TRIED BY FIRE
EXPOSITIONS OF THE FIRST EPISTLE OF PETER
BY F. B. MEYER, B. A.
PART 1 - 1 Peter 1:1-2:10
PART 2 - 1 Peter 2:11-4:2
PART 3 - 1 Peter 4:3-5:10
XI.
THE PRECIOUS
CORNER STONE
"To whom coming, as unto a living stone, disallowed indeed of men, but
chosen of God, and precious, ye also as lively stones are built up a
spiritual house, an holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices
acceptable to God by Jesus Christ. Wherefore also it is contained in the
Scripture, Behold, I lay in Sion a chief corner-stone, elect, precious:
and he that believeth on Him shall not be confounded. Unto you therefore
which believe He is precious; but unto them which be disobedient, the
stone which the builders disallowed, the same is made the head of the
comer, and a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence, even to them which
stumble at the Word, being disobedient: whereunto also they were
appointed. But ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy
nation, a peculiar people: that ye should show forth the praises of Him
who hath called you out of darkness into his marvellous light: which in
time past were not a people, but are now the people of God; which had not
obtained mercy, but now have obtained mercy."--1Peter 2:4-10.
PETER, "surnamed Cephas, which is by interpretation a stone," has much to
say about his Master as the stone; and weaves together into a beautiful
mosaic the many allusions which convey this aspect of his character and
work, sparkling as jewels on the page of Scripture.
In the hieroglyphed chamber in Egypt, where Jacob lay a-dying, his mind
reverted to the massive stones which were strewn over his native land, and
which on one occasion had figured so strangely in his dreams; and he spake
of the coming Shepherd as being the "Stone of Israel." Moses in his
swan-song, when bidding the people ascribe greatness to God, alleged as
the reason, "He is the Rock." And David, in the last of his Psalms, opened
his exquisite delineation of the true King by saying, "The Rock of Israel
spake to me."
New interest was given to the same thought by an incident which is said to
have occurred in the building of Solomon's Temple. The stones were shaped
at a distance from the sacred site, that no sound of chisel or stone-saw
might be heard during the building of that house for God. As the palm of
the desert, or the oak of the forest, grows noiselessly into perfect
maturity and beauty, so did that noble pile crown the summit of Zion. But
on one occasion a stone was brought up by the straining oxen, which
refused to fit into any of the rising walls. And, after repeated attempts
to dispose of it, it was placed by itself in a retired spot, and was soon
forgotten, perhaps even covered by a luxuriant growth of weeds. At last,
as the building neared completion, it was discovered that a stone of
special form would be required to knit two walls, and fill a particular
corner. The need suggested the forgotten and rejected bit of masonry,
which was lying still where it had been discarded. "The stone which the
builders refused became the head-stone of the corner."
This incident is said to have suggested
that reference of the venerable Psalm, which is quoted by the Lord as
applying to Himself, and is referred to in at least two other places in
the New Testament besides this (Psa. 118:22; Matt. 21:42; Mark 12:10; Luke
20:17; Acts 4:11; Eph. 2:20).
In a slightly different form, the same thought re-appears in Isaiah. The
men of his time were full of the project of a foreign alliance as the best
means of bolstering up the kingdom, just then in dire peril of
dissolution, through internal dissension and threatening invasion. God, by
the mouth of his prophet, compared the attempt, and the peace it gave, to
making a covenant with death, and a hiding-place of lies, and foretold the
breaking of a storm, in which none of these devices should avail to shield
their inventors. And then, in answer to the dread with which his own
people foreboded the fury of that hail, and the overflowing of those
waters, He said that He would lay in Zion, for a foundation, "a stone--a
tried stone--a precious corner stone, a sure foundation"; and that He who
believed should not make haste.
Daniel adds one further link to the chain of holy thought, when he likens
the kingdom of God to the quarrying of a mighty stone in some lone
mountain rent. Though no hands are engaged upon it, it assumes shape,
disintegrates itself from its rocky home, and begins to roll down the
mountain side crushing everything obstructing its path. If that stone is
for a moment still, and a man falls over it, he is broken and maimed. It
is "a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence." If, on the other hand,
it falls on some passer-by, it grinds him to powder. In many a highland
valley, standing out amid the green grass, on which the sheep peacefully
browse in summer, there are mighty masses of rock which have leapt from
the face of the overhanging cliffs. Woe to any man who had been standing
beneath at the moment of their fall! Battered--demolished--ground to
powder. These are solemn words. But they are adapted from the prophecies
of Daniel by the Master himself (Da 2:34; Matt. 21:44).
1. LET US TRY TO UNDERSTAND
THE CONCEPTION OF THE PARAGRAPH.
It is full of changing metaphor; image piled on image; thought sliding
into thought, and rising in noble sequence to a pitch of sublime
magnificence. On a massive bed of Rock, there lies a Stone, which is
fitted to be a bond of union, joining lines of building, which had run in
opposite directions, making "both one." It is not only a stone, it is a
corner stone (Eph. 2:20).
Behold that stone! God looks on it with his sevenfold omniscience; and his
hands have engraved on it rare symbols of mystery and beauty, such as no
skilled human hand could design (Zech. 3:9). The carved lily work of Jachin and Boaz even could not vie with that heavenly workmanship. How
manifestly is this stone both elect and precious. Jesus was elect before
all worlds, as the organ of creation, the channel of redemption, the head
of the new race, the foundation-stone of the Church. And as to his dignity
and worth, He is beyond all price, the pearl of inestimable value, the
Koh-i-noor of heaven, the fairest among ten thousand, the altogether
lovely, the jewel of God's heart.
Next: there might be imagined an altercation among the builders. Though
the stone lies there ready to their hand, they deliberately reject God's
prepared foundation. Some are inclined to admire the carving, or to praise
the situation selected for it. But more criticise it, or deride it, or
account it as only suitable to carry part of their scaffolding. And so
after some discussion, the builders, wise in their own judgment, pass
away. "Disallowed indeed of men"! And then, without foundations, they
begin an erection, which is built on a seam of sand, and is destined to
stand as an unfinished monument of their folly.
But God's purpose cannot be foiled. If men will not build on his
foundation, yet there shall still stand on it a structure to his eternal
praise. Here is a marvel indeed! For, lo! the stone lives. "A living
stone." "It is full of eyes." Nay, more, it is attractive as magnetized
iron: it draws to itself other stones, dead, heavy, hard, which are lying
all around; and as one after another they slowly approach it, they also
begin to live. "To whom coming, a living stone, ye also, as living stones.
But even here the marvel does not stay. As in the prophet's vision, bone
after bone disentangled itself from the heaps of the slain, and built
itself up into the order and symmetry of the human frame, so here stone
follows stone, as if gathered by unseen hands, and together they build up
a house, the fabric of which is not material, but spiritual; because, as
the stones have passed into life, they have dropped their grosser nature,
and have become etherealized into a spirituality of essence, befitting the
constituent parts of "a spiritual house." God's home is not in the high
and lofty place of the heavens, nor in any house built by man, but in the
structure composed of saved and saintly spirits, once gross material, dead
as stones, but now, by contact with Jesus Christ, made pure, holy, and, in
the deepest sense, spiritually minded. "This is my rest for ever: here
will I dwell; for I have desired it."
But in such a temple there must be priests; and in this also the Divine
purpose cannot fail. Those who were once but as the rubble of the
hillside, are not only constituted part of a spiritual fabric, but by a
rapid change in the thought, they are represented as performing priestly
functions, an holy priesthood, clad in the appointed garments for holiness
and beauty. And since a priesthood must have somewhat to offer, and these
occupants of the true temple cannot appear before the altar or tread the
inner shrine, with empty hands, there are sacrifices prepared: yet (and
the thought changes once more) these sacrifices are not material any more
than they need to be propitiatory, since the one all-sufficient sacrifice
for sin has been offered once for all; but they are spiritual, and consist
in the consecrated lives and jubilant praises of those who have been
raised from the dust to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God,
by Jesus Christ.
Nor is that all: those who are thus associated with Christ are identified
with Him in the esteem and love of God. In the one verse, we are told that
our Lord is precious in the esteem of the Father--his beloved; his
darling; his only one. But in the original Greek of a following verse,
correctly rendered in the R.V., this preciousness is assigned to us; for
you therefore which believe is the preciousness. Not only is Jesus
precious to us, as our beloved and our friend, but his worth and beauty in
the mind of God are passed on to us who believe; so that our dull common
natures flash in the excellence of his loveliness. Yes, and we are changed
into his likeness from glory to glory. Thus the fishermen of Galilee are
discovered in the lowest tier of the foundations of the New Jerusalem, as
precious stones. And what is true of them is in a measure true of us all.
Iron touches magnetized iron and becomes magnetic. Stones touch the Stone
and become jewels. Thus God manufactures his stores of precious stones,
the facets of which, cut here in pain, shall flash for ever in the light
of his own glory yonder.
And now, ere we turn away, let us look once more at the disobedient and
disbelieving builders. Some of them have stumbled over the Divine
preparation, and are hopelessly maimed; others wander out on to the dark
mountains, where they will meet with many a disaster, falling down
precipices, or being otherwise overtaken with death. And their proud
building shall stand as a second Babel, for the laughter of the world.
They are "confounded" indeed: a fate which is impossible for those who
build on God's elect foundation. Alas that men should abuse the very means
which God had prepared for their salvation and blessedness!
2. THE PERSONAL
APPLICATION.
Ye are an elect race (R.V.).--
There are elect races in the world,
standing in the sunlit circle of civilization, not for themselves only,
but for others. The larger the privilege, the greater the responsibility.
