STRENGTHENED WITH MIGHT
‘That He would grant you, according
to the riches of His glory, to be strengthened with might, by His Spirit
in the inner man.’ — Ephesians 3:16.
IN no part of Paul’s letters does he
rise to a higher level than in his prayers, and none of his prayers are
fuller of fervour than this wonderful series of petitions. They open out
one into the other like some majestic suite of apartments in a great
palace-temple, each leading into a loftier and more spacious hall, each
drawing nearer the presence-chamber, until at last we stand there.
Roughly speaking, the prayer is
divided into four petitions, of which each is the cause of the following
and the result of the preceding — ‘That He would grant you, according to
the riches of His glory, to be strengthened with might by His Spirit in
the inner man’ — that is the first. ‘In order that Christ may dwell in
your hearts by faith,’ ‘ye being rooted and grounded in love’ — such is
the second, the result of the first, and the preparation for the third.
‘That ye may be able to comprehend with all saints... and to know the love
of Christ which passeth knowledge,’ such is the third, and all lead up at
last to that wonderful desire beyond’ which nothing is possible — ‘that ye
might be filled with all the fulness of God.’
I venture to contemplate dealing
with these four petitions in successive sermons, in order, God helping me,
that I may bring before you a fairer vision of the possibilities of your
Christian life than you ordinarily entertain. For Paul’s prayer is God’s
purpose, and what He means with all who profess His name is that these
exuberant desires may be fulfilled in them. So let us now listen to that
petition which is the foundation of all, and consider that great thought
of the divine strength-giving power which may be bestowed upon every
Christian soul.
I. First, then, I remark that God
means, and wishes, that all Christians should be strong by the possession
of the Spirit of might.
It is a miserably inadequate
conception of Christianity, and. of the gifts which it bestows, ‘and the
blessings which it intends for men, when it is limited, as it practically
is, by a large number — I might almost say the majority — of professing
Christians to a simple means of altering their relation to the past, and
to the broken law of God and of righteousness. Thanks be to His name! His
great gift to the world begins in each individual case with the assurance
that all the past is cancelled. He gives that blessed sense of
forgiveness, which can never be too highly estimated unless it is forced
out of its true place as the introduction, and made to be the climax and
the end, of His gifts. I do not know what Christianity means, unless it
means that you and I are forgiven for a purpose; that the purpose, if I
may so say, is something in advance of the means towards the purpose, the
purpose being that we should be filled with all the strength and
righteousness and supernatural life granted to us by the Spirit of God.
It is well that we should enter into the vestibule, There is no other path
to the throne but through the vestibule. But do not let us forget that the
good news of forgiveness, though we need it day by day, and need it
perpetually repeated, is but the introduction to and porch of the Temple,
and that beyond it there towers, if I cannot say a loftier, yet I may say
a further gift, even the gift of a divine life like His, from whom it
comes, and of which it is in reality an effluence and a spark. The true
characteristic blessing of the Gospel is the gift of a new power to a
sinful weak world; a power which makes the feeble strong, and the
strongest as an angel of God.
Oh, brethren! we who know how, ‘if
any power we have, it is to ill’; we who understand the weakness, the
unaptness of our spirits to any good, and our strength for every vagrant
evil that comes upon them to tempt them, should surely recognise as a
Gospel in very deed that which proclaims to us that the ‘everlasting God,
the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth,’ who Himself ‘fainteth
not, neither is weary,’ hath yet a loftier display of His strength-giving
power than that which is visible in the heavens above, where, ‘because He
is strong in might not one faileth.’ That heaven, the region of calm
completeness, of law unbroken and therefore of power undiminished, affords
a lesser and dimmer manifestation of His strength than the work that is
done in the hell of a human heart that has wandered and is brought back,
that is stricken with the weakness of the fever of sin, and is healed into
the strength of obedience and the omnipotence of dependence. It is much to
say ‘for that He is strong in might, not one of these faileth,’ it is more
to say ‘He giveth power to them that have failed; and to them that have no
might He increaseth strength’ The Gospel is the gift of pardon for
holiness, and its inmost and most characteristic bestowment is the
bestowment of a new power for obedience and service. And that power, as I
need not remind you, is given to us through the gift of the Divine Spirit.
The very name of that Spirit is the ‘Spirit of Might.’ Christ spoke to us
about being ‘endued with power from on high.’ The last of His promises
that dropped from His lips upon earth was the promise that His followers
should receive the power of the Spirit coming upon them. Wheresoever in
the early histories we read of a man who was full of the Holy Ghost, we
read that he was ‘full of power.’ According to the teaching of this
Apostle, God hath given us the ‘Spirit of power; which is also the Spirit
‘of love and of a sound mind.’ So the strength that we must have, if we
have strength at all, is the strength of a Divine Spirit, not our own,
that dwells in us, and works through us.
And there is nothing in that which
need startle or surprise any man who believes in a living God at all, and
in the possibility, therefore, of a connection between the Great Spirit
and all the human spirits which are His children- I would maintain, in
opposition to many modern conceptions, the actual supernatural character
of the gift that is bestowed upon every Christian soul My reading of the
New Testament is that as distinctly above the order of material nature as
is any miracle, is the gift that flows into a Believing heart. There is a
direct passage Between God and my spirit. It lies open to His touch; all
the paths of its deep things can be trodden by Him. You and I act upon one
another from without, He acts upon us within. We wish one another
blessings; He gives the blessings. We try to train, to educate, to
incline, and dispose, by the presentation of motives, and the urging of
reasons; He can plant in a heart by His own divine husbandry the seed that
shall blossom into immortal life. And so the Christian Church is a great,
continuous, supernatural community in the midst of the material world; and
every believing soul, because it possesses something of the life of Jesus
Christ, has been the seat of a miracle as real and true as when He said
‘Lazarus, come forth!’ Precisely this teaching does our Lord Himself
present for our acceptance when He sets side by side, as mutually
illustrative, as belonging to the same order of supernatural phenomena,
‘the hour is coming, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God
and they that hear shall live,’ which is the supernatural resurrection of
souls dead in sin, — and ‘the hour is coming in the which all that are in
the graves shall hear His voice, and shall come forth,’ which is the
future resurrection of the body, in obedience to His will.
So, Christian men and. women, do you
set clearly before you this: that God’s purpose with you is but begun when
He has forgiven you, that He forgives you for a design, that it is a means
to an end, and that you have not reached the conception of the large
things which He intends for you unless you have risen to this great
thought — He means and wishes that you should be strong with the strength
of His own Divine Spirit.
II. Now notice, next, that this
Divine Power has its seat in, and is intended to influence the whole of,
the inner life.
As my text puts it, we may be
‘strengthened with might by His Spirit in the inner man. ’ By the ‘inner
man’ I suppose, is not meant the new creation through faith in Jesus
Christ which this Apostle calls ‘the new man,’ but simply what Peter calls
the ‘hidden man of the heart,’ the ‘soul,’ or unseen self as distinguished
from the visible material body which it animates and informs. It is this
inner self, then, in which the Spirit of God is to dwell, and into which
it is to breathe strength. The leaven is hid deep in three measures of
meal until the whole be leavened. And the point to mark is that the whole
inward region which makes up the true man is the field upon which this
Divine Spirit is to work.’ It is not a bit of your inward life that is to
be hallowed. It is not any one aspect of it that is to be strengthened,
but it is the whole intellect, affections, desires, tastes, powers of
attention, conscience, imagination, memory, will. The whole inner man in
all its corners is to be filled, and to come under the influence of this
power, ‘until there be no part dark, as when the bright shining of a
candle giveth thee light.’
There is no part of my being that is
not. patent to the tread of this Divine Guest. There are no rooms of the
house of my spirit into which He may not go. Let Him come with the master
key in His hand into all the dim chambers of your feeble nature; and as
the one life is light in the eye, and colour in the cheek, and deftness in
the fingers, and strength in the arm, and pulsation in the heart, so He
will come with the manifold results of the one gift to you. He will
strengthen your understandings, and make you able for loftier tasks of
intellect and of reason than you can face in your unaided power; He will
dwell in your affections and make them vigorous to lay hold upon the holy
things that are above their natural inclination, and will make it certain
that their reach shall not be beyond their grasp, as, alas! it so often is
in the sadness and disappointments of human love. He will dome into that
feeble, vacillating, wayward will of yours, that is only obstinate in its
adherence to the low and the evil, as some foul creature, that one may try
to wrench away, digs its claws into corruption and holds on by that. He
will lift your will and make it fix upon the good and abominate the evil,
and through the whole being He will pour a great tide of strength which
shall cover all the weakness. He will be like some subtle elixir which,
taken into the lips, steals through a pallid and wasted frame, and brings
back a glow to the cheek and a lustre to the eye, and swiftness to the
brain, and power to the whole nature. Or as some plant, drooping and
flagging beneath the hot rays of the sun, when it has the scent of water
given to it, will, in all its parts, stiffen and erect itself, so, when
the Spirit is poured out on men, their whole nature is invigorated and
helped.
That indwelling Spirit will be a
power for suffering. The parallel passage to this in the twin epistle to
the Colossians is — ‘strengthened with all might unto all patience and
long-suffering With gentleness.’ Ah, brethren! unless this Divine Spirit
were a power for patience and endurance it were no power suited to us poor
men. So dark at times is every life; so full at times of discouragements,
of dreariness, of sadness, of loneliness, of bitter memories, and of
fading hopes does the human heart become, that-if we are to be strong we
must have a strength that will manifest itself most chiefly in this, that
it teaches us how to bear, how to weep, how to submit.
And it will be a power for conflict,
We have all of us, in the discharge of duty and in the meeting of
temptation, to face such tremendous antagonisms that unless we have grace
given to us which will enable us to resist, we shall be overcome and swept
away. God’s power given by the Divine Spirit does not absolve us from the
fight, but it fits us for the fight. It is not given in order that,
holiness may be won without a struggle, as some people seem to think, but
it is given to us in order that in the struggle for holiness we may never
lose ‘one jot of heart or hope,’ but may be ‘able to withstand in the evil
day, and having done all to stand.’
It is a power for service. ‘Tarry ye
in Jerusalem till ye be endued with power from on high.’ There is no such
force for the spreading of Christ’s Kingdom, and the witness-bearing work
of His Church, as the possession of this Divine Spirit. Plunged into that
fiery baptism, the selfishness and the sloth, which stand in the way of so
many of us, are all consumed and annihilated, and we are set free for
service because the bonds that bound us are burnt up in the merciful
furnace of His fiery power.
‘Ye shall be strengthened with might
by His Spirit in the inner man’ — a power that will fill and flood all
your nature if you will let it, and will make you strong to suffer, strong
to combat, strong to serve, and to witness for your Lord.
III. And now, lastly, let me point you still further to the measure of
this power. It is limitless with the boundlessness of God Himself. ‘That
he would grant you’ is the daring petition of the Apostle, ‘according to
the riches of His glory to be strengthened.’
