at once into the very heart of his theme. Colder
natures reach such heights by slow degrees. He gains them at a bound, or
rather, he dwells there always. Put a pen into his hand; and it is like
tapping a blast furnace; and out rushes a fiery stream at white heat. But
there is a great deal more than fervour in the words. In the rush of hid
thoughts there is depth and method. We come slowly after, and try by-analysing
and meditation to recover some of the fervour and the fire of such
utterances as this.
Notice that buoyant, joyous,
emphatic reiteration: 'Blessed,' 'blest,' 'blessings.' That is more than
the fascination exercised over a man's mind by a word; it covers very deep
thoughts and goes very far into the centre of the Christian life. God
blesses us by gifts; we bless Him by words. The aim of His act of blessing
is to evoke in our hearts the love that praises. We receive first, and
then, moved By His mercies, we give. Our highest response to His most
precious gifts is that we shall 'take the cup of salvation, and call upon
the name of the Lord,' and in the depth of thankful and recipient hearts
shall say, 'Blessed be, God who hath blessed us.'
Now I think that I shall best bring
out the deep meaning of these words if I simply follow them as they lie
before us. I do not wish to say anything about our echo in blessing God, I
wish to speak about the original sweet sound, His blessing to us.
I. And I note, first of all, the
character and the extent or these blessings which are the constituents of
the Christian life.
All, spiritual, blessings; says the
Apostle. Now, I am not going to weary you with mere exegetical remarks,
but I do want to-lay stress upon this, that, when the Apostle speaks about
'spiritual blessings,' he does not merely use that word 'spiritual' as
defining the region in us in which the blessings are given, though that is
also implied; but rather as pointing to the medium by which they are
conferred. That is to say, he calls them 'spiritual,' not because they
are, unlike material and outward blessings,
gifts for the inner man, the true self, but because they are imparted to
the waiting spirit by that Divine Spirit who communicates to men all the
most precious things of God. They are 'spiritual' because the Holy Spirit
is the medium of communication by which they reach men's spirit.
And I may just pause for one moment
- and it shall only be for a moment - to point out to you how inwoven into
the very texture of the writer's thoughts, and all the more emphatic
because quite incidental, and needing to be looked for to be found, is
here the evidence of his believing that the name of God was God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. For it is the Father who is the Giver, the
Son who is the Reservoir, the Spirit who is the Communicator, of these
spiritual gifts. And I do not think that any man could have written these
words of my text, the main purpose of which is altogether different to
setting forth the mystery of the divine nature, unless he had believed in
God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.
But, apart altogether from that, let
me remind you in one sentence of how the gifts which thus come to men by
that Divine Spirit derive their characteristic quality from their very
medium of communication. There are many other blessings for which we have
to say, 'Blessed be God'; for all the gifts that come from 'the Father of
Lights' are light, and everything that the Fountain of sweetness bestows
upon mankind is sweet, but earthly blessings are but the shadow of
blessing. They remain without us, and they pass. And if they were all for
which we had to praise God, our praises had need to be often checked by
sobs and tears, and often very doubtful and questioning. If there were
none other but such, and if this poor life were all, then I do not think
it would be true that it is 'better to have loved and lost, Than never to
have loved stall.'
It is but a quavering voice of
praise, with many a sob between, that goes up to bless God for anything
but spiritual blessings. Though it is true that all which comes from the
Father of Lights is light, the sorrows and troubles that He sends have the
light terribly muffled in darkness, and it needs strong faith and insight,
to pierce through the cloud to see the gleam of anything bright beneath.
But when we turn to this other region, and think of what comes to every
poor, tremulous, human heart, that likes to take it through that Divine
Spirit - the forgiveness of sins, the rectification of errors, the
purification of lusts and passions, the gleams of hope on the future, and
the access with confidence into the standing and place of children: oh,
then surely we can say, 'Blessed be God for spiritual blessings.'
But if the word which defines may
thus seem to limit, the other word which accompanies it sweeps away every
limit; for it calls upon us to bless God for all spiritual blessings. That
is to say, there is no gap in His gift. It is rounded and complete and
perfect. Whatever a man's needs may require, whatever his hopes can dream,
whatever his wishes can stretch out towards, it is all here, compacted and
complete. The spiritual gifts are encyclopaediacal and all-sufficient,
They, are not, segments, but completed circles. When God gives He gives
amply.
II. So much, then, for the first
point; now, in the second place, note the one divine act by which all
these blessings have been bestowed.
'Blessed be God who has given'; or,
still more definitely, pointing to some one specific moment and deed in
which the benefaction was completed, 'Blessed be God who gave.'
When? Well, ideally in the depths of
His own eternal mind the gift was complete or ever the recipients were
created to receive it, and historically the gift was complete in the act
of redemption when He spared not His Own Son, but gave Him up unto the
death for us all. A man may destine an estate for the benefit of some
community which for generations long may continue to enjoy its benefits,
but the gift. is complete when he signs the deed that makes it over.
Humphrey Chetham gave the boys in his school to-day their education when,
centuries ago, he assigned his property to that beneficent purpose. So,
away back in the mists of Eternity the gift was completed, and the
signature was put to the deed when Jesus Christ was born, and the seal was
added when Jesus Christ died. 'Blessed be God who hath given.'
So, then, we may not only draw the
conclusion which the Apostle drew, 'how shall He not with Him also freely
give us all things?' but we can draw an even grander one, 'Has He not with
Him also freely given us all things?' And we possess them all to-day if
our hearts are resting on Jesus Christ, The limit of the gift is only in
ourselves. All. has been given, but the question remains how much has been
taken.
Oh, Christian men and women, there
is nothing that we require more than to have what we have, to posses what
is ours, to make our own what has been bestowed. You sometimes hear of
some beggar, or private soldier, or farm laborer, who has come all at once
into an estate that was his, years before he knew anything about it. There
is such a boundless wealth belonging by right, and by the Giver's gift, to
every Christian soul; and yet, here are we, many of us, like the paupers
who sometimes turn up in workhouses, all in rags, and with
deposit-receipts for L200 or L300 stitched into the rags, that they get no
good out of. Here are we, with all that wealth, paupers still. Be, sure
that you have what you have. Do you remember the exhortation to a valiant
effort in one of the stories in the Old Testament - 'Know ye that
Ramoth-gilead is ours, and we take it not?' And that is exactly what is
true about hosts of professing Christians who have not, in any real sense,
the possession of what God has given them. It is well to ask, for our
desires are the measures of our capacities. It is well to ask, but we very
often ask when what is wanted is not that we should get more, but that we
should utilize what we have. And we make mistakes therein, as if God
needed to be besought to give, when all the while it is we who need to be
stirred up to grasp and keep the things that are freely given to us of
God.
III. In the next place, notice
the one place where all these blessings are kept.
'Blessed be God who has blessed us
with all spiritual blessings-in heavenly places.' 'In heavenly places.'
Now that does not merely define the region of origin, the locality where
they originated or whence they come. It does do that, but it does a great
deal more. It does not merely tell us, as we often are posed to think that
it does, that 'every good and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh
down' - though that is perfectly true, but it means much rather that in
order to get the gift we must go up. They are in the heavenly places, and
they cannot live anywhere else. They have been sticking shrubs in tubs
outside our public buildings this last week. How long will they keep their
leaves and their freshness? How soon will they need to be shifted and
taken back again to the sweeter air, where they can flourish? God's
spiritual gifts cannot grow in smoke and dirt and a polluted atmosphere.
And if a professing Christen man lives his life on the low levels he will
have very few of the heavenly gifts coming down to him there. And that is
the reason - the reason above all others - why, with such a large
provision made for all possible necessities and longings of all sorts,
people who call themselves Christians go up and down the world feeble and
poor, and with little enjoyment of their religion, and having verified
scarcely anything of the great promises which God has given them.
Brother, according to the old word
with which the Mass used to begin, 'Sursum corda' - up with your hearts!
The blessings are in the heavens, and if we want them we must go where
they are. It is not enough to drink sparing draughts from the stream as it
flows through the plain. Travel up to the headwaters, where the great pure
fountain is, that gushes out abundant and inexhaustible. The gifts are
heavenly, and there they abide, and thither we must mount if we would
possess them.
Now that this understanding of the
words is correct I think is clearly shown by a verse in the next chapter,
where we find the very same phrase employed. In this connection the
Apostle says that 'God hath raised us up together in heavenly places in
Christ Jesus.' That is to say, the true ideal of the Christian life is
that, even here and now, it is a life of such intimate union and
'incorporation with Jesus Christ as that where He is we are, and that even
whilst we tabernacle upon earth and move about amongst its illusions and
changing scenes, in the depth of our true being we may be fixed, and sit
at rest with Christ where He is.
Do not dismiss that as mere pulpit
rhetoric. Do not say that it is mystical and incomprehensible, and cannot
be reduced into practice amidst the distractions of daily life. Brethren,
it is not so! Jesus Christ Himself said about Himself that He came down
from heaven, and that though He did, even whilst He wore the likeness of
the flesh, and was one of us, He was 'the Son of Man which is in Heaven,'
when He lay in the manger, when He worked at the carpenter's bench in
Nazareth, when He walked with weary feet those blessed acres, when He
hung, for our advantage, on the bitter Cross. And that was no
incommunicable property of His mysterious nature, but it was the typical
example of what it is possible for manhood to be. And you and I, if we are
to possess in any measure corresponding with the gift of Christ the
spiritual blessing which God bestows, must have our lives 'hid with Christ
in God,' and sit together with Him in the heavenly places.
IV. Lastly, note the one Person
in whom all spiritual blessings are enshrined.
'In the heavenly places in Christ
Jesus.' You cannot separate between Him and His gifts, neither in the way
of getting Him without them, nor in the way of getting them without Him.
They are Himself, and in the deepest analysis all spiritual blessings are
reducible to one - viz. that the Spirit of Jesus Christ-Himself shall
dwell with us.
Now, that union by which it is
possible for poor, empty, sinful creatures to be filled with His fulness,
animated with His life, strengthened with His omnipotentence, and
sanctified by His indwelling - that union is the very kernel of this
Epistle to the Ephesians.
I dare say I have often drawn your attention to the singular emphasis and
repetition with which that phrase 'in Christ' occurs throughout the
letter. Just take the two or three instances of it that I gather as I
speak. In this first chapter we read, 'the faithful in Jesus Christ,' Then
comes our text, 'blessings in heavenly places in Christ.' Then, in the
very next verse, we read, 'chosen us in Him.' Then, a verse or two after,
we have 'accepted in the Beloved,' which is immediately followed by, 'in
whom we have redemption through His blood.' Then, again, 'that He might
gather together in one all things in Christ, in whom also we have obtained
the inheritance' I need not make other quotations, but throughout the
letter every blessing that can gladden or sanctify the human spirit is
regarded by the Apostle as being stored and shrined in Jesus Christ:
inseparable from Him, and therefore to he bound by us only in union with
Him
And that is the point of all which I
want to say - viz. that, inasmuch as all spiritual blessings that a soul
can need are hived in Him in whom is all sweetness, the way, and the only
way, to get them is that we too, should pass into Him and dwell in Jesus,
Christ. It is His own teaching: 'I am the Vine, ye are the branches. Abide
in Me. Separate. from Me ye can do nothing,' and get nothing, and are
nothing.
Oh, brethren! it is well that all
.our treasures should be in one place. It is better that they should all
be in One Person. And if only we will lay our poor emptiness by the side
of His fulness there will pass over from that infinite abundance and
sufficiency everything that we can require.
We abide in Him by faith, by
meditation, by love, by submission, by practical obedience, and, if we are
wise, the effort of our lives will be to keep close to that Lord. As long
as we keep touch with Him we have all and abound. Break the connection by
wandering away, in thought and desire, by indulgence in sin, by letting
earthly passions surge in and separate us from Him - break the connection
by rebellion, by making ourselves our own ends and lords, and it is like
switching off the electricity,
Everything falls dead. You cannot have Christ's blessing unless you take
Christ.
And so, dear brethren, 'abide in Me
and I in you: There is nothing else that will make us blessed; there is
nothing else that will meet all the circumference of our necessities;
there is nothing else that will quiet our hearts, will sanctify our
understandings. Christ is yours if 'ye are Christ's.' 'Of His fulness have
all we received,' for it all became ours when we Became His, and Christian
growth on earth and heaven is But the unfolding of the folded graces that
are contained in Him. We possess the whole Christ, but eternity is needed
to disclose all the unsearchable riches of our inheritance in Him. |
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ACCORDING
TO - Part 1
by Alexander Maclaren
'According to the good pleasure of
His will.... According to the riches of His grace.' - Ephesians 1:5, 7.