This is the Divine method of government through the selection of nations
or races, which are specially gifted and endowed, that they may be better
qualified to help and save their fellows. And the position of the
Israelite nation, to whom pertained "the adoption, and the glory, and the
covenants," was expressly entrusted to them, that through them God might
bless all the nations of the earth. But during the present period of
rejection the Christian Church has been summoned to this glorious work of
becoming the channel for the Divine blessing to mankind.
A royal priesthood.--These two offices were jealously kept apart in
Israel, and when Uzziah attempted to combine them he was driven from the
Temple with the brand of leprosy on his brow. But in Christ they blend.
"He is a priest upon his throne" (Zech. 6:13). And all his followers are
constituted kings and priests (Rev. 1:6). As priests we worship in near
proximity to God; as kings we rule over men with a rule born of love,
which blesses and saves.
An holy nation.-- This expression, like the former, comes from the ancient
covenant into which God entered with Israel at Sinai (Exod. 19:6). Israel
failed in keeping it, and, as a nation, they have been temporarily cast
aside; but the individuals, whether Jews or Greeks, who have accepted.
Christ, constitute in their hosts another nation, which, as an innumerable
multitude, lives throughout the world, obeying a higher morality, citizens
of the city which can never pass away.
A people far God's own possession.--Love yearns for proprietorship; nor
can the heart of God be satisfied unless it can speak of some as its own.
Oh, happy they who have obeyed his summons, and have made a complete
surrender of themselves to Him! He has already taken them for his own
possession. Enclosed as a garden; tilled as a field; inhabited as a home;
guarded, kept, used, loved, with an emphasis none others know. Nor is
there anything in God Himself which is not at the disposal of those who
hold nothing back from Him.
How can we repay Him for all that He has done for us-when we compare what
we are, with what we were? Once in darkness, now in marvellous light. Once
not included among the people of God, now accounted as part of them. Once
without hope of mercy, now the happy recipients of untold mercy. What
shall we say? Is it not our duty to praise Him, not only with our lips,
but in our lives, casting our crowns at his feet, and hearing our part in
the song of adoration, which from all creation breaks around his throne?
Let us show forth his praise.
XII.
THE PLEA FOR
A BLAMELESS LIFE
"Dearly beloved, I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims, abstain from
fleshly lusts, which war against the soul; having your conversation honest
among the Gentiles: that whereas they speak against you as evildoers, they
may by your good works, which they shall behold, glorify God in the day of
visitation."--1Peter 2:11-12.
We now pass from the more purely doctrinal to the practical. All the
Apostles begin their Epistles by laying adamant foundations of Gospel
truth, on which they erect a superstructure of exhortations to practical
Godliness. Perhaps this division is less noticeable in the writings of the
Apostle Peter than in those of his "beloved brother Paul." Still there is
clearly a transition at this point. The sermon that has no personal
application is a failure. Doctrine without precept tends to dry
speculation. Precept without doctrine tends to a sapless formalism,
destitute of power.
How tenderly these exhortations are expressed! It is not easy to realize
that Peter, the strong rock-man, is speaking here. But years of sorrow
have done their work, in mellowing and toning the roughness of his
character. And there is a gentleness in his voice, as he beseeches his
dearly beloved readers, which must have been one of the strongest
persuasives to the life for which he pleaded. This plea for a blameless
life must have gone home with double effect, because the shaft was winged
with feathers drawn from love's gentle breast. The force of the expression
is the greater, because it is not often that we find Peter pleading thus.
Christian love does not always require the use of tender and effusive
expressions. There is always a danger of their losing their meaning and
power through incessant repetition; but there are occasions, especially
when we yearn for the welfare of others, at which, though we might be bold
enough to enjoin them that which is convenient, yet, for love's sake, we
rather beseech them.
Fleshly lusts are enumerated in detail in several passages of the Word of
God (Gal. 5:19-21). Lust is inordinate desire--the desire for too much of
a good thing, or for any of a bad one. Fleshly lusts are those which seek
their gratification through the avenues of the physical nature with which
God has endowed us. We are all provided with certain natural instincts and
desires, which have been implanted for right and useful purposes, and are
innocent and right when regulated by the will of God. But these natural
appetites are constantly fretting against restraint, yearning for unlawful
gratification, seething and foaming as the sea-waves against a harbour
bar. If you yield to them; if you love anything outside the circle of
God's wilt; if you follow your own wild instincts, irrespective of the
self-restraint demanded by conscience; if you indulge any one side of your
nature out of the due balance and equilibrium of the whole; if you allow
an undue monopoly of taste or thought in one direction--then beware! You
need especially to be on your guard against the fleshly lusts of which the
Apostle speaks.
They war against the soul--That word "war" is full of meaning. It gives
the idea of the march of an army against a city, as of the Greeks to
surround and capture Troy--an assault which began with open war and ended
by the stratagem of the wooden horse, from which the armed warriors
descended into the heart of the city at dead of night. Of course we should
all admit that excessive indulgence in any appetite injures the body, and
especially the organs through which the sin against the whole fabric has
been committed. But we may not all realize how destructive these fleshly
lusts are to the inner life. They attack and conquer it, and lead it into
captivity, impairing its energies sullying its purity, lowering its tone,
and cutting off the locks of moral strength. Remember then, when tempted
to yield to some unholy prompting, even though you only indulge the
thought or wish, that you are exposing yourself to a certain diminution of
spiritual force, which will inevitably cripple your endeavours, and show
itself in failure and defeat. No act of sensual indulgence is possible
without inevitable injury to our true selves. It may be forgiven, and put
away, through the forgiveness of God, by the blood of Jesus; but the soul
can never be quite what it would have been had the temptation been
overcome, and the grace of self-restraint exercised.
How many there are around us, eminently fitted by their gifts, to lead the
hosts of God, who, like Samson, grind in the prison-house, making pastime
for their foes, because they have been mastered by appetites which they
should have controlled, as the horseman his fiery steed! Is them not a
deep spiritual truth in the notion of the savage warrior, that the
strength of a fallen foe enters the arm which has smitten him to the dust?
Indulge the flesh--and you are weak. Curb it by self restraint--and you
ace strong.
We need, however, to notice how this abstinence from unholy indulgence may
be realized. And it may be helpful to remember the following points:--
(1) Let us understand that self-restraint is possible.--It is quite true
that we are children of a sinning race, and come into life with the taint
of evil in us. This is not a matter for argument, but of each man's
individual experience. Though the third chapter of Genesis and the first
chapter of Romans had never been penned, we must have felt that somewhere
there had been an awful lapse in the story of our race, or that it had
been the sport of some malign fate. From the first there is in us all an
hereditary tendency to gratify to excess the promptings of the natural
appetite. Besides this we have deepened and intensified these inherited
tendencies by our actual transgressions. There have been repeated yieldings, each one of which has nourished and fostered their strength.
And we resemble an athlete, who has permitted himself to be bound around
with threads of cotton, any of which could be snapped in a moment, but all
of which together hold him like an iron chain.
But, notwithstanding this, it is true that no temptation can happen to us
but such as is common to man--none with which God cannot deal. It would be
impious to say that God has permitted evil to arrive at such a pitch that
He cannot cope with it; or that there is any sin, usurping his throne in
the inner realm, which He cannot quell.
It is immaterial how strong may be your inherited tendencies towards evil,
or the habits which you have formed by successive acts of sin--God is able
to give you deliverance, and to keep you from being overcome. It is
possible even for you to abstain from the fleshly lusts which have been
subjugating our soul, as Moabites and Philistines did the fair land of
Israel in the days when the Judges ruled. Every command carries a promise
at its heart; and this loving entreaty for a better, purer life hides a
Divine undertaking that you shall yet be more than conqueror, putting your
foot on flesh and self, and reigning where now you groan in slavery. Take
heart! it is possible even for you to abstain from fleshly lusts, because
God is able to keep.
(2) Choose death.--There is a sense in which we all died in Jesus Christ
our Lord, when on the cross He yielded up his spirit to his Father. There
is also another sense in which we must die daily, in the constant denial
of self. But, besides this, there must be one definite moment in each
Christian's life when death is definitely chosen for all that is selfish,
worldly, fleshly, and of the devil. This is surely the meaning of the
Apostle, when he says, using a tense which signifies a definite past act:
"They that are of Christ Jesus crucified the flesh with the passions and
the lusts thereof" (Gal. 5:24).
Too many of us never come to that point. We accept the incursions and
reign of evil things too much as an inevitable experience to which we must
ever be liable in this world. We yield, and repent, and curse ourselves,
and yield again. Christians often speak of their besetting sins as natural
infirmities which they cannot help, but which must be borne as the
diseases incident to childhood. There is too little of the rising up of a
holy and almost fierce determination to be free.
Or if there be such a resolve, it often lacks completeness. It shuts the
front door but not the back door of the nature, against the thought of
possible indulgence. It leaves an almost invisible thread of communication
between the soul and the evils of which it would fain be rid, and along it
the contagion is still free to pass. And as long as there is the smallest
flaw in the integrity of the soups purpose, there is no hope of
deliverance. We must cut all connection, close every aperture, and abandon
all thought of fleshly indulgence in every shape and form. In short, we
must choose death.
Is not this the secret of your repeated failure? You have heard about the
keeping power of Christ, and have appealed for it. But you have not been
kept. You have been overcome in spite of your cries for help. And you will
never get right until you go down into the grave where Jesus lay, and
place yourself on that rough rocky niche, whilst the heavy stone shuts you
away from all that you held dear. And when you count all things dross for
his sake, you will win Christ. Through the grave you will come to the
Easter dawn. Death will be the gate of life. Having been crucified with
Christ, you will discover that his life will flow into you triumphantly.