There is the measure. There is no
limit except the uncounted wealth of His own self-manifestation, the
flashing light of revealed divinity. Whatsoever there is of splendour in
that, whatsoever there is of power there, in these and in nothing on this
side of them, lies the limit of the possibilities of a Christian life. Of
course there is a working limit at each moment, and that is our capacity
to receive; but that capacity varies, may vary indefinitely, may become
greater and greater beyond our count or measurement Our hearts may be more
and more capable of God; and in the measure in which they are capable of
Him they shall be filled by Him. A limit which is always shifting is no
limit at all. A kingdom, the boundaries of which are not the same from one
year to another, by reason of its own inherent expansive power, may be
said to have no fixed limit. And so we appropriate and enclose, as it
were, within our own little fence, a tiny portion of the great prairie
that rolls boundlessly to the horizon. But to-morrow we may enclose more,
if we will, and more and more; and so ever onwards, for all that is God’s
is ours, and He has given us His whole self to use and to possess through
our faith in His Son. A thimble can only take up a thimbleful of the
ocean, but what if the thimble be endowed with a power of expansion which
has no term known to men? May it not, then, be that some time or other it
shall be able to hold so much of the infinite depth as now seems a dream
too audacious to be realised?
So it is with us and God. He lets us
come into the vaults, as it were, where in piles and masses the ingots of
uncoined and uncounted gold are stored and stacked; and He says, ‘Take as
much as you like to carry.’ There is no limit except the riches of His
glory.
And now, dear friends, remember that
this great gift, offered to each of us, is offered on conditions. To you
professing Christians especially I speak. You will never get it unless you
want it, and some of you do not want it. There are plenty of people who
call themselves Christian men that would not for the life of them know
what to do with this great gift if they had it. You will get it if you
desire it. ‘Ye have not because ye ask not.’
Oh! when one contrasts the largeness
of God’s promises and the miserable contradiction to them which the
average Christian life of this generation presents, what can we say? ‘Hath
His mercy clean gone for ever? Doth His promise fail for evermore?’ Ye
weak Christian people, born weakling and weak ever since, as so many of
you are, open your mouths wide. Rise to the height of the expectations and
the desires which it is our sin not to cherish; and be sure of this, as we
ask so shall we receive. ‘Ye are not straitened in God.’ Alas! alas! ‘ye
are straitened in yourselves.’
And mind, there must be
self-suppression if there is to be the triumph of a divine power in you.
You cannot fight with both classes of weapons. The human must die if the
divine is to live. The life of nature, dependence on self, must be
weakened and subdued if the life of God is to overcome and to fill you.
You must be able to say ‘Not I!’ or you will never be able to say ‘Christ
liveth in me.’ The patriarch who overcame halted on his thigh; and all the
life of nature was lamed and made impotent that the life of grace might
prevail. So crush self by the power and for the sake of the Christ, if you
would that the Spirit should bear rule over you.
See to it, too, that you use what
you have of that Divine Spirit. ‘To him that hath shall be given.’ What is
the use of more water being sent down the mill lade, if the water that
does come in it all runs away at the bottom, and none of it goes over the
wheel? Use the power you have, and power will come to the faithful steward
of what he possesses. He that is faithful in a little shall get much to be
faithful ever. Ask and use, and the ancient thanksgiving may still come
from your lips. ‘In the day when I cried, Thou answeredst me, and
strengthenedst me with strength in my soul.’
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THE INDWELLING CHRIST
‘That Christ may dwell in your
hearth by faith; ye being rooted and grounded in love.’ — Ephesians 3:17.
WE have here the second step of the
great staircase by which Paul’s fervent desires for his Ephesian friends
climbed towards that wonderful summit of his prayers — which is ever
approached, never reached, — ‘that ye might be filled with all the fulness
of God.’
Two remarks of an expository
character will prepare the way for the lessons of these verses. The first
is as to the relation of this clause to the preceding. It might appear at
first sight to be simply parallel with the former, expressing
substantially the same ideas under a somewhat different aspect. The
operation of the strength-giving Spirit in the inner man might very
naturally be supposed to be equivalent to the dwelling of Christ in our
hearts by faith. So many commentators do, in fact, take it; but I think
that the two ideas may be distinguished, and that we are to see in the
words of our text, as I have said, the second step in this prayer, which
is in some sense a result of the ‘strengthening with might by the Spirit
in the inner man.’ I need not enter in detail into the reasons for taking
this view of the connection of the clause, which is obviously in
accordance with the climbing-up structure of the whole verse. It is enough
to point it out as the basis of my further remarks.
And now the second observation with
which I will trouble you, before I come to deal with the thoughts of the
verse, is as to the connection of the last words of it. You may observe
that in reading the words of my text I omitted the ‘that’ which stands in
the centre of the verse. I did so because the words, ‘Ye being rooted and
grounded in love,’ in the original, do stand before the ‘that, ’ and are
distinctly separated by it from the subsequent clause. They ought not,
therefore, to be shifted forward into it, as our translators and the
Revised Version have, I think, unfortunately done, unless there were some
absolute necessity either from meaning or from construction. I do not
think that this is the case; but on the contrary, if they are carried
forward into the next clause, which describes the result of Christ’s
dwelling in our hearts by faith, they break the logical flow of the
sentence by mixing together result and occasion. And so I attach them to
the first part of this verse, and take them to express at once the
consequence of Christ’s dwelling in the heart by faith, and the
preparation or occasion for our being able to comprehend and know the love
of Christ which passeth knowledge. Now that is all with which I need
trouble you in the way of explanation of the meaning of the words. Let us
come now to deal with their substance.
I. Consider the Indwelling of
Christ, as desired by the Apostle for all Christians.
To begin with, let me say in the
plainest, simplest, strongest way that I can, that that dwelling of Christ
in the believing heart is to be regarded as being a plain literal fact.
To a man who does not believe in the
divinity of Jesus Christ, of course that is nonsense, but to those of us
who do see in Him the manifested incarnate God, there ought to be no
difficulty in accepting this as the simple literal force of the words
before us, that in every soul where faith, howsoever feeble, has been
exercised, there Jesus Christ does verily abide.
It is not to be weakened down into
any notion of participation in His likeness, sympathy with His character,
submission to His influence, following His example, listening to His
instruction, or the like. A dead Plato may so influence his followers, but
that is not how a living Christ influences His disciples. What is meant is
no mere influence derived but separable from Him, however blessed and
gracious that influence might be, but it is the presence of His own self,
exercising influences which are inseparable from His presence, and only to
be realised when He dwells in us.
I think that Christian people as a
rule do far too little turn their attention to this aspect of the Gospel
teaching, and concentrate their thoughts far too much upon that which is
unspeakably precious in itself, but does not exhaust all that Christ is to
us, via the work that He wrought for us upon Calvary; or to take a step
further, the work that He is now carrying on for us as our Intercessor and
Advocate in the heavens. You who listen to me Sunday after Sunday will not
suspect me of seeking to minimise either of these two aspects of our
Lord’s mission and operation, but I do believe that very largely the glad
thought of an indwelling Christ, who actually abides and works in our
hearts, and is, not only for us in the heavens, or with us by some kind of
impalpable and metaphorical presence, but in simple, that is to say, in
spiritual reality is in our spirits, has faded away from the consciousness
of the Christian Church.
And so we are called ‘mystics’ when
we preach Christ in the heart. Ah, brother! unless your Christianity be in
the good deep sense of the word ‘mystical,’ it is mechanical, which is
worse. I preach, and rejoice that I have to preach, a ‘Christ that died,
yea! rather that is risen again; who is even at the right hand of God, who
also maketh intercession for us.’ Nor do I stop there, but I preach a
Christ that is in us, dwelling in our hearts if we be His at all.
Well, then, further observe that the
special emphasis of the prayer here is that this ‘indwelling’ may be an
unbroken and permanent one. Any of you who can consult the original for
yourselves will see that the Apostle here uses a compound word which
conveys the idea of intensity and continuity. What he desires, then, is
not merely that these Ephesian Christians may have occasional visits of
the indwelling Lord, or that at some lofty moments of spiritual enthusiasm
they may be conscious that He is with them, but that always, in an
unbroken line of deep, calm receptiveness, they may possess, and know that
they possess, an indwelling Saviour.
And this, I think, is one of the
reasons why we may and must distinguish between the apparently very
similar petition in the previous verse, about which we spoke in the last
sermon, and the petition which is now occupying us; for, as I shall have
to show you, it is only as ‘strengthened with might by His Spirit in the
inner man,’ that we are capable of the continuous abiding of that Lord
within us.
Oh! what a contrast to that idea of
a perpetual unbroken inhabitation of Jesus in our spirits and to our
consciousness is presented by our ordinary life! ‘Why shouldst Thou be as
a wayfaring man that turneth aside to tarry for a night?’ may well be the
utterance of the average Christian. We might, with unbroken blessedness,
possess Him in our hearts, and instead, we have only ‘visits short and far
between.’ Alas, alas, how often do we drive away that indwelling Christ,
because our hearts are ‘soul with sin,’ so that He
‘Can but listen at
the gate
And hear the household jar within.’
Christian men and women! here is the
ideal of our lives, capable of being approximated to (if not absolutely in
its entirety reached) with far more perfection than it ever has yet been
by us. There might be a line of light never interrupted running all
through our religious experience. Instead of that there is a light point
here, and a great gap of darkness there, like the straggling lamps by the
wayside in the half-lighted squalid suburbs of some great city. Is that
your Christian life, broken by many interruptions, and having often
sounding through it the solemn words of the retreating divinity which the
old profound legend tells us were heard the night before the Temple on
Zion was burnt: — ‘Let us depart?’ ‘I will arise and return unto My place
till they acknowledge their offences.’ God means and wishes that Christ
may continuously dwell in our hearts. Does He to your own consciousness
dwell in yours?
And then the last thought connected
with this first part of my subject is that the heart, strengthened by the
Spirit. is fitted to be the Temple of the indwelling Christ. How shall we
prepare the chamber for such a guest? How shall some poor occupant of some
wretched hut By the wayside fit it up for the abode of a prince? The
answer lies in these words that precede my text. You cannot strengthen the
rafters and lift the roof and adorn the halls and furnish the floor in a
manner befitting the coming of the King; but you can turn to that Divine
Spirit who will expand and embellish and invigorate your whole spirit, and
make it capable of receiving the indwelling Christ.
That these two things which are here
considered as cause and effect may, in another aspect, be considered as
but varying phases of the same truth, is only part of the depth and
felicity of the teaching that is here; for if you come to look more deeply
into it, the Spirit that strengtheneth with might is the Spirit of Christ;
and He dwells in men’s hearts by His own Spirit. So that the apparent
confusion, arising from what in other places are regarded as identical
being here conceived as cause and effect, is no confusion at all, but is
explained and vindicated by the deep truth that nothing but the indwelling
of the Christ can fit for the indwelling of the Christ. The lesser gift of
His presence prepares for the greater measure of it; the transitory
inhabitation for the more permanent. Where He comes in smaller measure He
opens the door and makes the heart capable of His own more entire
indwelling. ‘Unto him that hath shall be given.’ It is Christ in the heart
that makes the heart fit for Christ to dwell in the heart. You cannot do
it by your own power; turn to Him and let Him make you temples meet for
Himself.