THAT phrase, 'according to,' is one
of the key-words of this profound epistle, which occurs over and over
again, like a refrain. I reckon twelve instances of it in three chapters
of the letter, and they all introduce one or other of the two thoughts
which appear in the two fragments that I have taken for my text. They
either point out how the great blessings of Christ's mission have
underlying them the divine purpose, or they point out how the process of
the Christian life in the individual has for its source and measure the
abundances, the wealth of the grace and the power of God. So in both
aspects the facts of earth are traced up to, and declared to be, the
outcome of the heavenly depths, and that gives solemnity, grandeur,
elevation, to this epistle all its own. We are carried, as it were, away
up into the recesses of the mountains of God, and we look down upon the
unruffled, mysterious, deep lake, from which come the rivers that water
all the plains beneath.
Now of these two types of reference
to the divine will and the divine wealth, I should like to gather together
the instances, as they occur in this letter, in so far as I can, in the
course of a sermon, touching them, it must be, very imperfectly. But I
fear that it is impossible to deal with both the phases of this 'according
to,' in one discourse. So I confine myself to that which is suggested by
the first of our two texts, in the hope that some other day we may be able
to overtake the other. So then, we have set before us here the Christian
thought of the divine will which underlies, and therefore is manifest by,
the work of Jesus Christ, in its whole sweep and breadth. And I just take
up the various instances in which this expression occurs in a great
variety of forms, but all retaining substantially the same meaning.
I. Note that that divine will
which underlies and is operative in, and therefore is certified to us by
the whole work of Jesus Christ, in its facts and its consequences, is a
'good pleasure.'
Now there are few thoughts which the
history of the world has shown to be more productive of iron and steel in
the human character than that of the sovereign will of God. That made
Islam, and is the secret of its power today, amidst its many corruptions.
Because these wild desert tribes were all stiffened, or I might say
inflamed, by that profound conviction, the sore-reign will of God, they
came down like a hammer upon that corrupt so-called Christian Church, and
swept it off the face of the earth, as it deserved to be swept. And the
same thought of the sovereign will, of which we are but instruments-pawns
on its chess-board - made the grand seventeenth century Puritanism in
England, and its sister type of men and of religion in Holland. For this
is a historically proved thesis, that there is nothing which so
contributes to the formation, and valuation of, and the readiness to die
for, civil liberty, as the firm grasp of that thought of the divine
sovereignty. Just because a man realises that the will of God is supreme
over all the earth, he rebels against all forms of human despotism.
But with all the good that is in
that great thought - and the Christianity of this day sorely wants the
strength that might be given it by the exhibition of that steel medicine -
it wants another, 'the good pleasure of His will.' And that word, 'good
pleasure, does not express, as I think, in Paul's usage of it, the simple
notion of sovereignty, but always the notion Of a benevolent sovereignty.
It is ' the good pleasure' - as it is put in another place by the same
Apostle - 'of His goodness.' And that thought, let in upon the solemnity
and severity of the other one, is all that it needs in order to make the
man who grasps it not only a hero in conflict, and a patient martyr in
endurance, but a child in his Father's house, rejoicing in the love of his
Father everywhere and always.
Paul would have us believe that if
we will take the work of Jesus Christ in the facts of His life, and its
results upon humanity, as our horn-book and lesson, we shall draw from
that some conceptions of the great thing that underlies it, 'the good
pleasure of His will.' We stand in front of this complex universe, and
some of us say: 'Law'; and some of us say: 'A Lawgiver behind the law; a
Person at the heart of all things'; but unless we can say: 'And in the
heart of the Person a will, which is the expression of a steadfast,
omnipotent love,' then the World seems to me to be a place of unsolvable
riddles and a torture-house. There goes the great steam-roller along the
road. Everybody can see that it crushes down, and makes its own path. Who
drives it? The steam in the boiler, or is there a hand on the lever? And
what drives the hand? Christianity answers, and answers with unfaltering
lip, rising clear above contradictions apparent and difficulties real,
'The good pleasure of His will,' and there men can rest.
Then there is another step. Another form in which this ' according to'
appears in this letter is, if we adopt the rendering, which I am disposed
to do in the present case, of the Authorised Version rather than of the
Revised, 'according to His good pleasure... which He hath purposed in
Himself,' The Revised Version says, 'Which He hath purposed in Him,' and
that is a perfectly possible rendering. But to me the old one is not only
more eloquent, but more in accordance with the connection. So I venture to
accept it without further, ado - 'His good pleasure which He hath purposed
in Himself.'
That brings us into the presence of
that same great thought, which in another aspect is expressed in saying
'His name. is Jehovah,' and in yet another aspect is expressed in saying
'God is love,' viz. the thought, which sounds familiar, but which has in
it depths of strength and illumination and joy, if We rightly ponder it,
that, to use human words, the motive of the divine action is all found
within the divine nature.
We love one another because, we
discern, or think we discern, lovable qualities in the being on whom our
love falls. God loves because He is God. That great artesian fountain
wells up from the depths, by its own sweet impulse, and pours itself out;
and 'the good pleasure of, His goodness' has no other explanation than
that it is His nature and property to be merciful And so, dear brethren,
we get clean past what has sometimes been the misapprehension of good
people, and has oftener been the caricatured representation of Evangelical
truth which its enemies have put forth-that God was made to love and pity
by reason of the sacrifice of the Son, whereas the very opposite is the
case. God loves, therefore He sent His Son, 'that whosoever believeth in
Him should not perish but have everlasting life,' and the notion of the
Cross of Christ as changing the divine heart is as far away from
Evangelical truth as it is from the natural conceptions that men form of
the divine nature. We shake hands with our so-called antagonists and say,
'Yes! we believe as much as you do that God does not love us because
Christ died, but we believe what perhaps you do not, that Christ died
because God loves us, and would save us.' 'The good pleasure which He hath
purposed in Himself.'
Then, still further, there is
another aspect of this same divine will brought out in other parts of this
letter, of which this is a specimen, 'Having made known unto us the
mystery of His will, according to His good pleasure which He hath purposed
in Himself, that in the dispensation of the fulness of the times He might
gather together in one all things in Christ,' which, being turned into
more modern phraseology, is just this - that the great aim of that divine
sovereign will, self-originated, full of loving-kindness to the world, is
to manifest to all men what God is, that all men may know Him for what He
is, and thereby be drawn back again, and grouped in peaceful unity round
His Son, Jesus Christ. That is the intention which is deepest in the
divine heart, the desire which God has most for every one of us. And when
the Old Testament tells us that the great motive of the divine action is
for 'My own Name's sake,' that expression might be so regarded as to
disclose an ugly despot, who only wants to be reverenced by abject and
submissive subjects. But what it really means is this, that the divine
love which hovers over its poor, prodigal children because it is love,
and, therefore, lovingly delights in a loving recognition and response,
desires most of all that all the wanderers should see the light, and that
every soul of man should be able to whisper. with loving heart, the name,
'Abba! Father!' Is not that an uplifting thought as being the dominant
motive which puts in action the whole of the divine activity? God created
in order that He might fling His light upon creatures, who should thereby
be glad. And God has redeemed in order that in Jesus Christ we might see
Him, and, seeing Him, be at rest, and begin to grow like Him- This is the
aim, 'That they might know Thee, the only true God .... whom to know is
eternal life.' And so self-communication and self-revelation is the very
central mystery of the will.
But that is not all Another of the
forms in which this phrase occurs tells us that that great purpose, the
eternal purpose which He purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord, was that, 'Now
unto the principalities and powers in heavenly places might be known' by
the Church 'the manifold wisdom of God.' And so we get another thought,
that that whole work of redemption, operated by the Incarnation, and
culminating in the Crucifixion and Resurrection and Ascension of Jesus
Christ, stands as being the means by which other orders of creatures,
besides ourselves, learn to know 'the manifold wisdom of God.' According
to the grand old saying, at Creation the 'morning stars sang together for
joy.' All spiritual creatures; be they 'higher' or 'lower,' can only know
God by the observation of His acts.
'Twas great to
speak a world from nought,
'Tis greater to redeem,'
and the same angelic lips that sang
these praises on the morning of Creation have learnt a new song that they
sing: 'Glory and honour and dominion and power he unto the Lamb that was
slain.'
Thus to principalities and powers, a
diviner height in the loftiness, and a diviner depth in the condescension,
and a diviner tenderness in the love, and a diviner energy in the power,
of the redeeming God have been made known, and this is the thought of His
eternal purpose. And that brings me to another point which is involved in
the words that I have just quoted, which stand in connection with those
that I have previously referred to. The phrase 'eternal purpose' literally
rendered is, 'the purpose of the ages,' and that, no doubt; may mean
'eternal' in the sense of running on through all the ages; or it may mean,
perhaps, that which we usually attach to the word 'eternal,' viz.
unbeginning and unending. I take the former meaning as the more probable
one, that the Apostle contemplates that great will of God which culminates
in Jesus Christ, as coming solemnly sweeping through all the epochs of
time from the beginning. In a deeper sense than the poet meant it,
'Through the ages an increasing purpose runs, and that hinds the epochs of
humanity together - 'the purpose of God in Christ Jesus.' The philosophy
of history lies there; and it is a true instinct that makes the cradle at
Bethlehem the pivot around which the world's chronology revolves. For the
deepest thing about all the ages on the further side of it is that they
are 'Before Christ,' and the formative fact for all the ages after it is
that they are Anno Domini.
And now the last thing that is
suggested by yet another of these eloquent expressions is deduced from
another part of the same phrase. The purpose of the ages is described as
that which He purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord.' Now the word 'purposed'
literally is 'made.' And it may be a question whether 'purposed' or
'accomplished' is the special meaning to be attached to the general word
'made.' Either is legitimate. I take it that what the Apostle means here
is that the purpose of God, which we have thus seen as sovereign,
self-originated, having for its great aim the communication to all His
creatures of the knowledge of Himself, and running through the ages, and
binding them into a unity, reaches its entire accomplishment in the
Cradle, and the Cross, and the Throne of Jesus Christ our Lord.
He fulfils the divine intention.
There is that one life, and in that life alone of humanity you have a
character which is in entire sympathy with the divine mind, which is in
full possession of the divine truth, which never diverges or deviates by a
hair's-breadth from the divine will, which is the complete and perfect
exponent to man of the divine heart and character; and that Christ is the
fulfilment of all that God desired in the depths of eternity, and the
abysses of His being. Did He will that men should know Him? Christ has
declared Him. Did He will that men should be drawn back to Him? Christ
lifted on the Cross draws all men unto Him. Was it 'according to the good
pleasure of His goodness' that we men should attain to the adoption of
sons? By that Son we too became sons. Was it the purpose of His will that
we should obtain an 'inheritance'? We obtain it in Jesus Christ, 'being
heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ.' All that God willed to do is
done. And when we look, on the one hand, up to that infinite purpose, and
on the other, to the Cross, we hear from the dying Him, 'It is finished!'
The purpose of the ages is accomplished in Christ Jesus.
Is it accomplished with you? I have been speaking about the divine counsel
which is a 'good pleasure,' which runs through the whole history of
mankind, But it is a divine purpose that you can thwart as far as you are
concerned. 'How often would I have gathered... and ye would not,' and your
'would not' neutralises His 'would.' Do not stand in the way of the
steam-roller. You cannot stop it, but it can crush you. Do not have Him
say about you, 'In vain have I smitten, in vain have I loved.' Bow,
accept, recognise that all God's armoury is brought to bear upon each of
us in that great Cross and Passion, in that great Incarnation and human
life. And I beseech you, in your hearts, let the will of God be done even
as for a world it has been done by the sacrifice of Calvary. |
|
ACCORDING
TO - Part 2
'According to the riches of His
grace.' - Ephesians 1:7.
WE have seen, in a previous sermon,
that a characteristic note of this letter is the frequent occurrence of
that phrase 'according to.' I also then pointed out that it was employed
in two different directions. One class of passages, with which I then
tried to deal, used it to compare the divine purpose in our salvation with
the historical process of the salvation. The type of that class of
reference is found in a verse just before my text, 'according to the good
pleasure of His will.' There is a second class of passages to which our
text belongs, where the comparison is not between the purpose and its
realisation, but between the stores of the divine riches and the
experiences of the Christian life. The one set of passages suggests the
ground of our salvation in the deep purpose of God; the other suggests the
measure of the power which is working out that salvation.