With much earnestness do the pages of the New Testament appeal to us to
come to this definite resolution. But especially is it the keynote of that
marvellous sixth chapter of Romans, which appeals to us as having died
with Christ, and as therefore being free from sin. Expressions are
employed, from which we would have shrunk, as being too forcible, too
extreme, in order to show how complete the deliverance is for those who
have been with Christ in the likeness of his death. There is not the least
doubt that our deliverance from the power of all fleshly lusts is in the
precise measure in which we have embraced that idea of complete severance
from them, which is suggested in the one final, all-severing, awful word
--Death.
(3) Walk in the Spirit.--There are Christians who live in the Spirit, but
who do not walk in the Spirit (Gal. 5:25). The distinction is an obvious
one. We live in the Spirit, because only in Him we share at all in the
life of Christ, a life which is everlasting and Divine. But how few of us
walk in the Spirit from hour to hour; pausing at each step, so that He may
work or speak; looking to Him for guidance at each turn of the path; and
adopting the track which He indicates, as by the cloud in old time, while
moving over the desert sands!
But nothing less than this will suffice. "Walk in the Spirit," says the
Apostle, "and ye shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh? It is not enough
to resolve to abstain: the mere resolution will not be sufficient to keep
the door shut against the pressure of temptation. Ye must have something
positive. Not the water of a negation, but the fire of a possession. The
indwelling and pre-occupation of the Holy Spirit in his fulness can alone
suffice for our need. And this can only be had by a reverent and perpetual
communication being maintained between the soul and Him; as air must be
pumped into the diver's helmet at every movement he makes on the ocean
floor.
But when the soul is pervaded perpetually by the presence and power of the
Holy Spirit, it is easy to abstain. The soul loses its very taste for
things in which it formerly delighted. It detects them when yet far
distant, and shudders at their approach. Satisfied with the provision of
the Father's house, it turns with disgust from the husks of the
swine-trough.
The motives for this abstinence are more than sufficient.
(1) We are strangers and pilgrims.--
Consider what you are.
If you were citizens of this world, then you might drive the stone trade
with them, and follow the same lusts; but seeing you are chosen and called
out of this world, and invested into a new society, made free of another
country, it is very reasonable that there be this difference betwixt you
and the world, that while they live as at home, your carriage be such as
becomes strangers; not glutting yourselves with their pleasures, not
surfeiting upon their delicious fruits, but living warily and soberly."
However gay or comfortable the hostelry may be, the traveller hastens
homewards. It is not for him to entangle himself with the fascinations and
allurements of the towns through which he goes. Indeed, he has no time to
be allured; before the meshes of the net enwrap him he is gone. And the
attractions of the beloved circle which await him so engage and monopolize
his heart that he has no desire for the unholy baits which are offered to
him. What then have we in common with fleshly lusts, when our citizenship
is in heaven, whence we are looking for the Saviour?
(2) We must consider our influence on the world.
Our behaviour among the
Gentiles must be honest, i.e., fair or beautiful, not only for our sake,
but for theirs. Followers of Jesus must never be surprised to find
themselves spoken of as evil doers. They called the Master "Beelzebub";
how much more will they malign the slaves of Christ's household! The most
monstrous stories were circulated throughout the Roman Empire of the rites
which Christians were said to perpetrate in their secret meetings; and on
the ground of those stories they were punished with torture and death.
Such baseless charges are sometimes made still, and we must take care not
to give any occasion for them in our behaviour. Nay, we must so live,
that, in the day of crisis and trial, men may be compelled to acknowledge
the worth of our religion, and to glorify God for having enabled us so to
bear and suffer and endure.
There are arguments being burnt up in sick-chambers, and in the furnaces
of trial through which Christians are called to pass, which silence
detractors, and compel them to admit the presence of a strength, a
patience, and a fortitude, for which their philosophy cannot account. And
in many such cases has blasphemy been turned to adoration, and railing to
praise.
With such motives to animate us, let us give a favourable response to this
touching and earnest plea for a stainless and blameless life.
XIII.
GOD'S SLAVES
"Submit yourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lord's sake: whether
it be to the king, as supreme; or unto governors, as unto them that are
sent by Him for the punishment of evildoers, and for the praise of them
that do well. For so is the will of God, that with well-doing ye may put
to silence the ignorance of foolish men: as free, and not using your
liberty for a cloak of maliciousness, but as the servants of God."--1Peter 2:13-16.
Peter is very remarkable to notice the frequency and earnestness with
which the writers of the New Testament insist on the use of that word
"slave," as describing their true relationship to God. It is the favourite
designation of the Apostle Paul, "apostle and slave," and he even gloried
in wearing the brand marks of the slavery of Jesus. Not only here, but in
the first line of his Second Epistle, the Apostle Peter describes himself
in the very same terms. And the Apocalyptic vision of the Apostle John
rings with the word, touched with heavenly light, transfigured, glorified.
That wondrous book is prepared for slaves; they are the sealed; they
receive the rewards; they see God's face and bear his name upon their
brows. Heaven takes our most dreaded terms, and makes them sparkle in its
own light, till what had seemed the synonym of terror becomes the target
of our noblest aims. The servants of the royal household are nobles.
All this is very singular. For the slavery which throve in the poisoned
atmosphere of the pagan world was the most cruel and wicked thing that
society has ever seen. The slavery of the Roman Empire was slavery at its
worst. The slave was the absolute chattel of his owner, for purposes of
crushing labour, bitter torture, degrading crime. There was no appeal, no
hope of redress, no escape, except by the dread door of death. And yet it
is this system which the sacred writers never weary of applying to our
relationship to Jesus Christ. It presents them with an ideal which stirs
their intensest enthusiasm.
It might have been expected that they would have attacked and denounced
it, and grasped this thistle by the hand, to uproot it from the harvest
field of the world. But this is not the Divine method. God does not deal
with society as a whole, but with individuals one by one; not with the
abuses, but with the spirit out of which they arise; not with politics,
but with principles. It may be that the Apostles did not realize the
certain effect of the work which they did. They went quietly forward,
telling out the message of God's love, reminding men that in Christ there
was neither slave nor master, insisting that their true position was
determined, not by their outward condition, but by their inward temper.
And in doing this they were creating a world in which slavery could not
live. And perhaps some among us, who do not join in crusades against
existing abuses, but concentrate all their energy to bringing individual
souls from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, are
really doing as much as others to purify and elevate society as a whole.
You will best save the world by saving the individuals who go to make it
up.
Instead of denouncing slavery they borrowed from it to indicate the
disposition of their lives, and interwove it into the fabric of their
discourses. And so it shone with a heavenly radiance, as clouds, drenched
in the glow of the setting sun, lie along the horizon as bars of gold. It
is on this fact, then, that we are God's slaves, that the Apostle founds
the exhortations of this paragraph.
1. THE DIVINE
DESPOTISM
This may seem a strong phrase. But it is exactly Scriptural. In the next
Epistle, the word used of our Master is that from which our word "despot"
was coined (2 Pet. 2:1). (Master in R.V.) And it will well serve our
purpose, if it startles us into a recognition of the absoluteness of
Christ's authority over his own.
We are too easy in our treatment of our Lord. We call Him Master and Lord,
and we say well, for so He is: but we do not realize how much the term
involves; nor do we do the things that He says. He is our Captain, and we
have to go, or come, or do, not because we see the reasonableness of his
commands, but because He utters them. He is our Owner, who has purchased
us for a specific purpose, and whose intentions will be frustrated unless
He receive from us absolute and exact obedience. He is the Founder of our
order, and surely has a right to look for as much from us as the Jesuit
demands of his "black-robed militia," each of whom must be "as a staff in
a blind man's hand." (Dr. Maclaren)
God hath exalted Him to be a Prince and a Saviour. We are too prone to
reverse the order, and make Him a Saviour and a Prince. And we are apt to
think much more of being saved by Him, than of doing as He bids. And it is
because we know so little of Jesus as King that we experience so little of
Him as Saviour.
It would do us good to again take the Gospels in hand, and carefully study
them with the one object of noticing their incessant appeals for
obedience. Everything in Christian life hinges on doing as we are told.
Ours not to reason why,
Ours not to make reply,
Ours but to do and die.
The rights of Jesus Christ to exercise this despotic authority are founded
on many considerations, on which just now we may not dwell at length. He
gave Himself for us; and his supreme gift of Himself for us demands the
absolute surrender of ourselves to Him. The blood which He shed on Calvary
is the price by which we have been bought; and we cannot be other than the
property of our purchaser. His rights over us are also founded on the gift
made by the Father to the Son, before all worlds, of those who, in the
process of time, should come to Him. Besides all which, we have ourselves
knelt at his feet professing our desire to be, ever, only, always his; not
in part, but in the entire range of spirit, soul, and body. Who then can
challenge his right to be despotic? Because He is what He is, in dignity,
in character, in infinite grace, in superior knowledge, we may gladly and
safely put the entire control of our lives into his hands, yielding an
obedience which we care not give to any creature living, and obeying
absolutely, blindly, dumbly.
2. THE EFFECT
OF THIS CONCEPTION
"Submit."
See how absolutely the Apostle rivets the collar of obedience on
the necks of these scattered saints. They might be disposed to hesitate in
their submission to every ordinance of man; but he silences their remonstrances, and makes their yoke easy, by whispering, Submit, for the
Lord's sake. They might demand why they should go on in patient well-doing
amid the detraction and ignorant opposition of foolish men; but he
forecloses every objection, by saying, So is the will of God. They might
vaunt their freedom, as having been introduced into a new realm, the
tidings of which were beginning to steal through the world, as the first
faint breath of spring through the woods: but he met their argument by
reminding them that, though they were free, they must not use their
liberty as a veil for evil living, because they were the servants (lit.
the slaves) of Gad.