II. So now, in the second place, notice the open door through which the
Christ comes in to dwell — ‘that He may dwell in your hearts by faith.’
More accurately we may render
‘through faith,’ and might even venture to suppose that the thought of
faith as an open door through which Christ passes into the heart, floated
half distinctly before the Apostle’s mind. Be that as it may, at all
events faith is here represented as the means or condition through which
this dwelling takes effect. You have but to believe in Him and He comes,
drawn from heaven, floating down on a sunbeam, as it were, and enters into
the heart and abides there.
Trust, which is faith, is
self-distrust. ‘I dwell in the high and holy place, with him also that is
of a contrite and humble spirit.’ Rivers do not run on the mountain tops,
but down in the valleys. So the heart that is lifted up and
self-complacent has no dew of His blessing resting upon it, but has the
curse of Gilboa adhering to its barrenness; but the low lands, the humble
and the lowly hearts, are they in which the waters that go softly scoop
their course and diffuse their blessings. Faith is self-distrust.
Self-distrust brings the Christ.
Faith is desire. Never, never in the
history of the world has it been or can it be that a longing towards Him
shall be a longing thrown back unsatisfied upon itself. You have but to
trust, and you possess. We open the door for the entrance of Christ by the
simple act of faith, and blessed be His name ! He can squeeze Himself
through a very little chink, and He does not require that the gates should
be flung wide open in order that, with some of His blessings, He may come
in.
Mystical Christianity of the false
sort has much to say about the indwelling of God in the soul, but it
spoils all its teaching by insisting upon it that the condition on which
God dwells in the soul is the soul’s purifying itself to receive Him. But
you cannot cleanse your hearts so as to bring Christ into them, you must
let Him come and cleanse them by the process of His coming, and fit them
thereby for His own indwelling. And, assuredly, He will so come, purging
us from our evil and abiding in our hearts.
But do not forget that the faith
which brings Christ into the spirit must be a faith which works by love,
if it is to keep Christ in the spirit. You cannot bring that Lord into
your hearts by anything that you do. The man who cleanses his own soul by
his own strength, and so expects to draw God into it, has made the mistake
which Christ pointed out when He told us that when the unclean spirit is
gone out of a man he leaves his house empty, though it be swept and
garnished. Moral reformation may turn out the devils, it will never bring
in God, and in the emptiness of the swept and garnished heart there is an
invitation to the seven to come back again and fill it.
And whilst that is true, remember,
on the other hand, that a Christian man can drive away his Master by evil
works. The sweet song-birds and the honey-making bees are said always to
desert a neighbourhood before a pestilence breaks out in it. And if I may
so say, similarly quick to feel the first breath of the pestilence is the
presence of the Christ which cannot dwell with evil. You bring Christ into
your heart by faith, without any work at all; you keep Him there by a
faith which produces holiness.
III. And the last point is the
gifts of this indwelling Christ, — ‘ye being,’ or as the words might more
accurately be translated, ‘Ye having been rooted and grounded in love.’
Where He comes He comes not
empty-handed. He brings His own love, and that, consciously received,
produces a corresponding and answering love in our hearts to Him. So there
is no need to ask the question here whether ‘love’ means Christ’s love to
me, or my love to Christ. From the nature of the ease both are included —
the recognition of His love and the response by mine are the result of His
entering into the heart. This love, the recognition of His and the
response by mine, is represented in a lovely double metaphor in these
words as being at once the soil in which our lives are rooted and grow,
and the foundation on which our lives are built and are steadfast. There
is no need to enlarge upon these two things, but let me just touch them
for a moment. Where Christ abides in a man’s heart, love will be the very
soil in which his life will be rooted and growl That love will be the
motive of all service, it will underlie, as its productive cause, all
fruitfulness. All goodness and all beauty will be its fruit. The whole
life will be as a tree planted in this rich soil. And so the life will
grow not by effort only, but as by an inherent power drawing its
nourishment from the soil. This is blessedness. It is heaven upon earth
that love should be the soil in which our obedience is rooted, and from
which we draw all the nutriment that turns to flowers and fruit.
Where Christ dwells in the heart,
love will be the foundation upon which our lives are builded steadfast and
sure. The blessed consciousness of His love, and the joyful answer of my
heart to it, may become the basis upon which my whole being shall repose,
the underlying thought that gives security, serenity, steadfastness to my
else fluctuating life. I may so plant myself upon Him. as that in Him I
shall be strong, and then my life will not only grow like a tree and have
its leaf green and broad, and its fruit the natural outcome of its
vitality, but it will rise like some stately building, course by course,
pillar by pillar, until at last the shining topstone is set there. He that
buildeth on that foundation shall never be confounded.
For, remember that, deepest of all,
the words of my text may mean that the Incarnate Personal Love becomes the
very soil in which my life is set and blossoms, on which my life is
founded.
‘Thou, my Life, O
let me be
Rooted, grafted, built in Thee.’
Christ is Love, and Love is Christ.
He that is rooted and grounded in love has the roots of his being, and the
foundation of his life fixed and fastened in that Lord.
So, dear brethren, go to Christ like
those two on the road to Emmaus; and as Fra Angelico has painted them on
his convent wall, put out your hands and lay them on His, and say, ‘Abide
with us. Abide with us!’ And the answer will come : — ‘This is my rest for
ever; here’ mystery of love! — ‘will I dwell, for I have desired it,’ even
the narrow room of your poor heart.
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LOVE UNKNOWABLE AND KNOWN
‘That ye... may be able to
comprehend with all saints what is the breadth and length, and depth, and
height; and to know the love of Christ, which passeth
knowledge.’ — Ephesians 3:18, 19.
THIS constitutes the third of the
petitions in this great prayer of Paul’s, each of which, as we have had
occasion to see in former sermons, rises above, and is a consequence of
the preceding, and leads on to, and is a cause or occasion of the
subsequent one.
The two former petitions have been
for inward strength communicated By a Divine Spirit, in order that Christ
may dwell in our hearts, and so we may be rooted and grounded in love. The
result of these desires Being realised in our hearts is here set forth in
two clauses which are substantially equivalent in meaning. ‘To comprehend’
may he taken as meaning nearly the same as ‘to know,’ only that perhaps
the former expresses an act more purely intellectual And, as we shall see
in our next semon, ‘the Breadth and length and depth and height’ are the
unmeasurable dimensions of the love which in the second clause is
described as ‘passing knowledge.’ I purpose to deal with these measures in
a separate discourse, and, therefore, omit them from consideration now.
We have, then, mainly two thoughts
here, the one, that only the loving heart in which Christ dwells can know
the love of Christ; and the other that even that heart can not know the
love of Christ. The paradox is intentional, but it is intelligible. Let me
deal then, as well as I can, with these two great thoughts.
I. First, we have this thought
that only the loving heart can know Christ’s love.
Now the Bible uses that word know to
express two different things; one which we call mere intellectual
perception; or to put it into plainer words, mere head knowledge such as a
man may have about any subject of study, and the other a deep and living
experience which is possession before it is knowledge, and knowledge
because it is possession.
Now the former of these two, the
knowledge which is merely the work of the understanding, is, of course,
independent of love. A man may know all about Christ and His love without
one spark of love in his heart. And there are thousands of people who, as
far as the mere intellectual understanding is concerned, know as much
about Jesus Christ and His love as the saint who is closest to the Throne,
and yet have not one trace of love to Christ in them. That is the kind of
people that a widely diffused Christianity and a habit of hearing sermons
produce. There are plenty of them, and some of us among them, who, as far
as their heads are concerned, know quite as much of Jesus Christ and His
love as any of us do, and could talk about it and argue about it, and draw
inferences from it, and have the whole system of evangelical Christianity
at their fingers’ ends. Ay! It is at their fingers’ ends, it never gets
any nearer them than that.’
There is a knowledge with which love
has nothing to do, and it is a knowledge that for many people is quite
sufficient. ‘Knowledge puffeth up,’ says the Apostle; into an unwholesome
bubble of self-complacency that will one day be pricked and disappear, but
‘love buildeth up’ — a steadfast, slowly-rising, solid fabric. There be
two kinds of knowledge: the mere rattle of notions in a man’s brain, like
the seeds of a withered poppy-head; very many, very dry, very hard; that
will make a noise when you shake them. And there is another kind of
knowledge which goes deep down into the heart, and is the only knowledge
worth calling by the name; and that knowledge is the child, as my text has
it, of love.
Now let us think about that for a
moment. Love, says Paul, is the parent of all knowledge. Well, now, can we
find any illustrations from similar facts in other regions? Yes! I think
so. How do we know, really know, any emotions of any sort whatever? Only
by experience. You may talk for ever about feelings, and you teach nothing
about them to those who have not experienced them. The poets of the world
have been singing about love ever since the world began. But no heart has
learned what love is from even the sweetest and deepest songs. Who that is
not a father can be taught paternal love by words, or can come to a
perception of it by an effort of mind? And so with all other emotions.
Only the lips that have drunk the cup of sweetness or of bitterness can
toll how sweet or how bitter it is, and even when they, made wise by
experience, speak out their deepest hearts, the listeners are but little
the wiser, unless they too have been scholars in the same school.
Experience is our only teacher in matters of feeling and emotion, as in
the lower regions of taste and appetite. A man must be hungry to know what
hunger is; he must taste honey or wormwood in order to know the taste of
honey or wormwood, and in like manner he cannot know sorrow but by feeling
its ache, and must love if he would know love. Experience is our only
teacher, and her school-fees are heavy.
Just as a blind man can never be
made to understand the glories of sunrise, or the light upon the far-off
mountains; just as a deaf man may read books about acoustics, but they
will not give him a notion of what it is to hear Beethoven, so we must
have love to Christ before we know what love to Christ is, and we must
consciously experience the love of Christ ere we know what the love of
Christ is. We must have love to Christ in order to have a deep and living
possession o! love of Christ, though reciprocally it is also true that we
must have the love of Christ known and felt by our answering hearts, if we
are ever to love Him back again.
So in all the play and counterplay
of love between Christ and us, and in all the reaction of knowledge and
love this remains true, that we must be rooted and grounded in love ere we
can know love, and must have Christ dwelling in our hearts, in order to
that deep and living possession which, when it is conscious of itself, is
knowledge, and is for ever alien to the loveless heart.
‘He must be loved, ere that to you
He will seem worthy of your love.’
If you want to know the blessedness
of the love of Christ, love Him, and open your hearts for the entrance of
His love to you. Love is the parent of deep, true knowledge.