The instances of this second use of
the phrase, besides the one in my text, 'according to the riches of His
grace,' are such as these: 'According to the riches of His glory';
'According to the power that worketh in us'; 'According to the measure of
the gift of Christ'; 'According to the energy of the might of His power,
which He wrought in Christ when He raised Him from the dead.'
Now it is clear that all these are
varying forms of the same thing. They vary in form, they are identical in
substance. What a Jew calls a 'cubit' an Englishman calls a 'foot,' but
the result is pretty nearly the same. Shillings, marks, francs, are
various standards; they all come to substantially the same result. These
varying measures of the divine gift which is at work in man's salvation,
have this in common, that they all run out into God's immeasurable,
unlimited power, boundless wealth. And so, if we gather them together, and
try to focus them in a few words, they may help to widen our conceptions
of what we ought to expect from God, to bow us in contrition as to the
small use that we have made of it, and to open our desires wide, that they
may be filled.
I only aspire, then, to deal with these four forms which I have already
suggested.
I. The measure of our possible attainments is the whole wealth of God.
'According to the riches of His grace.'
Another angle at which the same
thought is viewed appears in another part of the letter, where we have
this variation in the expression, 'According to the riches of His glory.'
'Grace' and 'Glory' are generally opposed antithetically; in this epistle
they are united, for in the verse before my text I read: 'To the praise of
the glory of His grace.' So the first thought is, the whole wealth of God
is available for every Christian soul.
Now it seems to me that there are
very few things that the popular Christianity of this day needs more than
a furnishing up of the familiar old Christian terminology, which has
largely lost the freshness and the power that it once had. They tell us
that these incandescent burners, that we are using nowadays, are very much
more bright when they are first fixed than after the mantle gets a little
worn. So it is with the terminology of Christianity. It needs to be
re-stated, not in such a way as to take the pith out of it, which is what
a great deal of the modern craze for re-statement means, but in such a way
as to brighten it up again, and to invest it with something of the
'celestial light' with which it was 'apparelled' when it first came. Now
that word 'grace,' I have no doubt, sounds to you hard, theological,
remote. But what does it mean? It gathers into one burning point the whole
of the rays of that conception of God, with which it is the glory of
Christianity to have flooded and drenched the world. It tells us that at
the heart of the universe there is a heart; that God is Love, that that
love is the motive-spring of His activity, that it comes and bends over
the lowliest with a smile of amity on its lips, with healing and help in
its hands, with forgiveness for all sins against itself, with boundless
wealth for the poorest, and that the wealth of His self-communicating love
is the measure of the wealth that each of us may possess.
God gives' according to the riches
of His grace.' You do not expect a millionaire to give half-a-crow,, to a
subscription fund; and God gives royally, divinely, measuring His
bestowments by the abundance of His treasures, and handing over with an
open palm large gifts of coined money, because there are infinite Chests
of uncirculated bullion in the deep storehouses. 'How great is Thy
goodness which Thou hast manifested before the sons of men for them that
fear Thee. How much greater is Thy goodness which Thou hast laid up in
store.' But whilst He gives all, the question comes to be: What do I
receive? The measure of His gift is His measureless grace; the measure of
my reception is my - alas! easily-measured faith. What about the unearned
increment? What about the unrealized wealth? Too many of us are like some
man who has a great estate in another land. He knows nothing about it, and
is living in grimy poverty in a back street, For you have all God's riches
waiting for you, and 'the potentiality of wealth beyond the dreams of
avarice' at your beck and call, and yet you are but poorly realizing your
possible riches. Alas, that when we might have so much we do have so
little. 'According to the riches of His grace' He gives. But another
'according to' comes in. 'According to thy faith be it unto thee.' So we
have to take these two measures together, and the working limit of our
possession of God's riches comes out of the combination of them both.
Let me remind you, before I pass on,
of what I have already suggested is but another phase of this same
thought. Paul says in this epistle that God gives not only 'according to
the riches of His grace,' but 'according to the riches of His glory,' and
that the latter expression is substantially identical with the former, is
plain from the combination of the two in an earlier verse of this chapter:
'To the praise of the glory of His grace.' Thus we come to the blessed
thought that the glory of God is essentially the revelation of that
stooping, pitying, pardoning, enriching love. Not in the physical
attributes, not in the characteristics of the divine nature which part Him
off from men, and make Him remote, both from their conceptions and their
affections, but in the love that bends to them is the true glory of God.
All these other things are but the fringes; the centre of glory is the
Love, which is the mightiest and the divinest thing in the Might Divine.
The sunshine is far stronger than the lightning, and there is more force
developed in the rain than in an earthquake. That truth is what
Christianity has made the common possession of the world. It has thereby
broken the chains of dread; it has bridged over the infinite distance. It
has given us a God that can love and be loved, can stoop and can lift, can
pardon and can purify. 'According to the good pleasure of His goodness,' -
there is the foundation of our salvation. 'According to the riches of His
grace,' - there is the measure of our salvation.
II. We have another form of the
same measure in another set of verses which speak of the present working
of God's power.
The Apostle speaks in regard to his
own apostolic commission of its being given 'according to the working
of His power'; and he speaks of all Christian men as receiving gifts
'according to the power that worketh in us.' So there we have a standard
that comes, at it were, a little closer to ourselves. We do not need to
travel up into the dim abysses above, or think of the sanctities and the
secrecies of that divine heart in the light which is inaccessible, but we
have the measure in ourselves.
The standards of length are kept at
Greenwich, the standards of capacity are kept in the Tower; but there are
local standards distributed throughout the land to which men may go and
have their measures corrected. And so besides all these lofty thoughts
about the grace and the glory which measures His gift, we can turn within,
if we are Christian people, and say,
'According to the
power that worketh in us.'
Ah, brethren! there are few things
that we want more than to revive and deepen the conviction that in every
Christian man, by virtue of his faith, and in proportion to his faith,
there is in operation an actual, superhuman, divine power molding his
nature, guiding, quietening, ennobling, lifting, confirming, and
hallow-ins and shaping him into conformity with Jesus Christ. I would that
we all believed not as a dogma, but realised as a personal experience,
that irrefragable truth, 'Know ye not that the Spirit of Christ dwelleth
in you, except ye be reprobate?' The life of self is evil; the life of
Christ in self is good, and only good. And if you are Christian men, and
in the proportion, as I have said, in which you are living by faith, you
have working in your spirits the very Spirit of Christ Himself.
And that power is the measure of
your possibilities. Obviously 'the power that worketh in us' is able to do
a great deal more than it is doing in any of us. And so with deep
significance the Apostle, side by side with his adducing of this power as
being the measure of our possible attainments, speaks about God am being
'able to do for us, exceeding abundantly above all that we can ask or
think.' 'The power that works in us' transcends in its possibilities our
present experience, it transcends our conceptions, it transcends our
desires. It is able to do everything; it actually does - well, you know
what it does in you. And the responsibility of hampering and hindering
that power from working out its only adequately corresponding results lies
at our own doors. 'A rushing, mighty wind' - yes; and in myself a scarcely
perceptible breathing, and often a dead calm, stagnant as in the latitudes
on either side of the Equator, where, for long, dreary days, no freshening
motion in the atmosphere is perceptible. 'A fire?' - yes; then why is my
grate full of grey, cold ashes, and one little spark in the corner? 'A
fountain springing into everlasting life?' - yes; then why in my basin is
there so much scum and ooze, mud and defilement, and so little of the
flashing and brilliant water? 'The power that works in us' is sorely
hindered by the weakness in which it works.
III. In the third place another
form of this measure is stated by the Apostle, 'According to the measure
of the gift of Christ.'
That means, of course, the gift
which Christ bestows. It is substantially the same idea as I have just
been dealing with, only looked at from rather a different point of view.
Therefore, I need not dwell upon its parallelism with what has just Been
occupying our attention, but rather ask you simply to consider one point
in reference to it, and that is that, side by side with the reference to
the gift of Christ as being the measure of our possible attainments, the
Apostle enlarges on the Infinite variety of the shapes which that one gift
takes in different people. 'He gave some apostles, some prophets,' etc.;
one man receiving according to this fashion, and another according to
that, and to each of us the distribution is made 'according to the measure
of the gift of Christ.' That is to say, it takes us all, the collective
goodness and beauty of the whole community of saints, to approximate to
the fulness of that gift, and all are needed in their different types and
forms of excellence, sanctity and beauty, in order to set forth, even
imperfectly, the richness and the manifoldness of His great gift. And so
'we all come' - there is a multiplicity - 'unto the perfect man, the
measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ' - there is a unity in
which the multiplicity inheres.
So try to get a little more of some
different type of excellence than that to which you are naturally
inclined. Seek, and consciously endeavour, to appropriate into your
character uncongenial excellences, and be very charitable in your
judgments of the different types of Christian conformity to Christ our
Lord. The crystals that are set round a light do not quarrel with each
other as to whether green, or yellow, or blue, or red, or violet is the
true colour to reflect. We need all the seven prismatic tints to make the
perfect white light. The gift of Christ is many-sided; try not to be
one-sided in your reception of it.
IV. And now the last form of this measure is 'according to the energy of
the might of His power, which He wrought in Christ when He raised Him from
the dead.'
When we gazed upon the riches of God's grace, they Were high above us,
when we looked upon 'the power that worketh in us,' we saw it working
amidst many hindrances and hamperings, but here there is presented to us
in a concrete example, close beside us, of what God can make of a man when
the man is wholly pliable to His will, and the recipient of His
influences. And so there stands before us the guarantee and the pattern of
immortal life, the Christ whose Manhood died and lives, who is clothed
with a spiritual body, who wields royal authority in the Kingdom of the
Most High And that is the measure of what God can do with me, and wishes
to do with me, if I will let Him. Christ is my pattern, and the measure of
my own possibilities.
To be with Him, where and what He
is, is the only adequate result of the power that works in us, and of the
process that is already begun in us, if we are Christian people. You are
sometimes - there is one eminent example of it in that great Medicean
Chapel at Florence - a statue exquisitely finished in all its limbs, but
one part left in the rough. That is the best that Christian people come to
here. Shall it always be sop Do not the very imperfections prophesy
completion, and is it not certain that the half-finished torso will be
carried to the upper workshop, and be there disengaged from the dead
marble and made to stand out in perfect beauty and fullest completeness?
Christ is the object of our hopes, and no hopes of the Christian life are
adequate to the power that works in us, or to the progress already made,
which do not see in the 'energy of the might of the power' which wrought
in Christ, the example and the guarantee of the exceeding greatness of
'His power which is to usward.'
And now, one last word. Besides all
these passages which have been occupying us, there is another use of this
same phrase in this letter which presents a very solemn and grim contrast.
I can do no better with it than simply read it: 'Ye were dead in
trespasses and sins; wherein in time past ye walked according to the
course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the
spirit that now worketh' - mark the allusion to the other words that we
have been referring to 'in the children of disobedience.' So there you
have the alternative, either 'dead in trespasses and sins,' whilst living
the physical and the intellectual life, or partaking of the life of Him '
who was dead, and is alive for ever more'; either 'walking according to
the course of this world,' which is ' disobedience' and 'wrath,' or
walking 'according to the power that worketh in us'; either 'putting on,'
or rather continuing to wear, 'the old man which is corrupt according to
the lusts which deceive,' or 'putting on the new man, which according to
God is created in righteousness and holiness and truth.' The choice is
before us. May God help us to choose aright!
|
|
GOD'S INHERITANCE
AND OURS
by Alexander Maclaren
'In whom also we have obtained an
inheritance,... the earnest of our inheritance.' - Ephesians 1:11, 14.
A DEWDROP twinkles into green and
gold as the sun-light falls on it. A diamond flashes many colours as its
facets catch the light. So, in this context, the Apostle seems to be
haunted with that thought of 'inheriting' and 'inheritance,' and he recurs
to it several times, but sets it at different angles, and it flashes back
different beauties of radiance. For the words, which I have wrenched from
(heir context in the first of these two verses, are more accurately
rendered, as in the Revised Version, in 'whom also we were made,' not
'have obtained ' - 'an inheritance.' Whose inheritance? God's! The
Christian community is God's possession. Then, in my second text, we have
the converse thought - ' the earnest of our inheritance. What is the
Christian's possession? The same God whose possession is the Christian.