There are wonderful contrasts in these words. Those who stand erect as the
brothers of Christ in the presence of God, are bidden to submit to every
ordinance of men. Those who avow their determination to live only in the
will of God discover that will working through the appointments of foolish
and ignorant men. The freemen of God are his slaves; and therefore the
servants of men. So great, and full, and rich is that real life which we
may live in communion with God, that we can afford to be very liberal in
complying with the demands of the human institutions by which we are
surrounded, so far as they do not clash with our allegiance to our Master
and Lord.
There is great helpfulness in these words. Often, when submission is
required of us to some arbitrary and imperious command, we are inclined to
resent it: the blood flushes our face, lightning flashes in our eyes, and
we are disposed to go off in a rage, saying, "Why should I do this thing?"
Then the Master approaches us, saying, "Submit for my sake; do it because
I wish it: gently remonstrate against the injustice if you will, and if
your remonstrances are likely to avail; but if you cannot alter or amend
it, be content to submit: I wish it to be so." This makes the sullen iron
swim; changes Marah into Elim; and fills the lion with the sweetness of
the honey-comb. Oh, do not complain, and fret, and chafe against men! Tell
your griefs to your King. Wait patiently for Him; and He will set you
free. Or, if not, then believe that his permissions are his appointments;
and in bending your meek neck to the unwelcome yoke of human ordinances,
be sure that you are performing his good pleasure. The talisman of victory
in all such cases- the key to earth's best peace as it is to heaven's
choicest boons- is found in the little words, "for the Lord's sake"
There is great reasonableness in these words. The world from the first
hated the religion of Jesus, and professed to suspect it, as inimical to
itself. It was a favourite charge against the early Christians that they
were plotting the overthrow of the Empire, and the dethronement of Caesar,
in favour of "one Jesus." Their private meetings were supposed to be
convened for unlawful political purposes. It was therefore necessary that
men's minds should be disabused of the impression that any violence
subversive of existing society was contemplated.
For this purpose the early Christians were specially exhorted to conform,
so far as they could, to the demands and usages of the people amongst whom
they sojourned as pilgrims and strangers. They were to render to Caesar
the things that were Caesar's. If they accepted the order, and safety, and
privileges of a settled national and corporate life, they were to bear
their quota of its cost, and yield homage to the form of government which
they found in vogue, agreeing to modify or alter it only by orderly and
constitutional methods. They were therefore called upon to render to all
their dues, tribute to whom tribute, custom to whom custom, fear to whom
fear, honour to whom honour. A quiet and peaceable life was to be their
model; submission their law; well-doing their purpose. Thus, in the
process of time, they would disarm prejudice, and conciliate their foes,
by the exhibition of the graces of an inoffensive, tender, and beneficent
life.
It is very beautiful to remark how literally these precepts were obeyed.
Tertullian contrasts the early Christians with the heathen. These
delighted in the bloody gladiatorial shows of the amphitheatre, whereas a
Christian was excommunicated if he went to it at all. When the pagans
deserted their nearest relatives in the plague, Christians ministered to
the sick. When Gentiles left their dead unburied on the field of battle,
and cast their wounded into the streets, the disciples hastened to relieve
their sufferings. Thus they muzzled the ignorance of foolish men. The tide
began to turn. The more microscopic (1Peter 2:12) was the inspection of
the world, the more evident was it that a new and blameless character was
abroad. Pliny admitted in his letter to the Emperor Trajan that there was
no cause of blame in the followers of the new religion, "save a perverse
and extravagant superstition." And the holy example of the primitive
believers is cited by Merivale as one of the four causes of the conversion
of the Roman empire.
But, of course, there are limits to the application of these words.--Our
first service must always be to God. And when the demands of the king or
his governors clash with the commands of the Supreme, there is no longer
place for submission, but for refusal. Instantly the soul recognizes that
there is no room for vacillation. Indecision is not to be thought of. The
Apostles, who were the first to advocate obedience to existing authority,
were also the very first to exclaim, when that authority was intruding
into the realm of conscience: "We must obey God rather than men." And they
accepted the consequences to the bitter dregs.
The two kingdoms need not clash. We may obey God in submitting to the
ordinances of men. We may do well in Caesar's empire, without contravening
our allegiance to Christ. Nay, more, we shall be better citizens to
Caesar, because we are citizens of the kingdom of heaven. But when Caesar
steps over the line of the material and outward into the spiritual and
eternal, there must be persistent refusal, though we rot in gaol (jail) as a
consequence. But even then we are God's freemen, because his slaves.
3. THE FOURFOLD
APPLICATION
Honour all men. Perhaps value or esteem would better render the force of
the original word. They were to manifest such a kindly interest in all men
as would arise from a recognition of the worth of each. There is some
worth in the most worthless. In each human being there is something which,
in the eye of God, is of infinite value: a lost money-piece which has
rolled away into the dust, but is worth sweeping the house to find. Put
the most degraded in one scale, and the weight of a world of gold in the
other, and the world would kick the beam. The blood of the Son of God is
its only equivalent. Let us try to view men as God does, so shall we
fulfil this injunction.
Love the brotherhood.--Love is not sentiment, but self-sacrifice; not
liking every one necessarily, but making others, instead of self, the
pivot of our living. And this is the spirit which we should show to all
who own the same Fatherhood, and therefore belong to the same Brotherhood.
Fear God.--True love expels the fear that hath torment, and begets godly
fear that dreads to cause Him pain. And every step of growth in holiness
is measured by the increase of this fear, as the rise of the Nile is
measured by the breadth of territory over which it spreads itself. "Love
persuades a man," says Leighton, "purely for the goodness and loveliness
of God, to fear to offend Him, though there were no interest at all in it
of a man's own personal misery or happiness."
Honour the king.--Respect human institutions. That lesson lay at the
beginning of this paragraph, and it is repeated at its close; and, surely,
if so much is said of honour for an earthly monarch, much more might be
urged on the behalf of the claims of the King of kings. Oh that men would
honour Him, with the honour they give to the Father! He is worthy to
receive the power, and riches, and wisdom, and might, and honour, and
glory, and blessing; for He was slain, and has redeemed us to God by his
blood. Let us honour Him with no stinting love.
Those who give themselves most absolutely to God, are given back by Him
most completely to live for others. Christ does make us members of another
sphere; but at the same time He bids us, for His sake, to take a warm and
living interest in all that touches human life around.
XIV. TAKING
THINGS PATIENTLY
"What glory is it, if, when ye be buffeted for your faults, ye shall take
it patiently? but if, when ye do well, and suffer for it, ye take it
patiently, this is acceptable with God."--1 Peter 2:20.
The servants here addressed were the household servants and slaves, so
largely employed in the great establishments of that age. Wealth and
position made special boast of the vast number of dependents that were
maintained. Life was held cheaply enough; and when a slave was once
purchased, he cost little to keep. The Roman empire swarmed with bondmen;
and they became her ruin.
It is not surprising that large numbers of these poor creatures fled to
the shelter of the Christian Church, as the outcast seeks fire and food.
There at least was liberty for the captives, and love and equality between
slave and owner, master and serf. The purchase of the soul of the slave
had cost the Son of God an equal amount of suffering with that He had
endured for the wealthiest. The love that bent over the hut where an
Onesimus sheltered, was as strong and tender as that which pleaded with a
Philemon. The heaven which awaited the dying Lazarus, was as fair as that
which beckoned a martyr Apostle. And so there was in the Gospel a
marvellous fascination for the slave; and if we may found any conclusion
on the fact that large portions of the Epistles are addressed to them, and
that some of the noblest passages are written for their special benefit,
we must admit not only that they were to be found on the church rolls, but
that the sacred writers entertained towards them a strong and tender
sympathy.
The one message which the Spirit of God had for them, and which is so
often repeated on these pages, may be gathered up in the words: Submit;
endure; be subject; take it patiently.
We must remember that they were not able to give notice and leave at their
will. Wherever they could do this, without blame, and without detriment to
the trust committed to them by God or man, they were at perfect liberty to
do so. "If thou mayest be made free, use it rather" (1 Cor. 7:21). But
this was seldom possible. For the most part they had no alternative but to
stay where they were till death released them. It was to such that these
special exhortations came.
There is a great restlessness among employees throughout society. Servants
giving notice. Young people trying to better themselves. Men changing from
situation to situation. As a rule, there is not much gained, even in a
worldly point of view, from successive changes. It is the steady plodding
life which most quickly leads to success and comfort. Still, there is no
sin in making a change, if it be not made simply from selfish motives, or
with an eye to worldly advantage. When the Christian testimony has been
clearly given, and perhaps clearly rejected; when our presence is rather
an irritant to ungodliness than a persuasive to Christ; when we feel able
to ask God clearly to open another door for us, and He has done as we
request; when it is possible to take another position without compromising
the interests committed to our care; when we can do better for the kingdom
of Christ by a change--then there is assuredly no reason against it.
But in many cases, as with these household servants, there is no
honourable way out of a position in which God seems to have wedged us. We
may be in daily contact with grinding tyranny; with almost unbearable
cruelty; with an envenomed tongue; with an irritating, captious, trying
temper, never satisfied, never pleased--a child with the mother; a nurse
with an invalid; an apprentice with an employer; a woman with her
husband--in some position which cannot be altered, and where the
obligation, once entered upon, must be borne to the end. Here then is the
unfailing Divine recipe: when reviled, do not revile again; when buffeted
though doing well, do not retaliate; when unjustly accused or punished, be
still and take it patiently. And out of all this will come a life which
shall not only be like His life who hath set us an example, but which
shall also exert a remedial and saving influence on the most violent
opposers of his Gospel, while it mounts up to God as an odour of a sweet
smell, eliciting his smile of loving approbation. Two lines of action are
here referred to.
1. BUFFETED
FOR FAULTS
We have all made mistakes, and know what it is to be reprimanded or
punished. But under such circumstances we have had no just ground for
complaint: and our true policy when so situated must be not to excuse
ourselves, nor to cast the blame on others or on our circumstances; not to
flash forth with indignant words; but to take it patiently--or if
speaking, to confess our wrong, and ask to be forgiven.