Of course, before we can love an
unseen person and believe in his love, we must know about him by the
ordinary means by which we learn about all persons outside the circle of
our sight. So before the love which is thus the parent of deep, true
knowledge, there must be the knowledge By study and credence of the record
concerning Christ, which supplies the facts on which alone love can be
nourished. The understanding has its part to play in leading the heart to
love, and then the heart becomes the true teacher. He that loveth, knoweth
God, for God is love. He that is rooted and grounded in love because
Christ dwells in his heart, will be strengthened to know the love in which
he is rooted. The Christ within us will know the love of Christ. We must
first ‘taste,’ and then we shall ‘see’ that the Lord is good, as the
Psalmist puts it with deep truth. First, the appropriation and feeding
upon God, then the clear perception By the mind of the sweetness in the
taste. First the enjoyment; then the reflection on the enjoyment. First
the love; and then the consciousness of the love of Christ possessed and
the love to Christ experienced. The heart must be grounded in love that
the man may know the love which passeth knowledge.
Then notice that there is also here
another condition for this deep and blessed knowledge laid down in these
words, ‘That ye may be able to comprehend with all saints. ’ That is to
say, our knowledge of the love of Jesus Christ depends largely on our
sanctity. If we are pure we shall know. If we were wholly devoted to Him
we should wholly know His love to us, and in the measure in which we are
pure and holy we shall know it. This heart of ours is like a reflecting
telescope, the least breath upon the mirror of which will cause all the
starry sublimities that it should shadow forth to fade and become dim. The
slightest moisture in the atmosphere, though it be quite imperceptible
where we stand, will be dense enough to shut out the fair, shining, snowy
summits that girdle the horizon and to leave nothing visible but the
lowliness and commonplaceness of the prosaic plain.
If you want to know the love of
Christ, first of all, that love must purify your souls. But then you must
keep your souls pure, assured of this, that only the single eye is full of
light, and that they who are not ‘saints’ grope in the dark even at
midday, and whilst drenched by the sunshine of HIS love, are unconscious
of it altogether. And so we get that miserable and mysterious tragedy of
men and women walking through life, as many of you are doing, in the very
blaze and focus of Christ’s love, and never beholding it nor knowing
anything about it.
Observe again the beginning of this
path of knowledge, which we have thus traced. There must be, says my text,
an indwelling Christ, and so an experience, deep and stable, of His love,
and then we shall know the love which we thus experience. But how comes
that indwelling? That is the question for us. The knowledge of His love is
blessedness, is peace, is love, is everything; as we shall see in
considering the last stage of this prayer. That knowledge arises from our
fellowship with and our possession of the love of God, which is in Jesus
Christ. How does that fellowship with, and possession of the love Of God
in Jesus Christ, come? That is the all-important question. What is the
beginning of everything? ‘That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith.’
There is the gate through which you and I may come, and by which we must
come if we are to come at all into the possession and perception of
Christ’s great love. Here is the path of knowledge. First of all, there
must be the simple historical knowledge of the facts of Christ’s life and
death for us, with the Scripture teaching of their meaning and power. And
then we must turn these truths from mere notions into life. It is not
enough to know the love that God has to us, in that lower sense of the
word ‘knowledge.’ Many of you know that, who never got any blessing out of
it all your days, and never will, unless you change. Besides the ‘knowing’
there must be the ‘believing’ of the love. You must translate the notion
into a living fact in your experience. You must pass from the simple work
of understanding the Gospel to the higher act of faith. You must not be
contented with knowing, you must trust. And if you have done that all the
rest will follow, and the little, narrow, low doorway of humble
self-distrusting faith, through which a man creeps on his knees, leaving
outside all his sin and his burden, opens out into the temple palace — the
large place in which Christ’s love is imparted to the soul.
Brethren, this doctrine of my text
ought to be for every one of us a joy and a gospel. There is no royal road
into the sweetness and the depth of Christ’s love, for the wise or the
prudent. The understanding is no more the organ for apprehending the love
of Christ than the ear is the organ for perceiving light, or the heart the
organ for learning mathematics. Blessed be God! the highest gifts are not
bestowed upon the clever people, on the men of genius and the gifted ones,
the cultivated and the refined, but they are open for all men; and when we
say that love is the parent of knowledge, and that the condition of
knowing the depths of Christ’s heart is simple love which is the child of
faith, we are only saying in other words what the Master embodied in His
thanksgiving prayer, ‘I thank Thee, Father I Lord of heaven and earth,
because Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast
revealed them unto babes.’
And that is so, not because
Christianity, being a foolish system, can only address itself to fools;
not because Christianity, contradicting wisdom, cannot expect to be
received by the wise and the cultured, but because a man’s brains have as
little to do with his trustful acceptance of the Gospel of Jesus Christ as
a man’s eyes have to do with his capacity of hearing a voice. Therefore,
seeing that the wise and prudent, and the cultured, and the clever, and
the men of genius are always the minority of the race, let us vulgar folk
that are neither wise, nor clever, nor cultured, nor geniuses, be thankful
that all that has nothing to do with our power of knowing and possessing
the belt Wisdom and the highest treasures, but that upon this path the
wayfaring man though a fool shall not err, and all narrow foreheads and
limited understandings, and poor, simple uneducated people as well as
philosophers and geniuses have to learn love by their hearts and not By
their heads, and by a sense of need and a humble trust and a daily
experience have to appropriate and suck out the blessing that lies in the
love of Jesus Christ. Blessed be His name! The end of all aristocracies of
culture and superciliousness of intellect lies in that great truth that we
possess the deepest knowledge and highest wisdom when we love and by our
love.
II. Now a word in the next place
as to the other thought here, that not even the loving heart can know the
love of Christ.
‘It passeth knowledge,’ says my
text. Now I do not suppose that the paradox here of knowing the love of
Christ which ‘passeth knowledge’ is to be explained by taking ‘know’ and
‘knowledge’ in the two different senses which I have already referred to,
so as that we may experience, and know by conscious experience, that love
which the mere understanding is incapable of grasping. That of course is
an explanation which might be defended, but I take it that it is much
truer to the Apostle’s meaning to suppose that he uses the words ‘know’
and ‘knowledge’ both times in the same sense. And so we get familiar
thoughts which I touch upon very briefly.
Our knowledge of Christ’s love,
though real, is incomplete, and must always be so. You and I believe, I
hope, that Christ’s love is not a man’s love, or at least that it is more
than a man’s love. We believe that it is the flowing out to us of the love
of God, that all the fulness of the divine heart pours itself through-that
narrow channel of the human nature of our Lord, and therefore that the
flow is endless and the Fountain infinite.
I suppose I do not need to show you
that it is possible for people to have, and that in fact we do possess a
real, a valid, a reliable knowledge of that which is infinite; although we
possess, as a matter of course, no adequate and complete knowledge of it.
But I only remind you that we have before us in Christ’s love something
which, though the understanding is not by itself able to grasp it, yet the
understanding led by the heart can lay hold of, and can find in it
infinite treasures. We can lay our poor hands on His love as a child might
lay its tiny palm upon the base of some great cliff, and hold that love in
a real grasp of a real knowledge and certitude, but we cannot put our
hands round it and feel that we comprehend as well as apprehend. Let us be
thankful that we cannot.
His love can only become to us a subject of knowledge as it reveals itself
in its manifestations. Yet after even these manifestations it remains
unuttered and unutterable even by the Cross and grave, even by the glory
and the throne. ‘It is as high as heaven; what canst thou do? deeper than
hell; what canst thou know? The measure thereof is longer than the earth,
and broader than the sea.’
We have no measure by which we can
translate into the terms of our experience, and so bring within the grasp
of our minds, what was the depth of the step, which Christ took at the
impulse of His love, from the Throne to the Cross. We know not what He
forewent; we know not, nor ever shall know, what depths of darkness and
soul-agony He passed through at the bidding of His all-enduring love to
us. Nor do we know the consequences of that great work of emptying Himself
of His glory. We have no means by which we can estimate the darkness and
the depth of the misery from which we have been delivered, nor the height
and the radiance of the glory to which we are to be lifted. And until we
can tell and measure by our compasses both of these two extremes of
possible human fate, till we have gone down into the deepest abyss of a
bottomless pit of growing alienation and misery, and up above the highest
reach of all unending progress into light and glory and God-likeness, we
have not stretched our compasses wide enough to touch the two poles of
this great sphere, the infinite love of Jesus Christ. So we bow before it,
we know that we possess it with a knowledge more sure and certain, more
deep and valid, than our knowledge of ought but ourselves; but yet it is
beyond our grasp, and towers above us inaccessible in the altitude of its
glory, and stretches deep beneath us in the profundity of its
condescension.
And, in like manner, we may say that
this known love passes knowledge, inasmuch as our experience of it can
never exhaust it. We are like the settlers on some great island continent
— as, for instance, on the Australian continent for many years after its
first discovery — a thin fringe of population round the seaboard here and
there, and all the bosom of the land untraversed and unknown. So after all
experiences of and all blessed participation in the love of Jesus Christ
which come to each of us by our faith, we have but skimmed the surface,
but touched the edges, but received a drop of what, if it should come upon
us in fulness of flood like a Niagara of love, would overwhelm our
spirits.
So we have within our reach not only the treasure of creatural affections
which bring gladness into life when they come, and darkness over it when
they depart; we have not only human love which, if ‘I may so say, is
always lifting its finger to its lips in the act of bidding us adieu; but
we may possess a love which will abide with us for ever. Men die, Christ
lives. We can exhaust men, we cannot exhaust Christ. We can follow other
objects of pursuit, all of which have limitation to their power of
satisfying and pall upon the jaded sense sooner or later, or sooner or
later are wrenched away from the aching heart. But here is a love into
which we can penetrate very deep and fear no exhaustion; a sea into which
we can cast ourselves, nor dread that like some rash diver flinging
himself into shallow water where he thought there was depth, we may be
bruised and wounded. We may find in Christ the endless love that an
immortal heart requires. Enter by the low door of faith, and your finite
heart will have the joy of an infinite love for its possession, and your
mortal life will rise transfigured into an immortal and growing
participation in the immortal Love of the indwelling and inexhaustible
Christ.
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THE PARADOX OF LOVE’S MEASURE
‘The breadth, and length, and
depth, and height.’ — Ephesians 3:18.
Of what? There can, I think, be no
doubt as to the answer. The next clause is evidently the continuation of
the idea begun in that of our text, and it runs: ‘And to know the love of
Christ which passeth knowledge.’ It is the immeasurable measure, then; the
boundless bounds and dimensions of the love of Christ which fire the
Apostle’s thoughts here. Of course, he had no separate idea in his mind
attaching to each of these measures of magnitude, but he gathered them
together simply to express the one thought of the greatness of Christ’s
love. Depth and height are the same dimension measured from opposite
ends.- The one begins at the top and goes down, the other begins at the
bottom and goes up, but the distance is the same in either case. So we
have the three dimensions of a solid hero — breadth, length, and depth.