So, then, there is a deep and a wonderful relation between the believing
soul and God, and however different must be the two sides of that
relation, the resemblance is greater than the difference. Surely that is
the deepest, most blessed, and most strength-giving conception of the
Christian life. Other notions of it lay stress, and that rightly, upon
certain correspondence between us and God. My faith corresponds to His
faithfulness and veracity. My obedience corresponds to His authority. My
weakness lays hold on His strength. My emptiness is replenished by His
fulness. But here we rise above the region of correspondences into that of
similarity. In these other aspects the convexity fits the concavity; in
this aspect the two hemispheres go together and make the complete globe.
We possess God, and God possesses us, and it is the same set of facts
which are set forth in the two thoughts, 'We were made an inheritance,...
the earnest of our inheritance.'
I. Now, then, let me ask you to look
first at this mutual possession.
We possess God; God possesses us.
What does that mean? Well, it means plainly and chiefly this, a mutual
love. For we all know - and many of us thankfully can bear witness to the
truth of it in our earthly relationships, - that the one way by which a
human spirit can possess a spirit is by the sweet mutual love which
abolishes 'mine' and 'thine,' and all but abolishes 'me' and 'thee.' And
so God sets little store by the ownership which depends on divinity and
creation, though, of course, that relation brings with it a duty. As the
old psalm has it,' It is He that hath made us, and we are His - still,
such a relationship as this, based upon the connection that subsists
between the Maker and the work of His hands, is so purely external, and a
harsh, and superficial, that God does not reckon it to be a possession at
all.
You perhaps remember how, in the
great word which underlies all these New Testament conceptions of God's
ownership of His people, viz. the charter that constituted Israel into a
nation, He said, 'Ye shall be unto Me a people for a possession above all
nations, for all the earth is Mine.' And yet, though that ownership and
mastership extended over everything that His hands had made, He - if I
might so say - contemned it, and relegated it to a secondary position, and
told the people that His heart hungered for something deeper, more real,
more vital than such a possession, and that therefore, just because all
the earth was His, and that was not enough to satisfy His heart, He took
them and made them a peculiar treasure above all nations. We have, then,
to think of that great Divine Love which possesses us when He loves us,
and when we love Him.
But remember that of this sweet
commerce and reverberation of love which constitutes possession, the
origination must be in His heart. 'We love Him because He first loved us.'
The mirrors are set all round the great hall, but their surfaces are cold
and lifeless until the great candelabrum in the centre is lit, and then,
from every polished sheet there flashes back an echoing, answering light,
and they repeat and repeat, until you scarce can tell which is the
original and which is the reflection. But quench the centre, light, and
the daughter-radiances vanish into darkness. The love on either side is on
one side spontaneous and underived, and on the other side is secondary and
evoked, but it is love on both sides. His possession of us is, as it were,
the upper side, and our possession of Him is, as it were, the underside of
the one golden bond. It matters not whether you look at the stream with
your face to its source or with your face to its mouth, the silvery plain
is the same; and the deepest tie that knits men to God is the same as the
tie that knits God to men. There is mutual possession because there is
mutual love.
Then again, in this same thought of
mutual possession there lies a mutual surrender. For to give is the
life-breath of all true love, and there is nothing which the loving heart
more desires than to be able to pour itself out -much rather than any
subordinate gifts - on its object. But that, if it is one-sided, is
misery, and only when it is reciprocal, is it blessed. God gives Himself
to us, as we know, most chiefly in that unspeakable gift of His Son, and
we possess Him by virtue of His self-communication which depends upon His
love. And then we possess Him, and He possesses us, not less by the
answering surrender of ourselves, which is the expression of our love. No
love subsists if it is only recipient; no love subsists if it is only
communicated. Exports and imports must both be realised in this sweet
commerce, and we enrich ourselves far more by what we give to the Beloved
than by what we keep for ourselves.
The last, the hardest thing to
surrender, is our own wills. To give them up by constraint is slavery that
degrades. To give them up because we love is a sacrifice which sanctifies,
even in the lowest reaches of daily life. And the love that knits us to
God is not invested with all its blessed possession of Him, until it has
surrendered its will, and said, 'Not as I will, but as Thou wilt.' The
traveller in the old fable gathered his cloak around him all the more
closely, and held it the more tightly, because of the tempest that blew,
but when the warm sunbeams fell be dropped it. He that would coerce my
will, stiffens it into rebellion; but when a beloved one says, 'Though I
might be much bold to enjoin thee, yet for love's sake I rather beseech,'
then yielding is blessedness, and the giving ourselves away is the finding
of God and ourselves.
I need not touch, in more than a
word, upon another aspect of this mutual possession, brought into view
lovingly in many parts of Scripture, and that is that there is in it not
only mutual love and mutual surrender, but mutual indwelling. 'He that
dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him.'
Jesus Christ has said the same thing
to us, 'I am the Vine, ye are the branches. He that abideth in Me bringeth
forth much fruit.' We dwell in God, possessing Him; He dwells in us,
possessing us. We dwell in God, being possessed by Him. He dwells in us,
being possessed by us. And He moves in the heart that loves, as the Master
walking through His house, as the divinity is present in the temple, and
as the soul permeates the body, and is sight in the eye and colour in the
cheek, and force in the arm, and deftness in the finger, and swiftness in
the foot. So the indwelling God breathes through all the capacities, and
all the desires, and all the needs of the soul which He inhabits, and
makes them all blessed. The very same set of facts - the presence of a
divine life in the life of the believing spirit - may either be looked at
from the lower end, and then they are that I possess God, and find in Him
the nutriment and the stimulus for all my being, or may be looked at from
the upper end, that He possesses me and finds in me capacities and a
nature the emptiness of which He fills, and organs which He uses. In both
eases mutual love, mutual surrender, mutual inhabitation, make up God's
possession of me and my possession of God.
II. And now let me point you in a
very few words to some of the plain, practical issues of this mutual
possession. God's possession of us demands our consecration. 'Ye are not
your own, ye are bought with a price; therefore, to live for self is to
fly in the face of the very purpose of Christ's mission and of God's
communication of Himself to us. There are slaves who run away from their
masters and 'deny the Lord that bought them.' We do that whenever, being
God's slaves, we set up anything else than His will as our law, or
anything else than His glory as the aim of our lives. To live for self is
to die, to die to self is to live. And the solemn obligations of that most
blessed possession by God of us are as solemn as the possession is
blessed, and can only be discharged when we turn to Him, and yield the
whole control of our nature to His merciful hand, believing that He has
not only the right to dispose of us, but that His disposition of us will
always coincide with our sanest conceptions of good, and our wisest
desires for happiness. Yield yourselves to God, for He has yielded Himself
to you, and in the yielding we realise our largest and most blessed
possession. It is a good bargain to give myself and to get God.
God's possession of us not only
demands consecration, but it ensures safety. Remember that great word, 'No
man is able' to pluck them out of My Father's hand' God is not a careless
owner who leaves His treasures to be blown by every wind, or filched by
every petty robber. He is not like the king of some decrepit monarchy,
slices of whose territory his neigh-hours are for ever paring off and
annexing. What God has God preserves. 'He is able to keep that which I
have committed unto Him against that day.' 'They are Mine, saith the Lord,
My jewels in the day which I make.' But our security depends on our
consecration. 'No man is able to pluck them out of My Father's hand.' No!
But you can wriggle yourself out of your Father's hand, if you will. And
the security avails only so long as you realise that you belong to God,
and are living not for yourself.
Possessing God we are rich. There is
nothing that is truly our wealth which remains outside of us, and can be
separated from us. 'Shrouds have no pockets,' says the Spanish proverb.
'His glory shall not descend after him,'
says the grim psalm. But if God possesses me He is not going to let His
treasures be lost in the grave. And if I possess Him then I shall pass
through death as a beam of light does through some denser medium - a
little refracted indeed, but not broken up; and I shall carry with me all
my wealth to begin another world with. And that is more than you can do
with the money that you make here. If you have God, you have the capital
to commence a new condition of things beyond the grave.
And so that mutual possession is the
real pledge of immortal life, for nothing can be more incredible than that
a soul which has risen to have God for its very own, and has bowed itself
to accept God's ownership of it, can be affected by such a transient and
physical incident as what we call death. We rise to the assurance of
immortality because we have an inheritance which is God Himself. And in
that inexhaustible Inheritance there lies the guarantee that we shall live
while He lives, because He lives, and until we have incorporated into our
lives all the majesty and the purity and the wisdom and the power that
belong to us because they are God's.
But we have to notice the two words
that lie at the beginning of our first text - 'In whom we were made an
inheritance.' That opens up the whole question of the means by which this
mutual possession becomes possible for us men. Jesus Christ has died. That
breaks the bondage under which the whole world is held. For the true
slavery which interferes with the free service and the full possession of
God is the slavery of self and sin. Jesus Christ has died. 'If the Son
make you free ye shall be free indeed.' That great sacrifice not only
'breaks the power of cancelled sin,' but it also moves the heart, in the
measure in which we truly accept it, to the love and the surrender which
make the mutual possession of which we have been speaking. And so it is in
Him that we become an Inheritance, that God comes to His rights in regard
to each of us. And it is in Him that we, trusting the Son, have the
inheritance for ours, and 'are heirs with God, and joint heirs with
Christ.' So, dear friends, if we would 'be meet for the inheritance of the
saints in light,' we must unite ourselves to that Lord by faith, and
through Him and faith in Him, we shall receive 'the remission of sins and
inheritance among all them that are sanctified.'
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THE
EARNEST AND THE INHERITANCE
'The earnest of our inheritance,
until the redemption of the purchased possession.' - Ephesians 1:14.
I HAVE dealt with a portion of this
verse in conjunction with the fragment of another in this chapter. I tried
to show you how much the idea of the mutual possession of God by the
believing soul, and of the believing soul by God, was present to the
Apostle's thoughts in this context. These two ideas are brought into close
juxtaposition in the verse before us, for, as you will see if you use the
Revised Version, the latter clause is there rightly paraphrased by the
addition of a supplement, and reads 'until the redemption of God's own
possession.' So that in the first clause we have 'our inheritance,' and in
the second we have 'God's possession.' This double idea, however, has
appended to it in this verse some very striking and important thoughts.
The possession of both sides is regarded as incomplete, for what we have
is the 'earnest' of the 'inheritance,' and 'God's own possession' has yet
to be 'redeemed,' in the fullest sense of that word, at some point in the
future. An 'earnest' is a fraction of an inheritance, or of a sum
hereafter to be paid, and is the guarantee and pledge that the whole shall
one day be handed over to the man who has received the foretaste of it in
the 'earnest.' The soldier's shilling, the ploughman's 'aries,' the clod
of earth and tuft of grass which, in some forms of transfer, were handed
over to the purchaser, were all the guarantee that the rest was going to
come. So the great future is sealed to us by the small present and the
experiences of the Christian life today, imperfect, fragmentary, defective
as they are, are the best prophecy and the most glorious pledge of that
great tomorrow. The same law of continuity which, in application to our
characters, and our work, and our daily life, makes 'to-morrow as this
day, and much more abundant,' in its application to the future life makes
the life here its parent, and the life yonder the prolongation and the
raising to its highest power, of what is the main though often impeded
tendency and direction of the present. The earnest of the 'inheritance' is
the pledge until the full redemption of 'God's own possession.' I wish,
then, to draw attention to these additional thoughts which are here
attached to the main idea with which we were dealing in the last sermon.
I. And I ask you to look with me, first, at the incompleteness of the
present possession.
I tried to show in my last sermon
how those great thoughts of God's having us, and our having God, rested
upon the three ideas of mutual love, mutual communication, and mutual
indwelling. On His side the love, the impartation, the indwelling, are all
perfect. On our side they are incomplete, broken, defective; and,
therefore, the incompleteness on our side hinders both God's possession of
us, and our possession of Him; so that we have but the' earnest' and not
the 'inheritance.' That is to say, the ownership may be perfect in idea,
but in realisation it is imperfect.
And then, if we turn to the word in
the other clause, 'the redemption of the purchased possession,' that
suggests the incompleteness with which God as yet owns us. For though the
initial act of redeeming is complete, yet redemption is a process, and not
an act. And we 'are having' it, as the Apostle says in another place very
emphatically, in continual and growing experience. The estate has been
acquired, but ham not yet been fully subdued. For there are tribes in the
jungles and in the hills who still hold out against the reign of Him who
has won it for Himself. And so seeing that the redemption in its fulness
is relegated to some point in the future, towards which we are
progressively approximating, and seeing that the best that can be said
about the Christian experience here is that we have an 'earnest of the
inheritance,' we must recognise the incompleteness to-day of our
possession of God, and of God's possession of us.