In this the royal Psalmist has set us a memorable example. When he was
slowly descending the long slope of Olivet towards the Jordan, there came
out a man of the house of Saul, whose name was Shimei, "and as David and
his men went by the way, he went along on the hill's side over against
them, and cursed as he went, and threw stones at him, and cast dust." And
Abishai chafed at it, and asked permission to quench his abuse in blood.
"No," said the king, "let him curse; because the Lord hath said unto him,
Curse David."
It was as though he felt that his sin demanded public reprimand, and he
meekly accepted the permission of God as his appointment. In such a spirit
as this should we bear all buffeting which comes to us for our faults. Be
still. Sit alone and keep silence. Put your mouth in the dust. Give your
cheek to him that smiteth you. The Lord will not cast you off for ever; He
will take you again to Himself. Only remember there is nothing to glory
over in this. It is your common duty. "Let patience have her perfect work,
that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing."
2. BUFFETED,
THOUGH DOING WELL.
Our superiors, or employers, may be froward, difficult to please, always
finding fault; and, though we do our very best, we may meet with nothing
but buffeting and rebuke. Still, we are to take it patiently.
There is no harm in quietly and temperately explaining the untruth or the
unreasonableness of the accusation; or in showing how we have striven to
do our best. When our Master was accused of casting out devils by
collusion with their prince, He showed how unreasonable the charge was;
and when smitten with the palm of the hand, He said: "If I have spoken
evil, bear witness of the evil; but if well, why smitest thou Me?" It is
open for us to give a soft answer like this; but if it do not turn away
wrath, we must "take it patiently."
Be sure that your patience is not mean-spirited cowardice.--There is no
virtue in that. But let it arise from conscience toward God. Offer your
soul's patient endurance to God upon that altar which sanctifies the gift;
and the motive which prompts the sacrifice will be precious in his sight.
"This is thankworthy." "This is acceptable with God." And the Greek might
bear such a rendering as this: God says, Thank you. Yes, so it is. If in
some great house some poor servant, or if in a school some persecuted
child, will dare, for God's sake, to choke back the passionate outburst of
indignation, and to endure grief, suffering wrongfully, there is a thrill
of delight started through the very heart of God, and from the throne God
stoops to say, Thank you. The hero-explorer may be thanked by his country
and his Queen; but the weakest and obscurest saint may receive the thanks
of the Almighty.
We may cultivate this grace of patience by many considerations.--Though
that particular allegation may be wrong, yet there have been many
occasions in our lives when we have received more praise or thanks than
were our due. Balance one against the other. And such is the evil of our
hearts, that the germs of sins, which have been wrongly imputed to us, are
latent, and only await the opportunity of breaking out; they would have
broken out before, but for the grace of God. Besides, does not this desire
to receive the praise and esteem of all betoken a very worldly heart? Why
should we want human applause? If we had our deserts, instead of one
buffet in a life of caresses, we should have but one caress in a storm of
buffetings. If the sinless, guileless Saviour was dumb as a sheep before
its shearers amid the torrents of abuse that beset Him, surely it becomes
us to be still, for there are plenty of causes for rebuke in us, to
justify the worst things ever said against us, and many worse than these.
Our ease is like that of a criminal who had better bear quietly a sentence
for a crime he has not committed, lest by too much outcry he induce
investigation into a list of offences, which are not charged against him,
because not known.
And in addition, let us think tenderly of the condition of our
persecutors.--Alas, for them! How sad, how pitiable are they. Surely they
need pity rather than wrath, mercy more than vehemence. Perhaps our
uncomplaining meekness may touch them as no words of indignation would; as
the sighs and agonies of the early martyrs were pricks and goads in the
consciences of their persecutors, driving them to the Lord.
Moreover, it is after all but a small thing to be judged by man.--If he
praise, what does it amount to? If he blame, what is it but a puff of
smoke, a blank cartridge, a meteor exploding in the air? Life at the
longest is short. Eternity is near, even at the doors. And the kiss of
God, as we step across the threshold of his presence-chamber, will make us
even thankful to have been put into such circumstances of rebuke as
enabled us to win so large a reward.
And is it for a moment to be supposed that God will not vindicate us? Of
course He will. "Shall not God avenge his own elect, which cry day and
night unto Him? I tell you that He will avenge them speedily." "He will
bring to light the hidden things of darkness." "He shall bring forth thy
righteousness as the light, and thy judgment as the noonday." We can
afford, then, to give place unto wrath, since He has said, "Vengeance
belongeth unto me; I will recompense." Let us commit ourselves, as Jesus
did, to Him who judgeth righteously, and we shall find that He will clear
us and cause our enemies to bite the dust, as when Haman led Mordecai in
triumph through the streets of Shushan.
3. THE INDUCEMENTS
TO PATIENT ENDURANCE.
(1) As we have already seen, God says, Thank you.--And those thanks will
be heard one day by the raptured soul, as it stands almost dazed in his
presence. "When did I aught to deserve all this?" And in answer, many a
trivial and forgotten incident of Christian gentleness and meekness under
misrepresentation and rebuke, will be recalled. "This, soul, I beheld in
thee; and it made Me glad. Welcome! and well done!"
(2) For this we were called.--Not to be happy, or saved, or glorified, but
to suffer as Jesus suffered. He was the Master of the house, but they spat
on Him, smote Him, derided and crucified Him; yet He threatened not. And
we have been called to live His life. To make his meaning clear, the
Apostle uses words which children could follow. When the Greek
schoolmaster taught writing, he made his letters faintly, and the scholar
wrote over his outlines. This is the Apostle's thought, and we have been
called to repeat each line and turn and curve of the Master's life, so
that the world may ever have a living copy of His life before its eyes.
"Leaving an example."
(3) We know we are on the right way for our home.--Our Master has gone
through the world, leaving traces of his path behind Him; as in the dense
bush of Australia a man will blaze the trunks or snap the twigs, that
those who follow may find the way. So, as we encounter hatred and
rebuke--not for our misdeeds but because we belong to Christ--and are able
to bear it patiently, we are sure that we are on His track; which leads
down into the grave, and through it to the Resurrection lawns, and up the
Ascension steeps, to the banks of the river of water of life, where they
follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth.
And is this patience possible? Not to your unaided efforts; but as the
gift of the God of Patience through the Holy Ghost. Thrice we are told of
the patience of Jesus, who bore threat and wrong without a word of
retaliatory threat. Oh, marvellous grace! And it was wrought out by Him,
not for Himself alone, but for all who believe. It awaits our
appropriation. Let us claim it in all moments of irritation and calumny,
saying with Robert Hall, "Calm me, Lamb of God, calm me!" or whispering
softly, "Thy patience, Lord!" So may God the Holy Spirit direct you into
the patience of Jesus Christ!
XV.
THE FOOTPRINTS
OF THE FLOCK
"For even hereunto were ye called: because Christ also suffered for us,
leaving us an example, that ye should follow his steps: who did no sill,
neither was guile found in his mouth: who, when He was reviled, reviled
not again; when He suffered, He threatened not; but committed Himself to
Him that judgeth righteously: who his own self bare our sins in his own
body on the tree, that we being dead to sins should live unto
righteousness: by whose stripes ye were healed. For ye were as sheep going
astray; but are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls."
1 Peter 2:21-25
STRAY SHEEP!
Can you not see them? They have broken through some narrow opening in the
fence; have wandered afar to browse on the sweet grass that enticed them
forth; have been scared and driven by dogs, broken into smaller and ever
smaller companies, till at last they wander alone, or fall into pits, or
lie feebly bleating with exposure and fatigue, the easy prey of lion or
wolf. Far from the fold; torn, wounded, driven; panting with alarm;
splashed and draggled with filth; certain to perish, unless rescued by the
shepherd. Such were all of us. "We were as sheep going astray."
How shall we ever sufficiently adore the Good, Great, and Chief Shepherd
of souls, that He did not leave us to our hapless fate, but came after
us--down mountain rent, through thorny brake, over jagged flints, seeking
until He found us, and, laying us upon his shoulders, brought us back. We
"are now returned." Safe sheltered in his fold. Listening for Him to call
us by our name. Bearing his name branded on us. Not dreading to be put
forth to new duties, trials, or temptations, because so sure that "when He
putteth forth his own sheep, He goeth before them; and his sheep follow
Him." But this following of the Shepherd and Bishop of our souls involves
suffering. "Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that we
should follow his steps." It becomes us to mark well those footprints, as
they lead down into the dark valley, ere they climb upward to the
Resurrection and Ascension heights.
(1) The sufferings incident to the common lot of men.--"Man is born to
trouble, as the sparks fly upward." "Work is but one half of life;
suffering is the other. There is a hemisphere of the world in the sunshine
of work; but there is another in the shadow of suffering." All suffer,
either in body or soul; in themselves or their families; from what they
have or have not; through the malice of their fellows; the malevolence of
wicked spirits; or their own follies and mistakes.
In all such sufferings, except the last, Jesus suffered. Whatever is meant
by hunger, thirst, weariness, poverty, and toil, physical weakness and
suffering, bereavement with its prostrating anguish, He knew. These things
are common to man. Enduring these he earns his bread. Through these his
character is formed. By these he acquires the mastery of nature. And
because the Lord was found in fashion as a man, He bowed his royal head to
endure them. Though Maker and Monarch of all, He chose the mendicant's
empty purse, the outcast's fare, the exile's bed, that no child of Adam
should be able to boast of an excess or peculiarity of suffering, in the
feeling of which He could not be touched. "He was made like unto his
brethren."