I suppose that I may venture to use
these expressions with a somewhat different purpose from that for which
the Apostle employs them; and to see in each of them a separate and
blessed aspect of the love of God in Jesus Christ our Lord.
I. What, then, is the breadth of
that love? It is as broad as humanity.
As all the stars lie in the
firmament, so all creatures rest in the heaven of His love. Mankind has
many common characteristics. We all suffer, we all sin, we all hunger, we
all aspire, hope, and die; and, blessed be God! we all occupy precisely
the same relation to the divine love which lies in Jesus Christ. There are
no step-children in God’s great family, and none of them receives a more
grudging or a less ample share of His love and goodness than every other.
Far-stretching as the race, and curtaining it over as some great tent may
enclose on a festal day a whole tribe, the breadth of Christ’s love is the
breadth of humanity.
And it is universal because it is
divine. No human mind can be stretched so as to comprehend the whole of
the members of mankind, and no human heart call be so emptied of self as
to be capable of this absolute universality and impartiality of affection.
But the intellectual difficulties which stand in the way of the width of
our affections, and the moral difficulties which stand still more
frowningly and forbiddingly in the way, have no power over that love of
Christ’s which is close and tender, and clinging with all the tenderness
and closeness and clingingness of a human affection, and lofty and
universal and passionless and perpetual, with all the height and breadth
and calmness and eternity of a divine heart.
And this broad love, broad as
humanity, is not shallow because it is broad. Our love is too often like
the estuary of some great stream which runs deep and mighty as long as it
is held within narrow banks, but as soon as it widens becomes slow and
powerless and shallow. The intensity of human affection varies inversely
as its extension. A universal philanthropy is a passionless sentiment. But
Christ’s love is deep though it is wide, and suffers no diminution because
it is shared amongst a multitude. It is like the great feast that He
Himself spread for five thousand men, women, and children, all seated on
the grass, ‘and they did all eat and were filled.’
The whole love is the property of
each recipient of it. He does not love as we do, who give a part of our
heart to this one and a part to that one, and share the treasure of our
affections amongst a multitude. All this gift belongs to every one, just
as all the sunshine comes to every eye, and as every beholder sees the
moon’s path across the dark waters, stretching from the place where He
stands to the centre of light.
This broad love, universal as
humanity, and deep u it is broad, is universal because it is individual
You and I have to generalise, as we say, when we try to extend our
affections beyond the limits of household and family and personal friends,
and the generalising is a sign of weakness and limitation. Nobody can love
an abstraction, but God’s love and Christ’s love do not proceed in that
fashion. He individualises, loving each and therefore loving all. It is
because every man has a space in His heart singly and separately and
conspicuously, that all men have a place there. So our task is to
individualise this broad, universal love, and to say, in the simplicity of
a glad faith, ‘He loved me and gave Himself for me.’ The breadth is
world-wide, and the whole breadth is condensed into, if I may so say, a
shaft of light which may find its way through the narrowest chink of a
single soul. There are two ways of arguing about the love of Christ, both
of them valid, and both of them needing to be employed by us. We have a
right to say, ‘He loves all, therefore He loves me.’ And we have a right
to say, ‘He loves me, therefore He loves all.’ For surely the love that
has stooped to me can never pass by any human soul
What is the breadth of the love of
Christ? It is broad as mankind, it is narrow as myself.
II. Then, in the next place, what is the length of the love of Christ?
If we are to think of Him only as a
man, however exalted and however perfect, you and I have nothing in the
world to do with His love. When He was here on earth it may have been sent
down through the ages in some vague way, as the shadowy ghost of love may
rise in the heart of a great statesman or philanthropist for generations
yet unborn, which He dimly sees will be affected by His sacrifice and
service. But we do not call that love. Such a poor, pale, shadowy thing
has no right to the warm throbbing name; has no right to demand from us
any answering thrill of affection. Unless you think of Jesus Christ as
something more and other than the purest and the loftiest benevolence that
ever dwelt in human form, I know of no intelligible sense in which the
length of His love can be stretched to touch you.
If we content ourselves with that
altogether inadequate and lame conception of Him and of His nature, of
course there is no present bond between any man upon earth and Him, and it
is absurd to talk about His present love as extending in any way to me.
But we have to believe, rising to the full height of the Christian
conception of the nature and person of Christ, that when He was here on
earth the divine that dwelt in Him so informed and inspired the human as
that the love of His man’s heart was able to grasp the whole, and to
separate the individuals who should make up the race till the end of time;
so as that you and I, looking back over all the centuries, and asking
ourselves what is the length of the love of Christ, can say, ‘It stretches
over all the years, and it reached then, as it reaches now, to touch me,
upon whom the ends of the earth have come.’ Its length is conterminous
with the duration of humanity here or yonder.
That thought of eternal being, when
we refer it to God, towers above us and repels us; and when we turn it to
ourselves and think of our own life as unending, there come a strangeness
and an awe that is almost shrinking, over the thoughtful spirit. But when
we transmute it into the thought of a love whose length is unending, then
over all the shoreless, misty, melancholy sea of eternity, there gleams a
light, and every wavelet flashes up into glory. It is a dreadful thing to
think, ‘For ever, Thou art God.’ It is a solemn thing to think, ‘For ever
I am to be’; but it is life to say: ‘O Christ! Thy love endureth from
everlasting to everlasting; and because it lives, I shall live also’ —
‘Oh! give thanks unto the Lord, for He is good, for His mercy endureth for
ever.’
There is another measure of the length of the love of Christ. ‘Master! How
often shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? — I say not unto
thee until seven times, but until seventy times seven.’ So said the
Christ, multiplying perfection into itself twice — two sevens and a ten —
in order to express the idea of boundlessness. And the law that He laid
down for His servant is the law that binds Himself. What is the length of
the love of Christ P Here is one measure of it-howsoever long drawn out my
sin may be, this is longer; and the white line of His love runs out into
infinity, far beyond the point where the black line of my sin stops.
Anything short of eternal patience would have been long ago exhausted by
your sins and mine, and our brethren’s. But the pitying Christ, the
eternal Lover of all wandering souls, looks down from heaven upon every
one of us; goes with us in all our wanderings, bears with us in all our
sins, in all our transgressions still is gracious. His pleadings sound on,
like some stop in an organ continuously persistent through all the other
notes. And round His throne are written the divine words which have been
spoken about our human love modelled after His: ‘Charity suffereth long
and is kind; is not easily provoked, is not soon angry, beareth all
things.’ The length of the love of Christ is the length of eternity, and
out-measures all human sin.
III. Then again, what is the
depth of that love.
Depth and height, as I said at the
Beginning of these remarks, are but two ways of expressing the same
dimension. For the one we begin at the top and measure down, for the other
we begin at the bottom and measure up. The top is the Throne; and the
downward measure, how is it to be stated? In what terms of distance are we
to express it? How far is it from the Throne of the Universe to the manger
of Bethlehem, and the Cross of Calvary, and the sepulchre in the garden?
That is the depth of the love of Christ. Howsoever far may be the distance
from that loftiness of co-equal divinity in the bosom of the Father, and
radiant with glory, to the lowliness of the form of a servant, and the
sorrows, limitations, rejections, pains and death — that is the measure of
the depth of Christ’s love. We can estimate the depth of the love of
Christ by saying, ‘He came from above, He tabernacled with us’ as if some
planet were to burst from its track and plunge downwards in amongst the
mist and the narrowness of our earthly atmosphere.
A well-known modern scientist has
hazarded the speculation that the origin of life on this planet has been
the falling upon it of the fragments of a meteor, or an aerolite from some
other system, with a speck of organic life upon it, from which all has
developed. Whatever may be the case in regard to physical life, that is
absolutely true in the case of spiritual life. It all originates because
this heaven-descended Christ has come down the long staircase of
Incarnation, and has brought with Him into the clouds and oppressions of
our terrestrial atmosphere a germ of life which He has planted in the
heart of the race, there to spread for ever. That is the measure of the
depth of the love of Christ.
And there is another way to measure
it. My miseries are deep, my helpless miseries are deep, but they are
shallow as compared with the love that goes down beneath all sin, that is
deeper than all sorrow, that is deeper than all necessity, that shrinks
from no degradation, that turns away from no squalor, that abhors no
wickedness so as to avert its face from it. The purest passion of human
benevolence cannot but sometimes be aware of disgust mingling with its
pity and its efforts, but Christ’s love comes down to the most sunken.
However far in the abyss of degradation any human soul has descended,
beneath it are the everlasting arms, and beneath it is Christ’s love. When
a coalpit gets blocked up by some explosion, no brave rescuing party will
venture to descend into the lowest depths of the poisonous darkness until
some ventilation has been restored. But this loving Christ goes down,
down, down into the thickest, most pestilential atmosphere, reeking with
,sin and corruption, and stretches out a rescuing hand to the most abject
and undermost of all the victims. How deep is the love of Christ! The deep
mines of sin and of alienation are all undermined and countermined by His
love. Sin is an abyss, a mystery, how deep only they know who have fought
against it; but
‘O love! thou
bottomless abyss,
My sins are swallowed up in thee.’
‘I will cast all their sins into the
depths of the sea.’ The depths of Christ s love go down beneath all human
necessity, sorrow, suffering, and sin.
IV. And lastly, what is the
height of the love of Christ?
We found that the way to measure the
depth was to begin at the Throne, and go down to the Cross, and to the
foul abysses of evil The way to measure the height is to begin at the
Cross and the foul abysses of evil, and to go up to the Throne. That is to
say, the topmost thing in the Universe, the shining apex and pinnacle,
glittering away up there in the radiant unsetting light, is the love of
God in Jesus Christ. Other conceptions of that divine nature spring high
above us and tower beyond our thoughts, hut the summit of them all, the
very topmost as it is the very bottommost, outside of everything, and
therefore high above everything, is the love of God which has been
revealed to us all, and brought close to us sinful men in the manhood and
passion of our dear Christ.
And that love which thus towers
above us, and gleams like the shining cross on the top of some lofty
cathedral spire, does not flash up there inaccessible, nor lie before us
like some pathless precipice, up which nothing that has not wings can ever
hope to rise, but the height of the love of Christ is an hospitable
height, which can be scaled by us. Nay, rather, that heaven of love which
is ‘higher than our thoughts,’ bends down, as by a kind of optical
delusion the physical heaven seems to do towards each of us, only with
this blessed difference, that in the natural world the place where heaven
touches earth is always the furthest point of distance from us: and in the
spiritual world the place where heaven stoops to me is always right over
my head, and the nearest possible point to me. He has come to lift us to
Himself, and this is the height of His love, that it bears us, if we will,
up and up to sit upon that throne where He Himself is enthroned.
So, brethren, Christ’s love is round
about us all, as some sunny tropical sea may embosom in its violet waves a
multitude of luxuriant and happy islets. So all of us, islanded on. our
little individual lives, lie in that great ocean of love, all the
dimensions of which are immeasurable, and which stretches above, beneath,
around, shoreless, tideless, bottomless, endless.