That is a matter of experience. We
know that only too well. 'I have God' - have I? I have a drop at the
bottom of a too often unsteadily held and spilling cup, and the great
ocean rolls unfathomable and boundless at my feet. How partial, how
fragmentary, how clouded with doubts and blank ignorance, how
intermittent, and, alas ! rare, is our knowledge of Him. We sometimes go
down our streets between tall houses, walking in their shadow, and now and
then there is a cross street down which a blaze of sunshine comes, and
when we reach it, and the houses fall back, we see the blue beyond. But we
go on, and we are in the shadow again. And so our earthly lives are
passed, to a large extent, beneath the shade of the grimy buildings that
we ourselves have put up, and which shut out heaven from us, and only now
and then a slanting beam comes through some opening, and carries wistful
thoughts and longings into the Empyrean beyond. And how feeble our faith,
and how little of His power comes into our hearts, and how little of the
joy of the Lord is realised in our daily experience we all know, and it is
sometimes good for us to force ourselves to feel it is but an 'earnest' of
the 'inheritance' that the best of us has.
'God has us.' Has He? Has He my
will, which submits itself, and finds joy in submitting itself, to Him?
How many competitors are there for my love which come in front of Him, and
we 'cannot get at Him for the press'! How many other motives are dominant
in our lives, and how often we wrench ourselves away from our submission
to Him, and try to set up a little dominion of our own, and say, 'Our
lives are ours; who is lord over us?' Oh, brethren! we have God if we are
Christians at all, and God has us. But alas! surely all honest experience
tells us that there are awful gaps in the circle, and that our possession
of Him, and His possession of us, are woefully incomplete.
Now, let me remind you that this
incompleteness is mainly our own fault. Of course, I know that for the
absolute completeness, either of my possession of God or of His of me, I
must pass from out this world, and enter upon another stage and manner of
being. But it is not being in the flesh, but it is being dominated by the
flesh, that is the reason for the incompleteness of our mutual possession.
And it is not being in the world, but it is being seduced and tyrannized
over by the influx of worldly desires and thoughts, surging into our
hearts, that drives God from out of our hearts, and draws us away from the
sweet security of being possessed by, and living close to, Him. Death does
a great deal for a man in advancing him in the scale of being, and in
changing the centre of gravity, as it were, of this life. But there is no
reason to believe that anything in death, or beyond it, will so alter the
set and direction of his soul as that it will lead him into that
possession of God, and being possessed by Him, which he has not here.
There are many of us who, if we were to die this instant, would no more
have God for ours, or belong to God, than we do now. It is our fault if
the circle is broken into so many segments, if the moments of mutual love,
communion, and indwelling are so rare and interrupted in our lives. The
incompleteness which is due to our earthly condition is nothing as
compared with the incompleteness which is due to our own sin.
But this incompleteness is one which
may be progressively diminished, and we may be tending moment by moment,
and year by year, nearer and nearer, and ever nearer, to the unreachable
ideal of the entire possession of, and being possessed by, our God. There
is a continual process of redemption of 'God's own possession' going on if
a Christian man is true to himself and to that Divine Spirit which is the
'earnest' of the 'inheritance.' Mark that in my text, as it stands in our
Bibles, and reads 'until the redemption,' there seems to be merely a
pointing onwards to a future epoch, but that, in the more accurate
rendering which you will find in the Revised Version, instead of 'until'
we have 'unto, ' and that teaches us that the Divine Spirit, which in one
aspect is the 'earnest of the inheritance,' is also operating upon men's
hearts and minds so as to bring about the gradual completion of the
process of redemption.
So, dear brethren, seeing that by
our own faults the possession is incomplete, and seeing that in the
incompleteness there is given to each of us, if we rightly use it, a
mighty power which is working ever towards the completion, it becomes us
day by day to draw into our spirits more and more of that divine
influence, and to let it work more fully upon the sins and faults which,
far more than the body of flesh, or the connection with the world which it
brings about, are the reasons for the incompleteness of the possession. We
have, if we are wise, the task to discharge of dairy enclosing, so to
speak, more and more of the broad land which is all given over to us for
our inheritance, but of which only so much as we fence in and cultivate,
and make our own, is our own.
The incompleteness is progressively
completed, and it is our work as much as God's work to complete it. For
though in our text that redemption is conceived of as a divine act, it is
not an act in which we are but passive. The air goes into the lungs, and
that oxygenates the blood, but the lung has to inflate if the air is to
penetrate all its vesicles. And so the Spirit which seals us unto the
redemption of the possession has to be received, held, diffused
throughout, and utilised by our own effort.
II. Now, secondly, notice the
certainty of the completion of the incompleteness.
As I have already said, the clod of
earth and the handful of grass, the servant's wages, the soldier's
shilling, are all guarantees that the whole of the inheritance or of the
pay will be forthcoming in due time. And so there emerges from this
consideration of the Divine Spirit as the 'earnest,' the thought that the
present experiences of a Christian soul are the surest proofs, and the
irrefragable guarantees, of that perfect future. We ask for proofs of a
future life. They may be very useful in certain states of mind, and to
certain phases of opinion, but as it seems to me, far deeper than the
region of logical understanding, and far more conclusive than anything
that can be cast into the form of a syllogism, is the experience of a sour
which knows that God is its, and that it is God's. 'I think, therefore, I
am,' said the philosopher. 'I have God; therefore I shall always be,' says
the Christian. Whilst that evidence is available only for himself, it is
absolutely conclusive for himself. And the fact that it does spring in the
hearts which are purest, because nearest God, is no small matter to be
considered by men who may be groping for proofs of a life to come. If the
selected moments of the purest devotion here on earth bring with them
inevitably the confidence of the unending continuance of that communion,
then those who do not believe in that future have to account for the fact
as best they may. As for us who do know, though brokenly, and by reason of
our own faults very imperfectly, what it is to have God, and be had by
Him, we do not need to travel out to dim and doubtful analogies, nor do we
even depend entirely upon the fact of a risen Christ ascended to the
heavens, and living evermore, but we can say, 'I am God's; God is mine,
and death has no power over such a mutual possession.'
The very incompleteness adds
strength to the assurance, for the facts of the Christian life are such as
to demand, both by its greatness and by its littleness, by its loftiness
and by its lapses into lowliness, by the floodtide of devotion that
sometimes sweeps rejoicingly over the mud-shoals and by the ebb that
sometimes leaves them all black and festering, a future life wherein what
was manifestly meant to be, and capable of being, dominant, supreme, but
was hampered and hindered here, shall reach its full development, and
where the plant that was dwarfed in this alien soil, transplanted into
that higher house, shall blossom and immortal fruits. The new moon has a
ragged edge, and each of the protrusions and concavities are the prophecy
of the perfect orb which shall ere long fill the night with calm light
from its silvery shield. The incompleteness prophesies completion.
And if the incompleteness is so
blessed, what will the completeness be? A shilling to a million pounds,
Knowledge which is partial and intermittent, like the twilight, as
contrasted with the blaze of noonday, Joy like winter sunshine as compared
with the warmth and heat of the midday sun at the zenith on the Equator.
The 'earnest' of the 'inheritance' is wealth; the inheritance itself shall
be unaccountable treasure.
III. And so, lastly, a word about
the completion of the possession.
The 'earnest' is always of the same nature as, and a part of the
'inheritance.' Therefore, since the Holy Spirit is the earnest, the
conclusion is plain, that the inheritance is nothing less than God
Himself. Heaven is to possess God, and to be possessed by Him. That is the
highest conception that we can form of that future life. And it is sorely
to be lamented that subsidiary conceptions, which are all useful in their
subordinate places, have, by popular Christianity, been far too much
elevated into being the central blessedness of that future heaven. It is
all right that we should cast the things which it is 'impossible for men
to utter' into the shape of symbols which may a little relieve the
necessary inarticulateness; but golden streets, and crystal pavements, and
white robes, and golden palms, and all such representations, are but the
dimmest shadows of that which they intend to express, and do often, as is
the vice of all symbols, obscure. We can only conceive of a condition of
which we have had no experience, by the two ways of symbolism and of
negation. We can say, 'There shall be no night there; there shall be no
curse there; they need no candle, neither light of the sun; they rest not
day nor night; there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying,
neither shall there be any more pain, for the former things are passed
away.' But all these negations, like their sister symbols, are but surface
work, and we have to go deeper than all of them.
But to possess God, and to be
possessed by Him, and in either ease fully, perfectly in degree,
progressively in measure, eternal in duration, is the Heaven of heaven.
If that is the true conception of
the inheritance, then it follows indubitably that such a Heaven is not for
everybody. God would fain have us all for His there, as He would fain have
each of us here and now, but it may not be. There are creatures which live
beneath stones, and if you turn their coverings up, and let light fall on
them, it kills them. And there are men who have refused to belong to God
here, and refused to claim their portion in Him, and such cannot possess
that true Heaven which is God Himself. Then, if its possession is not a
mere matter of divine volition, giving a man what he is not capable of
receiving, it plainly follows that the preparation must begin now and here
by the incomplete possession of which my text is discoursing. And the way
of such preparation is plain. The context says: 'In whom, after that ye
believed, ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise.' Faith in Jesus
Christ, and trust in Him and His work as my forgiveness, my acceptance, my
changed nature and heart - is the condition of being ' sealed' with that
Spirit whose sealing of us is the condition of our love, our surrender,
and mutual indwelling, which our possession of God and being possessed by
Him, and are the condition of our future complete possession of the
'inheritance.' We must begin with faith in Christ. Then comes the sealing,
then comes the earnest, then comes the growing redemption, and in due time
shall come the fulness of-the possession. 'Believe on the Lord Jesus
Christ' if thou wouldst have the earnest, whilst thou dost tabernacle in
tents in the wilderness of Time, and if thou wouldst have the inheritance
when thou crossest the flood into the goodly land.
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THE
HOPE OF THE CALLING
by Alexander Maclaren
'That ye may know what is the hope
of His calling.' - Ephesians 1:18.
A MAN'S prayers for others are a
very fair thermometer of his own religious condition. What he asks for
them will largely indicate what he thinks best for himself; and how he
asks it will show the firmness of his own faith and the fervour of his own
feeling. There is nothing colder than the intercession of a cold
Christian; and, on the other hand, in no part of the fervid Apostle Paul's
writings do his words come more winged and fast, or his spirit glow with
greater fervour of affection and holy desire than in his petitions for his
friends.
In that great prayer, of which my
text forms a part, we have his response to the good news that had reached
him of the steadfastness in faith and abundance in love of these Ephesian
Christians. As the best expression of his glad love he asks for them the
knowledge of three things, of which my text is the first, and the other
two are the 'riches of the glory of the inheritance' and ' the exceeding
greatness of God's power.'
Now if we take the 'hope' in my
text, as is often done, as meaning the thing hoped for, there seems to Be
but a shadowy difference Between the first and the second of these
subjects of the apostolic petition. Whereas, if we take it as meaning, not
the object on which the emotion is fixed, But the emotion itself, then all
the three stand in a natural gradation and connection. We have, first, the
Christian emotion; then the object upon which it is fixed; 'the glory of
the inheritance'; then the power By which the latter is Brought and the
former is realised. We shall consider the second and third of these
petitions in following sermons. For the present I confine myself to this
first, the Apostle's great desire for Christians who had already made
considerable progress in the Christian life,' that they may know,' By
experiencing it, 'what is the hope of His calling.'
I. Now the first thought that
these words suggest to me is this, that the Christian hope is based upon
the facts of Christian experience.
What does the Apostle mean by naming
it 'the hope of his calling'? He means this, that the great act of the
divine mercy revealed to us in the Gospel, by which God summons and
invites men to Himself, will naturally produce in those who have yielded
to it a hope of immortal and perfect life.
Because God has called men, therefore the man who has yielded to the call
may legitimately, and must, if he is to do his duty, cherish such a hope.