(2) There are also sufferings peculiar to Christ as Mediator and
Saviour.--The Apostle lays stress on these as the necessary foundation of
our relationship to God. He "suffered for us"; and the preposition
unmistakably denotes that He took upon Himself the curse and consequence
of our sin, relieving us of it for evermore. And then as if to emphasize
the work of mediation and substitution more emphatically, the Apostle
quotes again from that great evangelic prophecy of Isaiah in which the
Spirit of Christ testified so clearly beforehand of the sacrificial aspect
of the Redeemer's sufferings (Isa. 53.).
He bore our sins.--It is a sacrificial word. As of old the Jew "leaned
hard" on the head of the victim destined to die for him, and the innocent
lamb bare the burden, dying beneath its load, so did Jesus bear our sins
in his own body on the tree. It was not the anticipation of approaching
physical torture which bowed Him so low in Gethsemane, or pressed the
bloody sweat from Him, as the feet of the peasant press the grapes in the
autumn vintage. It was the foreboding of the pressure of our sins, which
already began to crush his heart, and which broke it on the cross. No
sufferer has ever experienced sorrow like this. There has been nothing
like it in the history of the ages; nor will it admit of repetition. "Once
in the end of the world hath He appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice
of Himself." In one of Adam's race alone has this tragedy of love been
possible: that the sins of untold myriads should "meet on Him," and so be
expiated and put away for evermore (Isa. 53:6, marg.)
We must not linger long over the phrase which emphasizes the gift of his
own body to the work of our redemption. That body so purely born, which
must have been a fair casket for the holy jewel it contained; which in the
Jordan waters was first identified in outward seeming with the weight of
human sin, though in itself without sin; which was the very shrine and
home of God, who had prepared it for Him; which was the vehicle for so
many blessed words and deeds of ministry--that body was made a
sin-offering, and, so to speak, was burnt in fire without the camp, as the
bodies of the bulls and goats under the Levitical law. Nor must we stay to
compare that tree with the wood which Isaac carried on his strong young
shoulders to Moriah's brow. It is enough to know that it has taken deep
root in our world, and is filling it with its spreading branches, beneath
which even the fowls of the air are finding shelter--the true tree of
life, whose fruits drop on all lands, and whose leaves are for the healing
of the nations.
But there is yet one consideration which claims our attention ere we pass
on. Those sufferings, utterly unique and unapproachable by us, which rear
themselves amid all compeers, in lonely and unapproachable grandeur, have
for ever absolved us from having to bear the righteous penalty of the
broken moral laws of God's government. We may have to bear the natural
consequences and penalties of our wrong-doings. The converted drunkard,
though forgiven and delivered from the penalty of God's wrath, will yet
carry to his grave the marks and traces of his excess; though even these
may be transmuted into blessings by the near presence of our Lord. Out of
the eater will come forth meat, and out of the strong, sweetness; but, as
for the eternal, governmental, and judicial consequences of our sins,
these have been borne for us, and have been exhausted in the sufferings of
our blessed Lord. In the person of Jesus, the great God took them home to
Himself, and put them away for ever. Because He has suffered them, we need
not suffer them; because He has borne them, we need not bear them; because
the stripes fell thick and heavily on Him, they need never fall on us. "By
his stripes ye were healed."
The slaves whom the Apostle was addressing understood full well the
meaning of "stripes." The Greek word means the weal left by a stripe. From
the grave the Saviour came, bearing the weal's of many stripes,
wound-marks in hands and feet and side; but those bruises and wounds tell
a story which makes our hearts leap with joy. When the Great Shepherd,
raised through the blood of the everlasting covenant, met his timid
followers in the upper room, He bade them behold the print of the nails,
and the scar in his side. "Then were the disciples glad." And as we
consider the Lamb, "as it had been slain," and discern those precious
memorials of his finished work on our behalf, we too may break forth into
new songs, like those in heaven. Those stripes are the price of our
redemption, the evidence of our purchase, the sign-manual of pardon. Let
us then appropriate these triumphant words, and the whole verse of which
they form the appropriate close; and let each of us dare to say, not
because we feel it, but because we accept it as the word of God, which
cannot be broken: "He was wounded for my transgressions; He was bruised
for my iniquities; the chastisement of my peace was upon Him; and with his
stripes I am healed."
But the death of our Lord Jesus has a double aspect.--
It looks first towards the justice of God, to which it rendered an
adequate equivalent for our many sins. This was altogether independent of
us, for whom it was given. But it also looks towards man in the effect it
produces on those who rightly apprehend it. "That we, being dead to sins,
should live unto righteousness." There is a remarkable coincidence of
testimony between this statement and that in Rom. 6. Indeed, in these
words we strike one of the main seams of Scripture teaching. In the sight
of God, we are reckoned as being so identified with our Lord that what is
predicated of Him is also true of us. Dead in his death. Raised in his
resurrection. Seated with Him in his glory. And it should be the purpose
and aim of our life to realize by faith in actual practice and experience
all that is ours in the mind and purpose of God. Ye died: reckon
yourselves dead. Ye are risen: set your affection on things above. Ye are
seated in heavenly places: walk worthy of your high calling. By the grace
of God, there should be a perpetual deadness to every appeal that comes
from the flesh, the world, or the devil; and an ever fuller response to
the inspirations and appeals which come from the Spirit of God to a life
of righteousness.
The mediatorial sufferings of Christ do thus involve some suffering to us.
Because we must submit to daily death; we must take up our cross and
follow Him; we must sow ourselves, falling into the ground to die. A
perpetual self-denial; a setting up of the cross in our lives; a
conformity to his death; a drinking of his cup; a baptism into his
sufferings--all these are the indispensable conditions of that salvation
from the love and power of sin which He has wrought out for us. But in no
deeper sense can we follow in his steps as the Substitute, Mediator,
Reconciler, and High Priest of men.
(3) The sufferings of the sinless Man.--That He was sinless was
universally attested. No lamb or heifer was ever so searched for blemishes
as was He. Judas, who knew Christ's innermost history, declared that he
had "betrayed innocent blood." Pilate repeatedly insisted that he could
find no fault in Him at all. And the only charge that the priests could
substantiate against Him was his assumption of Deity. "He did no sin,
neither was guile found in his mouth." He did not say, Yea and Nay; but
all the promises of God in Him were yea, and, through Him, amen. He was
the true and faithful Witness.
And how lovely was his silence before his accusers. Silent before the
Sanhedrim, whilst the false witnesses hopelessly involved themselves.
Silent before Herod, so that from entering his halls to leaving them, no
word escaped his lips--emblem of the silence of God to those whose natures
are closed to Him. Silent before Pilate, except when that poor craven soul
gave expression to thoughts and questionings which surged up from its very
depths. Silent in the Palace-hall. Silent in the Praetorium. Silent on the
cross, save in words of blessing and prayer.
But how inevitable it was that holiness like His, even though so still and
uncomplaining, which did not strive, nor cry, nor lift up, nor cause its
voice to be heard in the streets, should come into collision with the
spirit of his time; and in that collision suffer bitterly! As the shining
of the sun brings out the poisonous fumes of the stagnant pool, so did the
presence of Jesus among men stir up the evil of human hearts; and that
evil must in itself have been a cause of awful suffering to one so
sensitive, so delicate, so holy as He was. The keener the appreciation of
musical harmonies, the intenser must ever be the agony of a discordant
note.
Sum up, if you can, the ingredients of suffering in Christ's cup. That the
race with which He stood in such close identification was so steeped in
sin that He was compelled to breathe our polluted atmosphere, all the more
terrible, in contrast with that of the world from which He had come, as
the foul miasma of a fetid court or room is the more distressing to those
who have just entered it from the fresh outer air; that He was
misrepresented and misunderstood and held guilty of sins against the
divinest traditions of his people; that He was treated as a madman, and as
possessed of weakened intellect; that He was obliged to endure the
contradiction of sinners against Himself; that He was opposed and hated by
those whom He yearned to save; that He was exposed to the temptations of
men and devils-are not all these footprints of suffering flecked with
blood, which substantiate the frequent references of this eye-witness to
the sufferings of Christ?
In all this He has left us an example that we should follow in his steps.
It is inevitable that we should pass through many of the same experiences.
The Christ-life in us must pass through the same stages of development,
and meet with the same treatment, as it did in Him. The world is not more
friendly than in the long past to the Master's spirit; and in proportion
as we are animated by it shall we be brought into the same collision with
the spirit of human society, and suffer from its incongruity to the
holiest instincts of the soul.
Expect to be reviled and buffeted, misunderstood and misrepresented; cast
out and crucified, as He was. The sheep cannot expect to fare better than
the Shepherd; nay, they know that they are on his track, when constrained
to follow in his footprints of suffering and sorrow. But the end will be
glorious, when the whole flock are gathered on the hills of eternity. If
we died, we shall also live, with Him. If we suffer, we shall also reign,
with Him. "Ye are they which have continued with Me in my temptations; and
I appoint unto you a kingdom as my Father hath appointed unto Me."
XVI.
WOMAN'S PLACE
IN THE HOME
"Likewise, ye wives, be in subjection to your own husbands; that if any
obey not the word, they also may without the word be won by the
conversation of the wives: while they behold your chaste conversation
coupled with fear. Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of
plaiting the hair, and of wearing of gold, or of putting on of apparel;
but let it be the hidden man of the heart, in that which is not
corruptible, even the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit, which is in the
sight of God of great price. For after this manner in the old time the
holy women also, who trusted in God, adorned themselves, being in
subjection unto their own husbands: even as Sara obeyed Abraham, calling
him lord; whose daughters ye are, as long as ye do well, and are not
afraid with any amazement. Likewise, ye husbands, dwell with them
according to knowledge, giving honour unto the wife, as unto the weaker
vessel, and as being heirs together of the grace of life; that your
prayers be not hindered."---1 Peter 3:1-7.