But, remember, this ocean of love
you can shut out of your lives. It is possible to plunge a jar into
mid-Atlantic, further than soundings have ever descended, and to bring it
up on deck as dry inside as if it had been lying on an oven. It is
possible for men and women — and I have them listening to me at this
moment — to live and move and have their being in that sea of love, and
never to have let one drop of its richest gifts into their hearts or their
lives. Open your hearts for Him to come in, by humble faith in His great
sacrifice for you. For if Christ dwell in your heart by faith, then and
only then will experience be your guide; and you will be able to
comprehend the boundless greatness, the endless duration, and absolute
perfection, and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge.
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THE CLIMAX OF ALL PRAYER
That ye might be
filled with all the fulness of God. — Ephesians 3:19.
THE Apostle’s many-linked prayer,
which we have been considering in successive sermons, has reached its
height. It soars to the very Throne of God. There can be nothing above or
beyond this wonderful petition. Rather, it might seem as if it were too
much to ask, and as if, in the ecstasy of prayer, Paul had forgotten the
limits that separate the creature from the Creator, as well as the
experience of sinful and imperfect men, and had sought to ‘wind himself
too high for mortal life beneath the sky.’ And yet Paul’s prayers are
God’s promises; and we are justified in taking these rapturous petitions
as being distinct declarations of God’s desire and purpose for each of us;
as being the end which He had in view in the unspeakable gift of His Son;
and as being the certain outcome of His gracious working on all believing
hearts.
It seems at first a paradoxical
impossibility; looked at more deeply and carefully it becomes a
possibility for each of us, and therefore a duty; a certainty for all the
redeemed in fullest measure hereafter; and, alas! a rebuke to our low
lives and feeble expectations. Let us look, then, at the petition, with
the desire of sounding, as we may, its depths and realising its
preciousness.
I. First of all, think with me of
the significance of this prayer.
‘The fulness of God’ is another
expression for the whole sum and aggregate of all the energies, powers,
and attributes of the divine nature, the total Godhead in its plenitude
and abundance.
‘God is love,’ we say. What does
that mean, but that God desires to impart His whole self to the creatures
whom He loves? What is love in its lofty and purest forms, even as we see
them here on earth; what is love except the infinite longing to bestow
one’s self? And when we proclaim that which is the summit and climax of
the revelation of our Father in the person of His Son, and say with the
last utterances of Scripture that ‘God is love,’ we do in other words
proclaim that the very nature and deepest desire and purpose of the divine
heart is to pour itself on the emptiness and need of His lowly creatures
in floods that keep back nothing. Lofty, wonderful, incomprehensible to
the mere understanding as this thought may be, clearly it is the inmost
meaning of all that Scripture tells us about God as being the ‘ portion of
His people,’ and about us, as being by Christ and in Christ ‘heirs of
God,’ and possessors of Himself.
We have, then, as the promise that
gleams from these great words, this wonderful prospect, that the divine
love, truth; holiness, joy, in all their rich plenitude of all-sufficient
abundance, may be showered upon us. The whole Godhead is our possession;
for the fulness of God is no far-off remote treasure that lies beyond
human grasp and outside of human experience. Do not we believe that, to
use the words of this Apostle in another letter, ‘it pleased the Father
that in Him should all the fulness dwell’? Do we not believe that, to use
the words of the same epistle, ‘In Christ dwelleth all the fulness of the
Godhead bodily’? Is not that abundance of the resources of the whole Deity
insphered and incarnated in Jesus Christ our Lord, that it may be near us,
and that we may put out our hand and touch it? This may be a paradox for
the understanding, full of metaphysical puzzles and cobwebs, but for the
heart that knows Christ, most true and precious. God is gathered into
Jesus Christ, and all the fulness of God, whatever that may mean, is
embodied in the Man Christ Jesus, that from Him it may be communicated to
every soul that will.
For, to quote other words of another
of the New Testament teachers, ‘Of His fulness have all we received, and
grace for grace,’ and to quote words in another part of the same epistle,
we may ‘all come to a perfect man, to the measure of the stature of the
fulness of Christ.’ High above us, then, and inaccessible though that
awful thought, ‘the fulness of God may seem, as the zenith of the
unsealeable heavens seems to us poor creatures creeping here upon the flat
earth, it comes near, near, near, ever nearer, and at last tabernacles
among us, when we think that in Him all the fulness dwells, and it comes
nearer yet and enters into our hearts when we think that ‘of His fulness
have we all received.’
Then, still further, observe another
of the words in this petition : — ‘That ye may be filled.’ That is to say,
Paul’s prayer and God’s purpose and desire concerning us is, that our
whole being may be so saturated and charged with an indwelling divinity as
that there shall be no room in our present stature and capacity for more,
and no sense of want or aching emptiness.
Ah, brethren! when we think of how
eagerly we have drunk at the stinking puddles of earth, and how after
every draught there has yet been left a thirst that was pain, it is
something for us to hear Him say: — ‘The water that I shall give him shall
be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life,’ — and ‘he
that drinketh of this water shall never thirst,’ Our empty hearts, with
their experiences of the insufficiency and the vanity of all earthly
satisfaction, stand there like the water-pots at the rustic marriage, and
the Master says, ‘Fill them to the brim.’ And then, by His touch, the
water of our poor savourless, earthly enjoyments is transmuted and
elevated into the new wine of His Kingdom. We may be filled, satisfied
with the fulness of God.
There is another point as to the
significance of this prayer, on which I must briefly touch. As our Revised
Version will tell you, the literal rendering of my text is, ‘filled unto’
(not exactly with) ‘all the fulness of God’; which suggests the idea not
of a completed work but of a process, and of a growing process, as if more
and more of that great fulness might pass into a man. Suppose a number of
vessels, according to the old illustration about degrees of glory in
heaven; they are each full, but the quantity that one contains is much
less than that which the other may hold. Add to the illustration that the
vessels can grow, and that filling makes them grow; as a shrunken bladder
when you pass gas into it will expand and round itself out, and all the
creases will be smoothed away. Such is the Apostle’s idea here, that a
process of filling goes on which may satisfy the then desires, because it
fills us up to the then capacities of our spirits; but in the very process
of so filling and satisfying makes those spirits capable of containing
larger measures of His fulness, which therefore flow into it. Such, as I
take it, in rude and faint outline, is the significance of this great
prayer.
II. Now turn, in the next place,
to consider briefly the possibility of the accomplishments of this
petition.
As I said, it sounds as if it were
too much to desire. Certainly no wish can go beyond this wish. The
question is, can a sane and humble wish go as far as this; and can a man
pray such a prayer with any real belief that he will get it answered here
and now? I say yes! There are two difficulties that at once start up.
People will say, does such a prayer
as this upon man’s lips not forget the limits that bound the creature’s
capacity? Can the finite contain the Infinite?
Well, that is a verbal puzzle, and I answer, yes! The finite can contain
the Infinite, if you are talking about two hearts that love, one of them
God’s and one of them mine. We have got to keep very clear and distinct
before our minds the broad, firm line of demarcation between the creature
and the Creator, or else we get into a pantheistic region where both
creature and Creator expire. But there is a Christian as well as an
atheistic pantheism, and as long as we retain clearly in our minds the
consciousness of the personal distinction between God and His child, so as
that the child can turn round and say, ‘I love Thee,’ and God can, look
down and say, ‘I bless thee’; then all identification and mutual
indwelling and impartation from Him of Himself are possible, and are held
forth as the aim and end of Christian life.
Of course in a mere abstract and
philosophical sense the Infinite cannot be contained by the finite; and
attributes which express infinity, like omnipresence and omniscience and
omnipotence and so on, indicate things in God that we can know but little
about, and that cannot be communicated. But those are not the divinest
things in God. ‘God is love.’ Do you believe that that saying unveils the
deepest things in Him God is light, ‘and in Him is no darkness at all.’ Do
you believe that His light and His love are nearer the centre than these
attributes of power and infinitude? If we believe that, then we can come
back to my text and say, ‘The love, which is Thee, can come into me; the
light, which is Thee, can pour itself into my darkness; the holiness,
which is Thee, can enter into my impurity. The heaven of heavens cannot
contain Thee. Thou dwellest in the humble and in the contrite heart.’
So, dear brethren, the old legends
about mighty forms that contracted their stature and bowed their divine
heads to enter into some poor man’s hut, and sit there, are simple
Christian realities. And instead of puzzling ourselves with metaphysical
difficulties which are mere shadows, and the work of the understanding or
the spawn of words, let us listen to the Christ when He says, ‘We will
come unto him and make our abode with him,’ and believe that it was no
impossibility which fired the Apostle’s hope when he prayed, and in
praying prophesied, that we might be filled with all the fulness of God.
Then there is another difficulty
that rises before our minds; and Christian men say, ‘How is it possible,
in this region of imperfection, compassed with infirmity and sin as we
are, that such hopes should be realised for us here?’ Well, I would rather
answer that question by retorting and saying: ‘How is it possible that
such a prayer should have come from inspired lips unless the thing that
Paul was asking might be?’ Did he waste his breath when he thus prayed?
Are we not as Christian men bound, instead of measuring our expectations
by our attainments, to try to stretch our attainments to what are our
legitimate expectations, and to hear in these words the answer to the
faithless and unbelieving doubt whether such a thing is possible, and the
assurance that it is possible.
An impossibility can never be a
duty, and yet we are commanded: ‘Be ye perfect, as your Father in heaven
is perfect.’ An impossibility can never be a duty, and yet we are
commanded to let Christ abide in our hearts.
Oh! if we believed less in the power
of our sin it would have less power upon us. If we believed more in the
power of an indwelling Christ He would have more power within us. If we
said to ourselves, ‘It is possible,’ we should make it possible. The
impossibility arises from our own weakness, from our own sinful weakness;
and though it may be true, and is true, that none of us will live without
sin as long as we abide here, it is also true that each moment of
interruption of our communion with Christ and therefore each moment of
interruption of that being ‘filled with the fulness of God,’ might have
been avoided. We know about every such time that we could have helped it
if we had liked, and it is no use bringing any general principles about
sin cleaving to men in order to break the force of that conviction. But if
that conviction be a real one, and if whenever a Christian man loses the
consciousness of God in his heart, making him blessed, he is obliged to
say: ‘It was my own fault and Thou wouldst have stayed if I had chosen,’
then there follows from this, that it is possible, notwithstanding all the
imperfection and sin of earth, that we may be ‘filled with all the fulness
of God.’
So, dear brethren, take you this prayer as the standard of your
expectations; and oh! take it as we must all take it, as the sharpest of
rebukes to our actual attainments in holiness and in likeness to our
Master. Set by the side of these wondrous and solemn words — ‘filled with
the fulness of God,’ the facts of the lives of the average professing
Christians of this generation, and of this congregation; their emptiness,
their ignorance of the divine indwelling, their want of anything in their
experience that corresponds in the least degree to such words as these.