It is clear enough that this is so, inasmuch as, unless there be a heaven
of completeness for us who have yielded to the summons and obeyed the
invitation of God in His Gospel, His whole procedure is enigmatical and
bewildering. The fact of the call is inexplicable; the cost of it is no
less so. It was not worth while for God to make the world unless with
respect to another which was to follow. It is still less worth His while
to redeem the world if the results of that redemption, as they are
exhibited here and now, and as they are capable of being exhibited in this
present condition of things, are all that are to flow from it. It was not
worth Christ's while to die, it was not worth God's while to send His Son,
there was no sense or consistency in that great voice that echoes from
heaven, calling us to love and serve Him, unless, beyond the jangling
contradictions, and imperfect attainments, and foiled aspirations, and
fragmentary faith, and broken services of earth, there be a region of
completeness where all that was tendency here shall have become effect;
and all that was but in germ here, and sorely frostbitten by the ungenial
climate, and shrivelled by the foul vapours in the atmosphere, shall
blossom and burgeon into eternal life. The Christian life, as it is today,
in its attainments and imperfections, is at once the witness of the
reality of the power that has produced it, and clamantly calls for a
sphere and environment in which that power shall be able to produce the
effects which it is capable of producing.
God is 'not a man that He should He,
nor the son of man that He should repent.' Men begin grand designs which
never get further than the paper that they are drawn on; or they build a
porch, and then they are bankrupt, or change their minds, or die, and the
palace remains unrealised, and all that pass by mock and say, 'This man
began to build and was not able to finish.' But God's designs are certain
of accomplishment. Unless we are to be reduced to a state of utter
intellectual bewilderment and confusion, and forgo our belief in His
veracity and resources to execute His designs, the design that lies in the
calling must needs lead on to the realm of perfectness. If we consider the
agent by which it is effected, even the risen Christ; if we consider the
cost at which it was accomplished, even the death on the Cross, the
mission of His Son, and His assumption of the limitations of an incarnate
life; if we consider the manifest potencies of the power that He has
brought into operation in the present Christian life; and if we consider,
side by side with these, the stark, staring contradictions and as manifest
inevitable limitations of the effects of that power, His calling carries
in its depths the assurance that what He means shall be done, that Jesus
Christ has not died in vain, that He has not ascended to fill a solitary
throne, but is the Firstfruits of a great harvest; and that we shall one
day be all that it is in the gospel of our salvation to make us,
unhindered by the limitations and unthwarted by the antagonisms of this
poor human life of ours. Unless there be a heaven in which all desires
shall be satisfied, all evils removed, all good perfected, all ragged
trees made symmetrical and full-grown, and all souls that love Him radiant
with His own perfect image, then the light that seemed a light from heaven
is the most delusive of all the marsh-fires of earth, and nothing in the
illusions of sense or of men's cunning is so cruel or so tragic as the
calling that seemed to be the voice of God, and summoned us to a heaven
which was only a dream.
II. And so, secondly, notice how
this hope of our text is in some sense the very topstone of the Christian
Paul has heard, concerning these people in Ephesus, of their faith and
love.
And because he has heard of these,
therefore he brings this prayer. These two - the faith which apprehends
the manifestation of God in Jesus Christ, and the love which that faith
produces in the heart that accepts the revelation of the infinite love -
are crowned by, and are imperfect without, and naturally lead on to the
brightness of this great hope, Faith - the reliance of the spirit upon the
veracity of the revealing God - gives hope its contents; for the Christian
hope is not spun out of your own imaginations, nor is it the mere making
objective in a future life of the unfulfilled desires of this
disappointing present, but it is the recognition by the trusting spirit of
the great and starry truths that are flashed upon it by the Word of God.
Faith draws back the curtain, and Hope gazes into the supernal abysses. My
hope, if it be anything else than the veriest will-o'-the-wisp and
delusion, is the answer of my heart to the revealed truth of God.
Similarly the love which flows from
faith not only necessarily leads on to the expectation of union being
perfected with the object of its warm affection, but also so works upon
the heart and character as that the false and seducing loves which draw
away, like some sluice upon a river, the current of life from its true
channel, are all sanctified and no more hinder hope. Loving, we hope for
that which, unless we loved, would not draw desires nor yield foretastes
of sweetness which, like perfumed oil, feed the pure flame of hope.
The triad of Christian graces is
completed by Hope. Without her fair presence something is wanting to the
completeness of her elder sister. The great Campenile at Florence, though
it be inlaid with glowing 'marbles, and fair sculptures, and perfect in
its beauty, wants the gilded, skyward-pointing pinnacle of its topmost
pyramid; and so it stands incomplete. And thus faith and love need for
their crowning and completion the topmost grace that looks up to the sky,
and is sure of a mansion there.
Brethren, our Christianity is
wofully imperfect unless faith and love find their acres, their
outstretching completion, in this Christian hope. Do you seek to complete
your faith .and love by a living hope full of immortality?
III. Thirdly, notice how this
hope is an all-important element in the Christian life.
The Apostle asks for it as the best
thing that can befall these Ephesian Christians, as the one thing that
they need to make them strong and good and blessed.
There are many other aspects of
desire for them Which appear. in other parts of this letter. But here all
Christian progress is regarded as being held in solution and included in
vigorous hope.
Why is the activity of hope thus
important for Christian life? Because it stimulates effort, calms sorrows,
takes the fascination out of temptations, supplies a new aim for life and
a new measure for the things of time and sense.
If we lived, as we ought to live, in
the habitual apprehension of the great future awaiting all real
Christians, would it not change the whole aspect of life? The world is
very big when it is looked at from any point upon its surface; but suppose
it could be looked at from the central sun, how large would it appear
then? We can shift our station in like fashion, and then we get the true
measure at once of the insignificance and of the greatness of life. This
world means nothing worthy, except as an introduction to another. Not that
thereby there will follow in any wise man contempt for the present, for
the very same reference to the future which dwarfs the greatnesses and
dwindles the sorrows, and almost extinguishes the dazzling lights of this
present, does also lift it to its true significance and importance. It is
the vestibule of that future, and that future is conditioned throughout by
the results of the few years that we live here. An apprenticeship may be a
very poor matter, looked at in itself; and the boy may say. What is the
use of my working at all these trivial things? but,since it is
apprenticeship, it is worth while to attend to every trifle in its course,
for attention to them will affect the standing of the man all his days.
Here and now we are getting ready for the great workshop yonder; learning
the trick of the tools, and how to use our fingers and our powers, and,
when the schooling is done, we shall be set to nobler work, and receive
ample wages for the years here. Because that great 'tomorrow will be as
this day' of earthly life, 'and much more abundant,' therefore it is no
trifle to work amongst the trifles; and nothing is small which may tell on
our condition yonder. The least deflection from the straight line, however
acute may be the angle which the divergent lines enclose at the starting,
and however small may seem to be the deviation from parallelism, will, if
prolonged to infinity, have room between the two for all the stars and the
distance between them will be that the one in heaven and the other is in
hell. And so it a great thing to live amongst the little things, and life
gains its true significance when we dwarf and magnify it by linking it
with the world to come.
If we only kept that hope bright
before us, how little discomforts and sorrows and troubles would matter!
Life would become 'a solemn scorn of ills.' It does not matter much what
kind of cabin accommodation we have if we are only going a short voyage;
the main thing is to make the port. If we, as Christian people, cherish,
as we ought to do, this great hope, then we shall be able to control, and
not, to despise but to exalt this fleeting and transient scene, because it
is linked inseparably with the life that is to come.
IV. Lastly, this hope needs
enlightened eyes.
The Apostle prays that God may give
to these Ephesians 'the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge
of Him,' and then he adds, as the result of that gift, the desire that the
Ephesian believers may have 'the eyes of their hearts enlightened.' That
is a remarkable expression. It does not mean, as an English reader might
suppose it to mean, that the affections are the agents by which this
knowledge reaches us; but 'heart' is here used, as it often is in
Scripture, as a general expression for the whole inward life, and all that
the Apostle means is that, by the gift of the Divine Spirit of wisdom, a
man's inner nature may be so touched as to be capable of perceiving and
grasping the 'hope of the calling.'
Observe, too, the language, 'that ye may know the hope.' How can you know
a hope? How do you know any kind of feeling? By having it. The only way of
knowing what is the hope is to hope, and this is only possible by dint of
these eyes of the understanding being enlightened. For our inward nature,
as we have it, and as we use it, without the touch of that Divine Spirit,
is so engrossed with this present that the far-off blessedness to which my
text refers has no chance of entering there. No man can look at something
beside him with one eye, and at something half a mile off with the other.
You have to focus the eye according to the object; and he who is gazing
upon the near is thereby made blind to that which is afar off. If we go
crawling along the low levels with our eyes upon the dust, then of course
we cannot see the crown above.
We need more than the historical
revelation of the light in order to enlighten the inward nature. There is
many a man here now who knows all about the immortality that is brought to
light by Jesus Christ just as well as the Christian man whose soul is full
of the hope of it, and who yet, for all his knowledge, does not know the
hope, because he has not felt it. You have to get further than to the
acceptance intellectually of the historical facts of a risen and ascended
Saviour before there can be, in your heart, any vital hope of immortality.
The inward eye must be cleared and strengthened, cross lights must be shut
out so that we may direct the single eye of our hearts towards the great
objects which alone are worthy of its fixed contemplation. And we cannot
do that without a divine help, that Spirit of wisdom which will fill our
hearts if we ask for it, which will fix our affections, which will clear
our eyesight, which withdraw it from seeing vanity as well as give it
reality to see.
But we must observe the conditions.
Since this clearness of hope comes not merely from the acceptance as a
truth of the fact of Christ's Resurrection and Ascension, but comes
through the gift of that Divine Spirit, then to have it you must ask for
it. Christian people, do you ask for it? Do you ever pray - I do not mean
in words, but in real desire - that God would help you to keep steadily
before you that great future to which we are all going so fast? If you do
you will get the answer. Seek for that Spirit; use it, and do not resist
its touches. Do not fix your gaze on the world when God is trying to draw
you to fix it upon Himself. Think more about Jesus Christ, more about
God's high calling, live nearer to Him, and try more honestly, more
earnestly, more prayerfully, more habitually, even amidst all the troubles
and difficulties and trivialities of each day, to cultivate that great
faculty of joyful and assured hope.
Surely God did not endue us with the
power of hoping that we might fling it all away on trivial, transient
things. We are all far too short-sighted; our fault is not that we do not
hope, but that we hope for such near things, for such small things, like
the old mariners who had no compass nor sextant, and were obliged to creep
timidly along the coasts, and steer from headland to headland. But we
ought to launch boldly out into mid-ocean, knowing that we have before us
that star that cannot guide us amiss. Do not set your hopes on the things
that perish, for if you do, hopes fulfilled and hopes disappointed will be
equally bitter in your mouths. And you older people who, like myself, are
drawing near the end of your days, and have little else left to hope for
in this world, do you see to it that your anticipations extend 'above the
ruinable skies.' There is an object beyond experience, above imagination,
without example, for which the creation wants a comparison, we an
apprehension, and the Word of God itself a sufficient revelation. 'It doth
not yet appear what we shall be,' God hath called us to His eternal
kingdom and glory; let us seek to walk in the light of the 'hope of His
calling.'
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GOD'S INHERITANCE IN THE SAINTS
by Alexander Maclaren
'That ye may know what is the riches
of the glory of His inheritance in the saints.' - Ephesians 1:18.
THE misery of Hope is that it so
often owes its materials to the strength of our desires or to the activity
of our imagination. But when mere wishes or fancies spin the thread, Hope
cannot weave a lasting fabric. And so one of the old prophets, in speaking
of the delusive hopes of man, says that they are like 'spiders' webs,' and
'shall not become garments.' Paul, then, having been asking for these
Ephesian Christians that they might have hopes lofty and worthy, and such
as God's summons to them would inspire, passes on to ask that they might
have the material out of which they could weave such hope, namely, a sure
and clear knowledge of the future blessings. The language in which he
describes that future is remarkable - 'the riches of the glory of His
inheritance in the saints.' He calls it God's inheritance, not as meaning
that God is the Inheritor, but the Giver. He speaks of it as in the
saints; meaning that, just as the land of Canaan was distributed amongst
tribes and families, and each man got his own little plot, so that broad
land is parted out amongst those who are 'partakers of the inheritance of
the saints in light.'
And so my text suggests to me three
points to which I seek to call your attention. First, the inheritance;
second, the heirs; and third, the heirs' present knowledge of their future
possession.
I. First, then, note the
inheritance.
Now we must discharge from the word
some of its ordinary associations. There is no reference to the thought of
succession in it, as the mere English reader is accustomed to think - to
whom inheritance means possession by the death of another. The idea is
simply that of possession. The figure which underlies the word is, of
course, that of the ancient partition of the land of Canaan amongst the
tribes, but we must go a great deal deeper than that in order to
understand its whole sweep and fulness of meaning.
What is the portion for a soul? God.