THERE were pure and virtuous homes in the old classic world, of which the
fragrant memory lingers to this day. Who can forget Panthea, who, as her
husband left her to fight under the renowned Cyrus, said?--"If ever there
was a woman that regarded her husband more than her own soul, I am that
woman." Who can forget the refusal of Cornelia to accept one of her many
and even royal suitors, because she insisted that her marriage with her
noble husband, Titus Gracchus, was not annulled by his death? Who will be
untouched by that exquisite description from the hand of the great Pliny,
who, speaking of his wife, said?--"She loves me, the surest pledge of her
virtue; and adds to this a wonderful disposition to learning, which she
has acquired from her love to me. She reads my writings, studies them, and
even gets them by heart. You would smile to see the concern she is in when
I have a cause to plead; and her joy when it is over. She finds means to
have the first news brought her of the success I meet with in court. She
accompanies my verses with the lute, with no master but love, the best of
instructors. Her affection is not founded on my worth or person; but she
is in love with the immortal part of me."
But these were isolated instances, canonized in history because so
exceptionally rare. The poets and historians of the Roman Empire paint in
the blackest colours the utter disregard of the marriage tie; the
abominable and shameless immorality which sapped the foundations of the
State, and led with inevitable exactness to its fall. These descriptions
are more than substantiated by the revelations of the wails of Pompeii.
Into such a world of stygian darkness, lit by a few stars, came the
religion of our Lord, and among its very first creations was that of the
family and the home. For these, its earliest and most precious gifts to
the age of its inception, and to all ages, mankind must ever own itself
indebted to the Gospel of the Lord Jesus.
Even the Jewish people had become grossly lax in their notions of the
obligations of wedded love. The rabbis permitted divorce on the most
trivial pretexts. If the husband were not pleased with his wife's
behaviour, or if she spoilt his food in cooking, or were stricken with a
grievous bodily affliction, he might put her away. It was held indeed that
this facility was a special privilege granted to Israel, but not to other
nations. That such was the state of society brings into startling emphasis
the words of Christ, who repeatedly went back to the primeval institution
of marriage, one woman for one man, and insisted that these two must live
together in the home, in a relationship which could only be dissolved by
death or by unfaithfulness.
It is necessary that these words of Christ and his Church should again
speak in the ears of the world. The growing revolt of the classes and the
masses from the simplicities of Christianity is being followed closely by
an increasing disregard of the ties of marriage and the bonds of home. How
rapidly the business of the divorce courts is increasing. We must have,
forsooth, looser divorce laws. We must not be too puritanic. We must admit
with Strauss that the New Testament contains "ascetic" notions concerning
marriage; that the Sermon on the Mount is deficient in the knowledge of
human nature; that the scientific method is in collision with the Biblical
ideal. And we are asked to condone the offences of certain great thinkers
and brilliant writers of our time against the sacrament of marriage, as if
their genius relieved them of moral obligation, or put them under some
special regime.
From such lamentable laxity, which is doing so much to dislodge from its
position the key-stone of our national greatness, little heeding the
lessons of the past, or realizing the full measure of disaster which must
crown the success of its endeavour, we turn with relief to the high, pure,
and divine conception of the place of woman in the Christian home, her
adorning, and her treatment.
1.
HER POSITION
It is true that she is bidden to be in subjection. But then we must also
remember the peculiar circumstances under which these Epistles were
written, and the revolution which was afoot.
Women had been degraded for centuries, as they are degraded now throughout
the Orient, and where Christianity has not come--supposed to be destitute
of souls; the drudge and slave, or toy; a piece of property, valuable or
not, as the case might be. But, like a ray of dawn, there came the
teaching of the Gospel. Woman was declared to be the helpmate of man,
taken not from his head or feet, but from his side, to be his companion.
In Christ was neither male nor female. The Holy Spirit showed no
partiality in his operations, but endowed the women of the early Church
equally with the men. The Lord Himself had admitted women to the inner
circle of his blessed friendship, and had called out their noblest
attributes. Before the eyes of the world there hung the memory of the
Virgin Mother; of the women who ministered to Him; of those who broke
their alabaster boxes on his person; of those who were last at his cross,
first at his grave. The miracle at the peasants marriage was a sign of the
Master's smile on this holy rite. And, as these visions passed before the
retina of woman's heart, she responded to the call of Jesus with glad
delight; she flung herself at his feet with the rapturous cry, "Rabboni";
she pressed into his Church, where she was welcome; and there was a danger
lest in the new-found ecstasy she might break loose from those sacred
obligations which were as old as Paradise, and which no Gospel could sever
or relax. Christ had not come to destroy the primeval rite, but to fulfil,
and to show that it was a pattern of that eternal and indissoluble union
into which He enters with his Church.
This was the origin of the command to be in subjection. It was, primarily,
addressed to those who since their marriage had become Christians. There
was considerable hesitancy in the early Church, as to their duty under
such circumstances. "Should they leave their husbands?" "Should they alter
their behaviour to them?" "Should they assume any superiority?" "No," said
the Apostles, "stay where you are, however painful your position, and
uncongenial your surroundings, and trying your husband's conduct. Be
chaste, gentle, loving, submissive, winsome, so that hearts may be
softened, which have never heard a word of Gospel preaching, and may be
won by the beauty of your holy and unselfish lives."
Of course, where true love subsists between husband and wife, and where
both are Christians, such a command as this is hardly needed. There is no
room for subjection, where there are no masterful commands; no standing up
for rights; no jealous strife for independence. The sensitive instincts of
love define exactly, as no words could do, the respective position of
husband and wife; and, altogether apart from such an injunction as this,
it is perhaps rather the nature of woman's love to yield, to lean on one
stronger than itself, and to give itself away in deeds of loving ministry.
If all Christian women would live like this, there would be less need of
preaching to their unconverted husbands. "Without a word, they would be
won by the conversation of their wives." Won! "A soul converted is gained
to itself, gained to the pastor or friend or wife or husband who sought
it, and gained to Jesus Christ; added to his treasury, who thought not his
own precious blood too dear to lay out for this gain." And what more
precious guerdon could reward a wife's chaste and God-fearing behaviour
than to know that her husband was to be a jewel in her crown, won for her
Lord!
There is nothing here for those who desire to marry out of the Lord. They
are clearly forbidden to be unequally yoked with unbelievers; and they
will find, to their cost, how bitter a thing it is to disobey a distinct
command. No hope is held out of either winning the other, where from the
first God's Word has been set at nought. But where conversion has taken
place after marriage in the case of one partner, there is every reason to
cherish hope for the other.
Oh, brokenhearted women, disappointed and of sorrowful spirit, ready to
despair, disposed to abandon heart and hope, be not weary in well-doing;
be yours the love that never faileth; remember that, in dark places, you
are to exemplify that love for the sake of the dear Master, who is looking
on and will not let you be tempted beyond what you are able to bear; dare
to trust Him for the future, and believe that God will yet give you your
dearest who sail in the ship with you over the stormy waves.
What a lesson is here for all! We cannot all preach by lip; but we can by
life. And such preaching is mighty in results; whilst the effect of it
abides long after the life has passed from view into the ministries of the
upper sanctuary.
2.
HER ADORNING
It does not seem that the Apostle forbids plaiting the hair, or wearing of
gold, any more than he does the putting-on of apparel. Religion does not
consist in the presence or absence of these things. If we wear them, we
are not better; if we abjure them, we are not worse. It makes surely very
little difference to the Saviour whether we dress in silk or calico, in
colours or drab. The one taw is--to dress as becomes the station in which
He has placed us, and in such a way as not to attract notice to ourselves.
Of course if a certain style of dress is associated only with the worldly
and irreligious; or if it exercises an injurious effect on those who
minutely watch and exaggerate what they see in us; or if it attracts
excessive remark, and makes us self-conscious--we do well to discard it,
and lay it aside. But where this is not the case, it is well to keep
moderately in the wake of custom and usage, lest we attract as much
attention by our prudery as our pride, and so minister to our accursed
love of singularily. But it is very pitiful when the Christian conscience
becomes morbid on these points. Some are so constantly questioning what
dress their Lord would have them wear, that they miss much of his company.
Of course, we ought to select our attire under his eye, asking for his
guidance in our choice, and his grace to indicate his taste for us. Surely
the Master has a right to say what his slaves should wear, and how they
should spend his money! And He will indicate his will in the gentlest and
most delicate manner. Cast the responsibility more utterly on Him, and
then occupy yourselves much more with Himself than with your attire, so
occupied with Him as to be almost oblivious of it.
The great point with each of us should be: Were is my adorning? If it be
without, then indeed we are in evil case. But if it be within--in the
hidden man of the heart, in the cultivation of a meek and quiet spirit--we
may leave outward matters to shape themselves very much as they may; and
they will cease to attract an undue share of our attention or thought.
Great is he, says Seneca, who enjoys his earthenware as if it were plate;
and not less great is the man to whom all his plate is no more than
earthenware. Plenty are there whose outward body is richly decked, but
whose inner being is clothed in rags; whilst others, whose garments are
worn and threadbare, are all glorious within. It is a solemn question:
What are our garments in the sight of God? Do we know anything of this
meek and quiet spirit, so precious in his esteem, so restful and blessed
amid the tumult of the world?
The clue to its possession seems hidden in the suggestion that the holy
women in the old time trusted in God. Turn your heart towards God; and the
result will show itself in such wholesomeness of behaviour, such
consistency in well-doing, such freedom from sudden fear, as will commend
the Gospel, and attract the smile of God.
3.
HER TREATMENT
These words to husbands may well be extended by the addition of the words
spoken to them in the Epistle to the Ephesians, in which they are bidden
to love their wives as Christ has loved the Church, nourishing and
cherishing them as their own body.