Judge whether a man is not more likely to be bowed down in wholesome sense
of his own sinfulness and unworthiness, if he has before him such an ideal
as this of my text, than if it, too, has faded out of his life. I believe,
for my part, that one great cause of the worldliness and the sinfulness
and mechanical formalities that are eating the life out of the
Christianity of this generation is the fact of the Church having largely
lost any real belief in the possibility that Christian men may possess the
fulness of God as their present experience. And so, when they do not find
it in themselves they say: ‘Oh! it is all right; it is the necessary
result of our imperfect fleshly condition.’ No! It is all wrong; and His
purpose is that we should possess Him in the fulness of His gladdening and
hallowing power, at every moment in our happy lives.
III. One word to close with, as
to the means by which this prayer may be fulfilled.
Remember, it comes as the last link
in a chain. I shall have wasted my breath for a month, as far as you are
concerned, if you do not feel that the preceding links are needful before
this can be attained.
But I only touch upon the nearest of
them and remind you that it must be Christ dwelling in our hearts, that
fills them with the fulness of God. Where He comes God comes. And where
does He come? He comes where faith opens the door for Him. If you will
trust Jesus Christ, if you will distrust yourselves, if you will turn your
thoughts and your hearts to Him, if you will let Him come into your souls,
and not shut Him out because your souls are so full that there is no room
for Him there, then when He comes He will not come empty-handed, but will
bring the full Godhead with Him.
There must be the emptying of self,
if there is to be the filling with God. And the emptying of self is
realised in that faith which forsakes self-confidence, self-righteousness,
self-dependence, self-control, self-pleasing, and yields itself wholly to
the dear Lord.
There is another condition that is
required, and that is the previous link in this braided chain. The
conscious experience of the love which is in Christ will bring to us ‘the
fulness of God.’ Love is power; love is God; and when we live in the sense
and experience of God’s love to us then we have the power and we have the
God. It is as in some of these petrifying streams, the water is charged
with particles which it deposits upon everything that is laid in its
course. So, if we plunge our hearts into that fountain of the love of
Christ, as it flows it will clothe us with all the divine energies which
are held in solution in the divinest thing in God — His own love. Plunged
into the love we are filled with the fulness.
Then keep near your Master. It all
comes to that. Meditate upon Him; do not let days pass, as they do pass,
without a thought being turned to Him. Do not go about your daily work
without a remembrance of Him. Keep yourselves in Christ. Seek to
experience His love, that love which passeth knowledge, and is only known
by them who possess it. And then, as the old painters with deep truth used
to paint the Apostle of Love with a face like his Master, living near
Christ and looking upon Him you will receive of His fulness, and ‘we all,
with open face, beholding the glory, shall be changed into the glory.’
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MEASURELESS POWER AND ENDLESS GLORY
‘Now unto Him that is
able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask think, according to
the power that worketh in us, 21. Unto Him be glory in the Church by
Christ Jesus throughout all ages. world without end. Amen.’ — Ephesians
3:20, 21.
ONE purpose and blessing of faithful
prayer is to enlarge the desires which it expresses, and to make to think
more loftily of the grace to which we appeal. So the Apostle, in the
wonderful series of supplications which precedes the text, has found his
thought of what he may hope for his brethren at Ephesus grow greater with
every clause. His prayer rises like some songbird, in ever-widening
sweeps, each higher in the blue, and nearer the throne; and at each a
sweeter, fuller note.
‘Strengthened with might by His
Spirit’; ‘that Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith’; ‘that ye may be
able to know the love of Christ’; ‘that ye might be filled with all the
fulness of God.’ Here he touches the very throne. Beyond that nothing can
be conceived. But though that sublime petition may be the end of thought,
it is not the end of faith. Though God can give us nothing more than it
is, He can give us more than we think it to be, and more than we ask, when
we ask this. Therefore the grand doxology of our text crowns and surpasses
even this great prayer. The higher true prayer climbs, the Wider is its
view; and the wider is its view, the more conscious is it that the horizon
of its vision is far within the borders of the goodly land. And as we gaze
into what we can discern of the fulness of God, prayer will melt into
thanksgiving and the doxology for the swift answer will follow close upon
the last words of supplication. So is it here; so it may be always.
The form of our text then marks the
confidence of Paul’s prayer. The exuberant fervour of his faith, as well
as his natural impetuosity and ardour, comes out in the heaped-up words
expressive of immensity and duration. He is like some archer watching,
with parted lips, the flight of his arrow to the mark. He is gazing on God
confident that he has not asked in vain. Let us look with him, that we,
too, may be heartened to expect great things of God. Notice then —
I. The measure of the power to
which we trust.
This epistle is remarkable for its frequent references to the divine rule,
or standard, or measure, in accordance with which the great facts of
redemption take place. The ‘things on the earth’ — the historical
pro-ceases by which salvation is brought to men and works in men — are
ever traced up to the ‘things in heaven’; the divine counsels from which
they have come forth. That phrase, ‘according to,’ is perpetually
occurring in this connection in the epistle. It is applied mainly in two
directions. It serves sometimes to bring into view the ground, or reason,
of the redemptive facts, as, for instance, in the expression that these
take place ‘according to His good pleasure which He hath purposed in
Himself.’ It serves sometimes to bring into view the measure by which the
working of these redemptive facts is determined; as in our text, and in
many other places.
Now there are three main forms under
which this standard, or measure, of the Redeeming Power is set forth in
this epistle, and it will help us to grasp the greatness of the Apostle’s
thought if we consider these.
Take, then, first, that clause in
the earlier portion of the preceding prayer, ‘that He would grant you
according to the riches of His glory.’ The measure, then, of the gift that
we may hope to receive is the measure of God’s own fulness. The ‘riches of
His glory’ can be nothing less than the whole uncounted abundance of that
majestic and far-shining Nature, as it pours itself forth in the dazzling
perfectness of its own Self-manifestation. And nothing less than this
great treasure is to be the limit and standard of His gift to us. We are
the sons of the King, and the allowance which He makes us even before we
come to our inheritance is proportionate to our Father’s wealth. The same
stupendous thought is given us in that prayer, heavy with the blessed
weight of unspeakable gifts, ‘that ye might be filled with all the fulness
of God.’ This, then, is the measure of the grace that we may possess. This
limitless limit alone bounds the possibilities for every man, the
certainties for every Christian.
The effect must be proportioned to
the cause. And what effect will be adequate as the outcome of such a cause
as ‘the riches of His glory’? Nothing short of absolute perfectness, the
full transmutation of our dark, cold being into the reflected image of His
own burning brightness, the ceaseless replenishing of our own spirits with
all graces and gladnesses akin to His, the eternal growth of the soul
upward and God-ward. Perfection is the sign manual of God in all His
works, just as imperfection and the falling below our thought and wish is
our ‘token in every epistle’ and deed of ours. Take the finest needle, and
put it below a microscope, and it will be all ragged and irregular, the
fine, tapering lines will be broken by many a bulge and bend, and the
point blunt and clumsy. Put the blade of grass to the same test, and see
how regular its outline, how delicate and true the spear-head of its
point. God’s work is perfect, man’s is clumsy and incomplete. God does not
leave off till He has finished. When He rests, it is because, looking on
His work, He sees it all ‘very good.’ His Sabbath is the Sabbath of an
achieved purpose, of a fulfilled counsel The palaces which we build are
ever like that one in the story, where one window remains dark and
unjewelled, while the rest blaze in beauty. But when God builds, none can
say, ‘He was not able to finish.’ In His great palace He makes her ‘
windows of agates’ and all her ‘borders of pleasant stones.’
So we have a right to enlarge our
desires and stretch our confidence of what we may possess and become to
this, His boundless bound — ‘The riches of glory.’
But another form in which the
standard, or measure, is stated in this letter is: ‘The working of His
mighty power, which He wrought in Christ, when He raised Him from the
dead’. (Ephesians 1:19, 20); or, as it is put with a modification, ‘grace
according to the measure of the gift of Christ’ (Ephesians 4:7). That is
to say, we have not only the whole riches of the divine glory as the
measure to which we may lift our hopes, but lest that celestial brightness
should seem too high above us, and too far from us, we have Christ in His
human-divine manifestation, and especially in the great fact of the
Resurrection, set before us, that by Him we may learn what God wills we
should become. The former phase of the standard may sound abstract,
cloudy, hard to connect with any definite anticipations; and so this form
of it is concrete, historical, and gives human features to the fair ideal.
His Resurrection is the high-water mark of the divine power, and to the
same level it will rise again in regard to every Christian. The Lord, in
the glory of His risen life, and in the riches of the gifts which He
received when He ascended up on high, is the pattern for us, and the power
which fulfils its own pattern. In Him we see what man may become, and what
His followers must become. The limits of that power will not be reached
until every Christian soul is perfectly assimilated to that likeness, and
bears all its beauty in its face, nor till every Christian soul is raised
to participation in Christ’s dignity and sits on His throne. Then, and not
till then, shall the purpose of God be fulfilled and the gift which is
measured by the riches of the Father’s glory, and the fulness of the Son’s
grace, be possessed or conceived in its measureless measure.
But there is a third form in which
this same standard is represented. That is the form which is found in our
text, and in other places of the epistle: ‘According to the power that
worketh in us.’
What power is that but the power of
the Spirit of God dwelling in us? And thus we have the measure, or
standard, set forth in terms respectively applying to the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Ghost. For the first, the riches of His glory; for the
second, His Resurrection and Ascension; for the third, His energy working
in Christian souls. The first carries us up into the mysteries of God,
where the air is almost too subtle for our gross lungs; the second draws
nearer to earth and points us to an historical fact that happened in this
everyday world; the third comes still nearer to us, and bids us look
within, and see whether what we are conscious of there, if we interpret it
by the light of these other measures, will not yield results as great as
theirs, and open before us the same fair prospect of perfect holiness and
conformity to the divine nature.
There is already a Power at work
within us, if we be Christians, of whose workings we may be aware, and
from them forecast the measure of the gifts which it can bestow upon us.
We may estimate what will be by what we know has been, and by what we feel
is. That is to say, in other words, the effects already produced, and the
experiences we have already had, carry in them the pledge of completeness.
I suppose that if the mediaeval
dream had ever come true, and an alchemist had ever turned a grain of lead
into gold, he could have turned all the lead in the world in time, and
with crucibles and furnaces enough. The first step is all the difficulty,
and if you and I have been changed from enemies into sons, and had one
spark of love to God kindled in our hearts, that is a mightier change than
any that remains to be effected in order to make us perfect. One grain has
been changed, the whole mass will be so in due time.