God is Heaven, and Heaven is God. No interpretation of 'the inheritance,'
however it may run into cheap and vulgar sensuous descriptions of a future
glory, has come within sight of the meaning of the word, unless it has
grasped this as the central thought:
'Whom have I in heaven but Thee? And there is none upon earth that I
desire beside Thee.' Only God can be the portion of a human spirit. And
none else can fill the narrowest and the smallest of man's needs.
So, then, if there were realised all the accumulated changes of progress
in blessedness, and the withdrawal of all external causes of disquiet and
weariness and weeping, still the heart would hunger and be empty of its
true possession unless God Himself had flowed into it. It were but a poor
advancement and the gain of a loss, if yearnings were made immortal, and
the aching vacuity, which haunts every soul that is parted from God, were
cursed with immortality. It would be so, if it be not true that the
inheritance is nothing less than the fuller possession of God Himself.
And how do men possess God? How do
we possess one another, here and now? By precisely the same way, only
indefinitely expanded and exalted, do we possess Him here, and shall we
possess Him hereafter. Heart to heart is joined by love which is mutual
and interpenetrating possession; where 'mine' and 'thine' become blended,
like the several portion, of the one ray of white light, in the blessed
word 'ours.' Contemplation makes us possessors of God. Assimilation to His
character makes us own and have Him. They who love and gaze, and are being
changed by still degrees into His likeness, possess Him. This is the
central idea of man's future destiny and highest blessedness, a union with
God closer and more intimate in degree, but yet essentially the same in
kind, as is here possible amidst the shows and vanities and wearinesses of
this mortal life. 'His servants shall serve Him, and see His face, and His
name shall be on their foreheads.' Obedience, contemplation,
transformation, these are the hands by which we here lay hold on God; and
they in the heavens grasp Him just as we here on earth may do. The
'inheritance' is God Himself.
Surely that is in accordance with
the whole teaching of. Scripture; and is but the expansion of plain words
which tell us that we 'are heirs of God.' If that be so, then all the
other subsidiary blessings which have been, the sore detriment of
Christian anticipation and of Christian life in a hundred ways, elevated
into disproportionate importance, fall into their right places, and are
more when they are looked upon as secondary than when they are looked upon
as primary.
Ah, brethren I neither the sensuous
metaphors which, in accommodation to our weakness, Scripture has used to
paint that future so that we may, in some measure, comprehend it, nor the
translation of these, in so far as they refer to circumstances and
externals, are enough for us. It is blessed to know that 'there shall be
no night there' - blessed to grasp all those sweet negatives which
contradict the miseries of the world, and to think of no sin, no curse, no
tears, no sighing nor sorrow, neither any more pain, 'because the former
things have passed away.' It is sweet and ennobling to think that, when we
are discharged of the load of this cumbrous flesh, we shall be much more
ourselves, and able to see where now is but darkness, and to feel where
now is but vacancy. It is blessed to think of the recognising of lost and
loved ones. But all these blessednesses, heaped together, as it seems to
me, would become sickeningly the same if prolonged through eternity,
unless we had God for our very own. Eternal is an awful word, even when
the noun that goes with it is blessedness. And I know not how even the
redeemed could be saved, as the long ages rolled on, from the oppression
of monotony, and the feeling, 'I would not live always,' unless God was
'the strength of their hearts, and their portion for ever.' We must rise
above everything that merely applies to changes in our own natures and in
our relations to the external universe, and to other orders of creatures;
and grasp, u the hidden sweetness that lies in the calyx of the gorgeous
flower, the possession of God Himself as the rapture of our joy and the
heaven of our heaven.
And if that be so, then these
accumulated words with which the Apostle, in his fiery, impetuous way,
tries to set forth the greatness of what he is speaking about, receive a
loftier meaning than they otherwise would have.
'The riches of the glory of His
inheritance' - now that word 'riches,' or 'wealth,' is a favourite of
Paul's; and in this single letter occurs, if I count rightly, five times.
In addition to our text, it is used twice in connection with God's grace,
'the riches of His grace' once in connection with Jesus, 'the unsearchable
riches of Christ'; and once in a similar connection to, though with a
different application from, our text, 'the riches of His glory.' Always,
you see, it is applied to something that is special and properly divine.
And here, therefore, it applies, not to the abundance of any creatural
good, however exuberant and inexhaustible the store of it may be, hut
simply and solely to that unwearying energy, that self-feeding and
ever-burning and never-decaying light, which is God. Of Him alone it can
be said that work does not exhaust, nor Being tend to its own extinction,
nor expenditure of resources to their diminution. The guarantee for
eternal blessedness is the 'riches' of the eternal God, and so we may be
sure that no time can exhaust, nor any expenditure empty, either His
storehouse or our wealth.
And again, the 'glory' is not the
lustrous light, however dazzling .to our feeble eyes that may be, of any
creature that reflects the light of God, but it is the far-flashing and
never-dying radiance of His own manifestation of Himself to the hearts and
souls of them that love Him. And so the 'inheritance is incorruptible and
undefiled, and fadeth not away'; not merely by reason of the communicated
will of God operating upon creatures whom He preserves untarnished by
corruption, and ungnawed by decay, but because He Himself is the
'inheritance,' and on Him time hath no power. On His wealth all His
creatures may hang for ever; and it shall be as it was in the sweet
parable of the miracle of old, the fragments that remain will be more than
when the meal began. 'The riches of the glory of His inheritance.'
II. Now notice, secondly, the
heirs.
The words of my text receive,
perhaps, their best commentary and explanation in those words which the
writer of them heard, on the Damascus road, when the voice from heaven
spoke to him about men 'obtaining an inheritance among them that are
sanctified.' It almost sounds like an echo of that long past, but
never-to-be-forgotten voice, when our Apostle writes as he does in our
text.
Now what does he mean by 'saints'?
Who are these amongst whom the broad acres of that infinite prairie are to
be parted out? The word has attracted to itself contemptuous meanings and
ascetical meanings, and meanings which really deny the true democracy of
Christianity and the equality of all believers in the sight of God. But
its scriptural use has none of these narrowing and confusing associations
adhering to it, nor does it even directly and at first mean, as we
generally take it to mean, pure men, holy in the sense of clean and
righteous. But something goes before that phase of meaning, and it is this
- a saint is a man separated and set apart for God, as His property. That
is the true meaning of the word. It is its meaning as it is applied to the
vessels of the Temple, the priests, the cervices, and the altar. It is its
meaning, only with the necessary substitution of spirit for body, as it is
applied in the New Testament as a designation co-extensive with that of
believers.
How does a man belong to God?
We asked a minute or two ago how God belonged to men The answer to the
converse question is almost identical. A man belongs to God by the
affection of his heart, by the submission of his will, by the reference of
his actions to Him; and he who thus belongs to God, in the same act in
which he gives himself to God, receives God as his possession. The thing
must be reciprocal. 'All mine is Thine'; and God answers, 'And all Mine is
thine.' He ever meets our 'O Lord, I yield myself to Thee,' with His 'And
My child, I give Myself to thee.' It is so in regard of our earthly loves.
It is So in regard of our relations to Him. And that being the ease,
purity, which is generally taken by careless readers as being the main
idea of sanctity, will follow this self-surrender, which is the basis of
all goodness, everywhere and always.
If that be true, and I do not think
it can be effectively denied, then the next step is a very plain one, and
that is that for the perfect possession of God, which is heaven, the same
thing is needed in its perfection which is required for the partial
possession of Him that makes the Christian life of earth And just as here
we get Him for ours in proportion as we give up ourselves to be His, so
yonder the inheritance belongs, and can only belong to, 'the saints.' So,
then, one can see that there is nothing arbitrary in this limitation of a
possession, which in its very nature cannot go beyond the bounds which are
thus marked out for it. If heaven were the vulgar thing that some of you
think it, if that future life were desirable simply because you escaped
from some external punishment and got all sorts of outward blessings and
joys, felicities and advantages, hung round the neck, or pinned upon the
breast, as they do to successful fighters, why then, of course, there
might be partiality in the distribution of the decorations. But if that
possession hinges upon our yielding ourselves to Him, then there is not an
arbitrary link in the whole chain. Faith is set forth as the condition of
heaven, Because faith is the means of union with Christ, by and from whom
alone we draw the motives for self-surrender and the power for sanctity.
You cannot have heaven unless you have God. That is step number one. You
cannot have God unless you have 'holiness, without which no man shall see
the Lord.' That is step number two. You cannot have holiness without
faith. That is step number three. 'An inheritance among them that are
sanctified'; and then there is added, 'by faith which is in Me.' It is
dear, too, what a fatal delusion some of us are under who think that we
shall, and fancy that we should like to, as we say, 'go to heaven when we
die.' Why, heaven is here, round about you, a present heaven in the
imitation of God, in the practice of righteousness, in the cultivation of
dependence upon Him, in the yielding of yourselves up to Him. Heaven is
here, and by your own choice you stop outside of it. There must be a
correspondence between environment and nature for blessedness. 'The mind
is its own place,' as the great Puritan poet taught us, 'and makes a
heaven of hell, a hell of heaven.' Fishes die on the shore, and the man
that drew them out dies in the water. Gills cannot breathe where lungs are
useful, and lungs cannot, where gills come into play. If you have not here
and now the holiness which knife you to God, and gives you possession of
Him, you would not like 'heaven,' if it were possible to carry you to that
place, in so far as it is a place. It is rather strange, if you hope to go
to heaven when you die, that you should be very unwilling to spend a
little time in it whilst you are alive, and that you should expect
blessedness then from that presence of God which brings you no blessedness
now.
III. Lastly, we have here the
heirs' present knowledge of their future blessedness.
The Apostle asks that these men may
know a thing that clearly seems unknowable. It is an impossible petition,
we might be ready to say, because it is clear enough that there can be no
true knowledge of the conditions and details of that future life. The dark
mountains that lie between us and it hide their secret well, and few or no
stray beams have reached us. An unborn babe, or a chrysalis in a hole in
the ground or in a chink of a tree, might think as wisely about its future
condition as we can do about that life beyond. There can be no knowledge
until there is experience.
What, then, does Paul mean by
framing such a petition as this? The answer is found in noticing that the
knowledge which he is imploring here is a consequence of a previous
knowledge. For, in a former verse, he prays that these men may have 'the
spirit of wisdom in the knowledge of God'; and when they have got the
knowledge of God he thinks that they will have got the knowledge of 'the
riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints.' Now, turn that into
other words, and it is just this, that the knowledge of God, which comes
by faith and love here, is in kind so identical with the fullest and
loftiest riches of the knowledge of Him hereafter, that, if we have the
one, we are not without the other. The one is in germ, the other, no
doubt, full blown; the one is the twinkling of the rushlight, as it were,
the other is the blaze of the sunshine. The two states of being are so
correspondent that from the one we draw our clearest knowledge of the
other. There are telescopes, in using which you do not look up when you
want to see the stars, but down on to a reflecting mirror, and there you
see them. Such a reflecting mirror, though it be sometimes muddied and
dimmed and always very small, are the experiences of the Christian soul
here.
So, dear friends, if we want to know
as much as may be known of the Blessedness of heaven, let us seek to
possess as much as may be possessed of the knowledge and love of God on
earth. Then we shall know the centre, at any rate; and that is light,
though the circumference may be very dark. Much will remain obscure. That
is of very small consequence to Hope, which does not need information half
so much as it needs assurance. Like some flower in the cranny of the rock,
it can spread a broad bright blossom on little soil, if only it be firmly
rooted.
The path for us all is plain. Come
to Jesus Christ as sinful men, and take what He has given, who has given
Himself for us. Touched by His love, let us love Him back again, and yield
ourselves to Him, and He will give Himself to us. They who can say, 'O
Lord! I am Thine,' are sure to hear from heaven, 'I am this' And they who
possess, in being possessed by, God Himself, do not need to die in order
to go to heaven, but are at least doorkeepers in the house of the Lord
now, and stand where they can see into the inner sanctuary which they will
one day tread. A life of faith Brings Heaven to us, and thereby gives us
the surest and the clearest knowledge of what we shall be, and have, when
we are brought to heaven
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THE
MEASURE OF IMMEASURABLE POWER
by Alexander Maclaren
'That ye may know.., what is the
exceeding greatness of His power to usward who believe, according to the
working of His mighty power, which He wrought in Christ.' - Ephesians
1:19, 20.
'THE riches of the glory of the
inheritance' will sometimes quench rather than stimulate hope. He can have
little depth of religion who has not often felt that the transcendent
glory of that promised future sharpens the doubt - 'and can I ever hope to
reach it?' Our paths are strewn with battlefields where we were defeated,
how should we expect the victor's wreath? And so Paul does not think that
he has asked all which his friends in Ephesus need when he has asked that
they may know the hope and the inheritance. There is something more
wanted, something more even for our knowledge of these, and that is the
knowledge of the power which alone can fulfil the hope and bring the
inheritance. His language swells and peals and becomes exuberant and noble
with his theme. He catches fire, as it were, as he thinks about this power
that worketh in us. It is 'exceeding.' Exceeding what? He does not tell
us, but other words in this letter, in the other great prayer which it
contains, may help us to supply the missing words. He speaks of the 'love
of Christ which passeth knowledge,' and of God being 'able to do exceeding
abundantly above all that we can ask or think.' The power which is really
at work in Christian men to-day is in its nature properly transcendent and
immeasurable, and passes thought and desire and knowledge.
And yet it has a measure. 'According
to the working of the strength of the might which He wrought in Christ.'
Is that heaping together of synonyms or all but synonyms, mere tautology?
Surely not. Commentators tell us that they can distinguish differences of
meaning between the words, in that the first of them is the more active
and outward, and the last of them is the more inward. And so they liken
them to fruit and branch and root; but we need simply say that the
gathering together of words so nearly co-extensive in their meaning is
witness to the effort to condense the infinite within the bounds of human
tongue, to speak the unspeakable; and that these reiterated expressions,
like the blows of the billows that succeed one another on the beach, are
hints of the force of the infinite ocean that lies behind.
And then the Apostle, when he has once come in sight of his risen Lord, as
is his wont, is swept away by the ardour of his faith and the clearness of
his vision, and breaks from his purpose in order to dilate on the glories
of his King. We do not need to follow him into that. I limit myself now to
the words which I have read as my text, with only such reference to the
magnificent passage which succeeds as may be necessary for the exposition
of this.
I. So, then, I ask you to look,
first, at the measure and example of the immeasurable power that works in
Christian men.
'According to the working of the
strength of the might which He wrought in Christ' - the Resurrection, the
Ascension, the session at the right hand of God, the rule over all
creatures, and the exaltation above all things on earth or in the heavens
- these are the facts which the Apostle brings before us as the
pattern-works, the chefs-d'oeuvre of the power that is operating in all
Christians. The present glories of the ascended Christ are glories
possessed by a Man, and, that being so, they are available as evidences
and measures of the power which works in believing souls. In them we see
the possibilities of humanity, the ideal for man which God had when He
created and breathed His blessing .upon him. It is one of ourselves who
has strength enough to bear the burden of the glory, one of ourselves who
can stand within the blaze of encircling and indwelling Divinity and be
unconsumed. The possibilities of human nature are manifest there. If we
want to know what the Divine Power can make of us, let us turn to look
with the eye of faith upon what it has made of Jesus Christ.
But such a thought, glorious as it
is, still leaves room for doubt as to my personal attainment of such an
ideal. Possibility is much, but we need solid certainty. And we find it in
the truth that the bond between Christ and those who truly love and trust
Him is such as that the possibility must become a reality and be
consolidated into a certainty. The Vine and its branches, their Head and
the members, the Christ and His Church, are knit together by such
closeness of union as that wheresoever and whatsoever the one is, there
and that must the others also be. Therefore, when doubts and fears, and
consciousness of our own weakness, creep across us, and all our hopes are
dimmed, as some star in the heavens is, when a light mist floats between
us and it, let us turn away to Him our brother, bone of our bone and flesh
of our flesh, and think that He, in His calm exaltation and regal
authority and infinite blessedness, is not only the pattern of what
humanity may be, but the pledge of what His Church must be. 'Where I am,
there shall also My servant be.' 'The glory that Thou gavest Me I have
given them.'
Nor is that all. Not only a
possibility and a certainty for the future are for us the measure of the
power that worketh in us, but as this same letter teaches us, we have, as
Christians, a present scale by which we may estimate the greatness of the
power. For in the next chapter, after that glorious burst as to the
dignity of his Lord, which we have not the heart to call a digression, the
Apostle, recurring to the theme of my text, goes on to say, 'And you hath
He quickened,' and then, catching it up again a verse or two afterwards,
he reiterates, clause by clause, what had been done on Jesus as having
been done on us Christians. If that Divine Spirit raised Him from the
dead, and set Him at His own right hand in the heavenly places, it is as
true that the same power hath 'raised us up together, and made us sit
together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus.' And so not only the far-off,
though real and brilliant, and eye and heart-filling glories of the
ascended Christ give us the measure of the power, but also the limited
experience of the present Christian life, the fact of the resurrection
from the true death, the death of sin, the fact of union with Jesus Christ
so real and close as that they who truly experience it do live, as far as
the roots of their lives and the scope and the aim of them are concerned,
'in the heavens,' and 'sit with Him in heavenly places' - these things
afford us the measure of the power that worketh in us.
Then, because a Man is King of kings and Lord of lords; and because He who
is our Life 'is exalted high above all principalities and powers'; and
because from His throne He has quickened us from the death of sin, and has
drawn us so near to Himself that if we are His we truly live beside Him,
even whilst we stumble here in the darkness, we may know the exceeding
greatness of His power, according to the working of the strength of the
might which He wrought in Christ when He raised Him from the dead.
II. Secondly, notice the
knowledge of the unknowable power.
We have already come across the same
apparent paradox, covering a deep truth, in the former sections of this
series of petitions. I need only remind you, in reference to this matter,
that the knowledge which is here in question is not the intellectual
perception of a fact as revealed in Scripture, but is that knowledge to
which alone the New Testament gives the noble name, being knowledge
verified by inward experience, and the result of one's own personal
acquaintance with its object.
How do we know a power? By thrilling
beneath its force. How are we to know the greatness of the power but
because it comes surging and rejoicing into our aching emptiness, and
lifts us buoyant above our temptations and weakness? Paul was not asking
for these people theological conceptions. He was asking that their spirits
might be so saturated with and immersed in that great ocean of force that
pours from God as that they should never, henceforth, be able to doubt the
greatness of that power which wrought in them. The knowledge that comes
from experience is the knowledge that we all ought to seek. it is not
merely to be desired that we should have right and just conceptions, but
that we should have the vital knowledge which is, and which comes from,
life eternal.
And that power, which thus we may
all know by feeling it working upon ourselves, though it be immeasurable,
has its measure; though it be, in its depth and fulness, unknowable and
inexhaustible, may yet be really and truly known. You do not need a
thunderstorm to experience the electric shock; a Battery that you can
carry in your pocket will do that for you. You do not need to have
traversed all the length and breadth and depth and height of some
newly-discovered country to be sure of its existence, and to have a real,
though it may be a vague, conception of the magnitude of its shores. And
so, really, though boundedly, we have the knowledge of God, and can rely
upon it as valid, though partial; and similarly, by experience we have
such a certified acquaintance with Him and His power as needs no
enlargement to be trusted, and to become the source of blessings untold.
We may see but a strip of the sky through the narrow chinks of our prison
windows, and many a grating may further intercept the view, and much dust
that might Be cleared away may dim the glass, but yet it is the sky that
we see, and we can think of the great horizon circling round and round,
and of the infinite depths above there, which neither eye nor thought can
travel unwearied. Though all that we see be but an inch in breadth and a
foot or two in height, yet we do see. We know the unknowable power that
passeth knowledge.
And let me remind you of how large
importance this knowledge of and constant reference to the measureless
power manifested in Christ is for us. I believe there can be no vigorous,
happy Christian life without it. It is our only refuge from pessimism and
despair for the world. The old psalm said,
'Thou hast crowned Him with glory and honour, and hast given Him dominion
over the works of Thy hands,' and hundreds of years afterwards the writer
of the Epistle to the Hebrews commented on it thus, ' e see not yet all
things put under Him.' Was the old vision a dream, was it never intended
to be fulfilled? Apparently so, if we take the history of the past into
account, and the centuries that have passed since have done nothing to
make it more probable, apart from Jesus Christ, that man will rise to the
height which the Psalmist dreamed of. When we look at the exploded Utopias
that fill the past; when we think of the strange and apparently fatal
necessity by which evil is developed from every stage of what men call
progress, and how improvement is perverted, almost as soon as effected,
into another fortress of weakness and misery; when we look on the world as
it is today, I know not whence a man is to draw bright hopes, or what is
to deliver him from pessimism as his last word about himself and his
fellows, except the 'working of the strength of the might which He wrought
in Christ.' 'We see not yet all things put under Him' be it so, 'but we
see Jesus,' and, looking to Him, hope is possible, reasonable, and
imperative.
The same knowledge is our refuge
from our own consciousness of weakness. We look up, as a climber may do in
some Alpine ravine, upon the smooth gleaming walls of the cliff that rises
above us. It is marble, it is fair, there are lovely lands on the summit,
but nothing that has not wings can get there.
We try, but slip backwards almost as
much as we rise. What is to be done? Are we to sit down at the foot of the
cliff, and say, 'We cannot climb, let us be content with the luscious
herbage and sheltered ease below?' Yes! That is what we are tempted to
say. But look! a mighty hand reaches over, an arm is stretched down, the
hand grasps us, and lifts us, and sets us there.
'No man hath ascended up into heaven
save He that came down from heaven,' and having returned thither stoops
thence, and will lift us to Himself. I am a poor, weak creature. Yes! I am
all full of sin and corruption. Yes! I am ashamed of myself every day.
Yes! I am too heavy to climb, and have no wings to fly, and am bound here
by chains manifold. Yes! But we know the exceeding greatness of the power,
and we triumph in Him.
That knowledge should shame us into
contrition, when we think of such force at our disposal, and such poor
results. That knowledge should widen our conceptions, enlarge our desires,
breathe a brave confidence into our hopes, should teach us to expect great
things of God, and to be intolerant of present attainments whilst anything
remains unattained. And it should stimulate our vigorous effort, for no
man will long seek to be better, if he is convinced that the effort is
hopeless.
Learn to realise the exceeding
greatness of the power that will clothe your weakness. 'Lift up your eyes
on high, and behold who hath created these things, for that He is strong
in might, not one faileth.' That is wonderful, but here is a far nobler
operation of the divine power. It is great to 'preserve the ancient
heavens' fresh and strong by His might, but it is greater to come down to
my weakness, to 'give power to the faint,' and 'increase strength to them
that have no might.' And that is what He will do with us.
III. Lastly, notice the
conditions for the operations of the power.
'To usward who believe,' says Paul.
He has been talking to these Ephesians, and saying 'ye,' but now, by that
'us,' he places himself beside them, identifies himself with them, and
declares that all his gifts and strength come to him on precisely the same
conditions on which theirs do to them; and that he, like them, is a waiter
upon that grace which God bestows on them that trust Him.
'To usward who believe.' Once more
we are back at the old truth which we can never make too emphatic and
plain, that the one condition of the weakest among us being strong with
the strength of the Lord is simple trust in Him, verified, of course, by
continuance and by effort.
How did the water go into the Ship
Canal at Eastham last week? First of all they cut a trench, and then they
severed the little strip of land between the hole and the sea, and the sea
did the rest. The wider and deeper the opening that we make in our natures
by our simple trust in God, the fuller will be the rejoicing flood that
pours into us. There is an old story about a Christian father, who, having
been torturing himself with theological speculations about the nature of
the Trinity, fell asleep and dreamed that he was emptying the ocean with a
thimble! Well, you cannot empty it with a thimble, but you can go to it
with one, and, if you have only a thimble in your hand, you will only
bring away a thimbleful. The measure of your faith is the measure of God's
power given to you.
There are two measures of the immeasurable power - the one is that
infinite limit, of 'the power which He wrought in Christ,' and the other
the practical limit. The working measure of our spiritual life is our
faith. In plain English, we can have as much of God as we want. We do have
as much as we want. And if, in touch with the power that can shatter a
universe, we only get a little thrill that is scarcely perceptible to
ourselves, and all unnoticed by others, whose fault is that? If, coming to
the fountain that laughs at drought, and can fill a universe with its
waters, we scarcely bear away a straitened drop or two, that barely
refreshes our parched lips, and does nothing to stimulate the growth of
the plants of holiness in our gardens, whose fault is that? The practical
measure of the power is for us the measure of our belief and desire. And
if we only go to Him, as I pray we all may, and continue there, and ask
from Him strength, according to the riches that are treasured in Jesus
Christ, we shall get the old answer, 'According to your faith be it unto
you.' |
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