The present operations of that power
carry in them the pledge of their own completion. The strange mingling of
good and evil in our present nature, our aspirations so crossed and
contradicted, our resolution so broken and falsified, the gleams of light,
and the eclipses that follow — all these in their opposition to each
other, are plainly transitory, and the workings of that Power within us,
though they be often overborne, are as plainly the stronger in their
nature, and meant to conquer and to endure. Like some half-hewn block,
such as travellers find in long abandoned quarries, whence Egyptian
temples, that were destined never to be completed, were built, our spirits
are but partly ‘polished after the similitude of a palace,’ while much
remains in the rough. The builders of these temples have mouldered away
and their unfinished handiwork will He as it was when the last chisel
touched it centuries ago, till the crack of doom; but stones for God’s
temple will be wrought to completeness and set in their places. The whole
threefold divine cause of our salvation supplies the measure, and lays the
foundation for our hopes, in the glory of the Father, the grace of the
Son, the power of the Holy Ghost. Let us lift up our cry: ‘Perfect that
which concerneth me, forsake not the works of thine own hands,’ and we
shall have for answer the ancient Word, fresh as when it sounded long ago
from among the stars to the sleeper at the ladder’s foot, ‘I will not
leave thee, until I have done that which I have spoken to thee of.’
II. Notice the relation of the
divine working to our thoughts and desires.
The Apostle in his fervid way
strains language to express how far the possibility of the divine working
extends. He is able, not only to do all things, but ‘beyond all things’ —
a vehement way of putting the boundless reach of that gracious power. And
what he means by this ‘beyond all things’ is more fully expressed in the
next words, in which he labours by accumulating synonyms to convey his
sense of the transcendent energy which waits to bless: ‘exceeding
abundantly above what we ask.’ And as, alas l our desires are but shrunken
and narrow beside our thoughts, he sweeps a wider orbit when he adds’
above what we think.’ He has been asking wonderful things, and yet even
his farthest-reaching petitions fall far on this side of the greatness of
God’s power. One might think that even it could go no further than filling
us ‘with all the fulness of God.’ Nor can it; but it may far transcend our
conceptions of what that is, and astonish us by its surpassing our
thoughts, no less than it shames us by exceeding our prayers.
Of course, all this is true, and is
meant to apply, only about the inward gifts of God’s grace. I need not
remind you that, in the outer world of Providence and earthly gifts,
prayers and wishes often surpass the answers; that there a deeper wisdom
often contradicts our thoughts and a truer kindness refuses our petitions,
and that so the rapturous words of our text are only true in a very
modified and partial sense about God’s working for us in the world. It is
His work in us concerning which they are absolutely true.
Of course we know that in all
regions of His working He is able to surpass our poor human conceptions,
and that, properly speaking, the most familiar, and, as we insolently call
them, ‘smallest’ of His works holds in it a mystery — were it none other
than the mystery of Being — against which Thought has been breaking its
teeth ever since men began to think at all.
But as regards the working of God on
our spiritual lives, this passing beyond the bounds of thought and desire
is but the necessary result of the fact already dealt with, that the only
measure of the power is God Himself, in that Threefold Being. That being
so, no plummet of our making can reach to the bottom of the abyss; no
strong-winged thought can fly to the outermost bound of the encircling
heaven. Widely as we stretch our reverent conceptions, there is ever
something beyond. After we have resolved many a dim nebula in the starry
sky, and found it all ablaze with suns and worlds, there will still hang,
faint and far before us, hazy magnificences which we have not apprehended.
Confidently and boldly as we may offer our prayers, and largely as we may
expect, the answer is ever more than the petition. For indeed, in every
act of His quickening grace, in every God-given increase of our knowledge
of God, in every bestowment of His fulness, there is always more bestowed
than we receive, more than we know even while we possess it. Like some
gift given in the dark, its true preciousness is not discerned when it is
first received. The gleam of the gold does not strike our eye all at once.
There is ever an unknown margin felt by us to be over after our capacity
of receiving is exhausted. ‘And they took up of the fragments that
remained, twelve baskets full.’
So, then, let us remember that while
our thoughts and prayers can never reach to the full perception, or
reception either, of the gift, the exuberant amplitude with which it
reaches far beyond both is meant to draw both after it. And let us not
forget either that, while the grace which we receive has no limit or
measure but the fulness of God, the working limit, which determines what
we receive of the grace, is these very, thoughts and wishes which it
surpasses. We may have as much of God as we can hold, as much as we wish.
All Niagara may roar past a man’s door, but only as much as he diverts
through his own sluice will drive his mill, or quench his thirst. God’s
grace is like the figures in the Eastern tales, that will creep into a
narrow room no bigger than a nutshell, or will tower heaven high. Our
spirits are like the magic tent whose walls expanded or contracted at the
owner’s wish — we may enlarge them to enclose far more of the grace than
we have ever possessed. We are not straitened in God, but in ourselves. He
is ‘able to do exceeding abundantly above what we ask or think.’ Therefore
let us stretch desires and thoughts to their utmost, remembering that,
while they can never reach the measure of His grace in itself, they make
the practical measure of our possession of it. ‘According to thy faith’ is
the real measure of the gift received, even though ‘according to the
riches of His glory’ be the measure of the gift bestowed. Note, again,
III. The glory that springs from
the divine work.
‘The glory of God’ is the lustre of
His own perfect character, the bright sum total of all the blended
brilliances that compose His name. When that light is welcomed and adored
by men, they are said to ‘give glory to God,’ and this doxology is at once
a prophecy that the working of God’s power on His redeemed children will
issue in setting forth the radiance of His Name yet more, and a prayer
that it may. So we have here the great thought expressed in many places of
Scripture, that the highest exhibition of the divine character for the
reverence and love — of the whole universe, shall we say? — lies in His
work on Christian souls, and the effect produced thereby on them. God
.takes His stand, so to speak, on this great fact in His dealings, and
will have His creatures estimate Him by it. He reckons it His highest
praise that He has redeemed men, and by His dwelling in them fills them
with His own fulness. And this chiefest praise and brightest glory accrues
to Him ‘in the Church in Christ Jesus.’ The weakening of the latter word
into ‘by Christ Jesus,’ as in the English version, is to be regretted, as
substituting another thought, Scriptural no doubt and precious, for the
precise shade of meaning in the Apostle’s mind here. As has been well
said, ‘the first words denote the outward province; the second, the inward
and spiritual sphere in which God was to be praised.’ His glory is to
shine in the Church, the theatre of His power, the standing demonstration
of the might of redeeming love. By this He will be judged, and this He
will point to if any ask what is His divinest work, which bears the
clearest imprint of His divinest self. HIS glory is to be set forth by men
on condition that they are ‘in Christ,’ living and moving in Him, in that
mysterious but most real union without which no fruit grows on the dead
branches, nor any music of praise breaks from the dead lips.
So, then, think of that wonder that God sets His glory in His dealings
with us. Amid all the majesty of His works and all the blaze of His
creation, this is what He presents as the highest specimen of His power —
the Church of Jesus Christ, the company of poor men, wearied and conscious
of many evils, who follow afar off the footsteps of their Lord. How dusty
and toil-worn the little group of Christians that landed at Puteoli must
have looked as they toiled along the Appian Way and entered Rome! How
contemptuously emperor and philosopher and priest and patrician would have
curled their lips, if they had been told that in that little knot of
Jewish prisoners lay a power before which theirs would cower and finally
fade! Even so is it still. Among all the splendours of this great
universe, and the mere obtrusive tawdrinesses of earth, men look upon us
Christians as poor enough; and yet it is to His redeemed children that God
has entrusted His praise, and in their hands that He has lodged the sacred
deposit of His own glory.
Think loftily of that office and
honour, lowly of yourselves who have it laid upon you as a crown. His
honour is in our hands. We are the ‘secretaries of His praise.’ This is
the highest function that any creature can discharge. The Rabbis have a
beautiful bit of teaching buried among their rubbish about angels. They
say that there are two kinds of angels — the angels of service and the
angels of praise, of which two orders the latter is the higher, and that
no angel in it praises God twice, but having once up his voice in the
psalm of heaven, then perishes and ceases to be. He has perfected his
being, he has reached the height of his greatness, he has done what he was
made for, let him fade away. The garb of legend is mean enough, but the
thought it embodies is that ever true and solemn one, without which life
is nought — ‘Man’s chief end is to glorify God.’
And we can only fulfil that high
purpose in the measure of our union with Christ. ‘In Him’ abiding, we
manifest God’s glory, for in Him abiding we receive God’s grace. So long
as we are joined to Him, we partake of His life, and our lives become
music and praise. The electric current flows from Him through all souls
that are "In Him,’ and they glow with fair colours which they owe to their
contact with Jesus. Interrupt the communication, and all is darkness. So,
brethren, let us seek to abide in Him, severed from whom we are nothing.
Then shall we fulfil the purpose of His love, who’ hath shined in our
hearts,’ that we might give to others ‘the light of the knowledge of the
glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.’ Notice, lastly,
IV. The eternity of the work and of the praise.
As in the former clauses the idea of
the transcendent greatness of the power of God was expressed by
accumulated synonyms, so here the kindred thought of its eternity, and
consequently of the ceaseless duration of the resulting glory, is sought
to be set forth by a similar aggregation. The language creaks and labours,
as it were. under the weight of the great conception. Literally rendered,
the words are — ‘to all generations of the age of the ages’ — a remarkable
fusing together of two expressions for unbounded duration, which are
scarcely congruous. We can understand ‘to all generations’ as expressive
of duration as long as birth and death shall last. We can understand ‘the
age of the ages’ as pointing to that endless epoch whose moments are
‘ages’; but the blending of the two is but an unconscious acknowledgment
that the speech of earth, saturated, as it is, with the colouring of time,
breaks down in the attempt to express the thought of eternity. Undoubtedly
that solemn conception is the one intended by this strange phrase.
The work is to go on for ever and
ever, and with it the praise. As the ages which are the beats of the
pendulum of eternity come and go, more and more of God’s power will flow
out to us, and more and more of God’s glory will be manifested in us. It
must be so; for God’s gift is infinite, and man’s capacity of reception is
indefinitely capable of increase. Therefore eternity will be needful in
order that redeemed souls may absorb all of God which He can give or they
can take. The process has no limits, for there is no bound to be set to
the possible approaches of the human spirit to the divine, and none to the
exuberant abundance of the beauty and glory which God will give to His
child. Therefore we shall live for ever: and for ever show forth His
praise and blaze out like the sun with the irradiation of His glory. We
cannot die till we have exhausted God. Till we comprehend all His nature
in our thoughts, and reflect all His beauty in our character; till we have
attained all the bliss that we can think, and received all the good that
we can ask; till Hope hem nothing before her to reach towards, and God is
left behind: we ‘shall not die, but live, and declare the works of the
Lord.’
Let His grace work on you, and yield
yourselves to Him, that His fulness may fill your emptiness. So on earth
we shall be delivered from hopes which meek and wishes that are never
fulfilled. So in heaven, after ‘ages of ages’ of growing glory, we shall
have to say, as each new wave of the shoreless, sunlit sea bears us
onward, ‘It doth not yet appear what we shall be.’