But three striking and beautiful suggestions are made here which will
suffice:--
(1) Give honour to the wife as the weaker vessel.--All bear on their
nature the touch of the great Potter's moulding hand; but some are
stronger than others, and in Christ's code the obligation to consider the
other always rests with the stronger. Politeness, high-breeding, chivalry,
courtesy--these are mimicked in society; but their original types are
found only, where Christianity has wrought her perfect work. No man can
fully acquire them until this Gospel is written in his heart; they pass
from within outwards, not from without inwards. And many who have never
been admitted to so-called good society are God's own gentle people.
(2) Remember that you are heirs together of the grace of life. There is no
such union as that of those who are wedded in the love of God, and to
whose love his love gives depth and meaning and a touch of infinitude. Of
a relationship like this we may well repeat the motto on Charles
Kingsley's grave, summing up a life of exquisite married bliss: we love;
we loved, we will love. Let thoughts of the common grace of life attempt
and ennoble your relations.
(3) See that your prayers be not hindered.--There is no test so subtle as
a good man's prayers. When he kneels before his God, He will know in a
moment whether or not he has contracted defilement during the preceding
hours; and, if so, where. And he is bidden to leave his gift at the altar,
and go to seek reconciliation, ere he returns to offer it. Whatever then
arises in the hour of prayer, and breathes on the mirror of the heart, is
thereby proved to be injurious and wrong, and must be put away. Whatever
makes husband and wife unable to pray together alone, or at the family
altar, must be dealt with mercilessly as a hindrance. And if only we are
faithful and true in these daily particulars of conduct, our prayers will
not only be unhindered but helped, and we shall gain such conceptions of
the love of Christ to us, amid all our failures and imperfections, as will
make the wedding bells ring out a perpetual chime of love within our
hearts, and we shall understand another phase of his love which passeth
knowledge.
There is nothing which tests us so much as the daily discipline of the
home life. It is much easier to stand amid a crowded assembly calling
Christians to entire consecration, than, on the following morning, to
bring those lofty principles to bear on the small details of the
breakfast-table, when the radiant light of the Transfiguration Mount has
been exchanged for the grey of an autumn day-break, and the excitement of
the crowds for the simple presence of wife and child. It is not so
difficult to live like saints where we are set free from the ordinary
friction and responsibilities of daily life, and surrounded by those who
interpose as many pillows of loving consideration as possible between us
and anything which would fret and annoy us. At the same time, if our
religion breaks down here it breaks down utterly. If we are not right, so
far as in us lies, with our nearest, it is very questionable if we are
right with God. Love to God involves love to man. And if we do not love
with a warm, sunny, attractive, and unselfish love those who live within
our home circle, we may gravely question whether we have tasted of the
love of God. For even if we have come to the end of our love we may become
the channels through which His love may, flow down to bless and save.
XXVII.
THE
CHRISTIAN TEMPER
"Finally, be ye all of one mind, having compassion one of another; love as
brethren; be pitiful; be courteous: not rendering evil for evil, or
railing for railing; but contrariwise blessing; knowing that ye are
thereunto called, that ye should inherit a blessing. For he that will love
life, and see good days, let him refrain his tongue from evil, and his
lips that they speak no guile: Let him eschew evil, and do good; let him
seek peace, and ensue it. For the eyes of the Lord are over the righteous,
and his ears are open unto their prayers: but the face of the Lord is
against them that do evil." 1 Peter 3:8-12.
In his Life of Frederick the Great, Carlyle describes in a few graphic
touches the Moravian town of Herrnhut; and, after remarking on the
religious atmosphere which brooded over the place, he says, "Herrnhut is a
Sabbath petrified; a Calvinistic Sabbath done into stone." It is a high
eulogium.
But every visitor to that unique settlement has been arrested by the
careful accuracy with which the principles of their religion and theology
have been exemplified to the minutest details in the lives of its
inhabitants.
But it were a still greater marvel to find in any community under heaven a
complete embodiment of these marvellous injunctions. All of one mind;
cemented into a holy unity by a common sympathy. Ministering to the
saints. Pitiful to the weak, erring, and poor. Courteous to equals. Calm
and forgiving under abuse and injury. Seeking peace. Living under the
smile of God. Where in all the world can we discover such a community of
Christians? It were a fair vision, worth going far to see. A temple to
Love. An abode of heavenly bliss. An oasis in the desert. A snatch of
celestial harmony amid the jarring discords of human selfishness. The New
Jerusalem descending from God out of heaven, Yet nothing less than this is
the Christian ideal, as it is also that which our Lord died to secure. And
it would well become us, if, without waiting for others, each one would
adopt the injunctions of these verses as the binding rule and regulation
of daily life. This would be our worthiest contribution to the convincing
of the world, and to the coming of the kingdom of our Lord. And it would
spread.
And does not the Apostles' use of the word finally teach us that all
Christian doctrine is intended to lead up to and inaugurate that life of
love, the bold outlines of which are sketched in these words? Let us not
be content with considering the mighty stones of truth laid by this wise
Master Builder in the foundations; but let us pass up, and into the temple
based upon them, where the Shekinah dwells above the mercy-seat, so that
we may catch its glow upon our faces, and bear it forth into the world.
1.
THE GENERAL
PRINCIPLE
"Be ye all of one mind, having compassion one of another." This oneness of
mind does not demand the monotony of similarity, but unity in variety. Not
the oneness of a hop-pole, or of a pile of hop-poles; but of the plant
which, with tendril, leaf, and fruit, rears itself aloft in the summer
air. Not the oneness of a brick, or of a pile of bricks; but of the house,
in which so many different materials and contrivances combine to shelter
human life. Not the oneness of a child; but of a family of children who
differ in age, character, temperament, and chosen pursuits, but are one in
love and tender sympathy.
We shall never be of
one mind in the sense of all holding the same opinions; but we may be all
of one mind when, beneath diversities of opinion, expression, and view, we
are animated by a common devotion to Christ; a common loyalty to the great
underpinning facts of Redemption; and a common love to all who hold the
Head, though they may differ from us in an infinite variety of minor
considerations.
The Church of Rome never caught this idea. Its only conception of the
oneness of Christ's disciples was a vast uniformity, a system in which
every one should utter the same formularies, worship in the same postures,
and belong to the same ecclesiastical order. And its leaders did their
best to realize their dream. They sought to exterminate divergence of view
by fire, and sword, and torture. They spread their network through the
world. And just before the dawn of the Reformation they seemed to have
succeeded. At the beginning of the sixteenth century, Europe reposed in
the monotony of almost universal uniformity under the almost universal
supremacy of the Papacy. Rome might almost have adopted the insolent boast
of the Assyrian of prophecy: "As one gathereth eggs, so have I gathered
all the earth; and there was none that moved the wing, or opened the
mouth, or peeped." And what was the result? There is but one answer
possible. The deep sleep of death. And it must always be so. Life abhors
uniformity. And whenever you force this marvellous being into your
cast-iron mould, you not only destroy its grace and beauty, but you kill
it.
There is variety in the human body, from eyelash to foot, from heart to
blood disc, from brain to quivering nerve fibre; yet in all this variety
each one is conscious of an indivisible unity. There is variety in the
tree: the giant arms that wrestle with the storm, the far-spreading roots
that moor it to the soil, the myriad leaves through which the winds make
music, the cones or nuts which it flings on the forest floor; yet in all
this it is one. There is variety in the Bible--variety of authorship, of
style, of age, from the bulrush ark to the break of the sapphire waves of
the Aegean about Patmos; yet for all this the sixty-six tractlets which
compose the Bible are always bound up in one cover, because composing one
book. So with Christians. There may be, and must be, infinite varieties,
and shades of thought and work; but, notwithstanding all, there is a
oneness which needs not to be created, for it is already consummated, but
which must be recognized and kept. "Endeavouring to keep the unity of the
Spirit in the bond of peace." Many folds, but one flock. Many stones, bait
one breastplate. Many temperaments, but one family. Many minds, but one
mind.
Much of the controversy of the present day arises from failure to
recognize the almost infinite variety of the human mind. No two persons
look at the same thing in the same way, or give the same version of an
incident or a tale. Each colours it with the tint of personal
idiosyncrasy, just as each object in nature borrows from sunlight its
especial hue. Start a dozen devout, deeply-taught men to formulate any
doctrine of the faith; whilst each holds the fact, no two will express it
in precisely the same way. We must distinguish between facts and views of
facts. Men may not think alike, and yet be of the same mind.
If we would obey this injunction of being "all of one mind," let us think
more often of the things in which we agree than of those in which we
differ. All are loved with the same love; bought by the same blood; born
of the same Spirit; members of the same body; animated by the same life;
subject to the same hopes and fears, afflictions and vicissitudes; drawing
our daily sustenance from the same supplies; destined for the same home.
How many and close are the bonds of our relationship! Surely it becomes us
to have great compassion one toward another: correcting each other, if
need be, privately, or before the Church, with no desire for
self-exaltation, but with eager loyalty for the glory of God; putting the
best construction on points of difference; viewing everything in the light
of the Master's glory; and trying to be more animated by that loving,
tender, compassionate spirit, which enabled Him to bear so long with the
misunderstanding, strife, and stupidity, of the men whom He had chosen to
form the inner circle of his earthly life.
2. FOUR SPECIFIC
APPLICATIONS
(1) To fellow-Christians. Love as brethren.--"Love" is not identical with
"like." Providence does not ask us whom we would like to be our
brethren--that is settled for us; but we are bidden to love them,
irrespective of our natural predilections and tastes. You say--That is
impossible. But remember that true love does not necessarily originate in
the emotions, but in the will; it consists not in feeling, but in doing;
not in sentiment, but in action; not in soft words, but in noble and
unselfish deeds.
Love changes the pivot and centre of life from self to another. Before she
flings her magic spell upon us, we are self-contained and self-centred,
bending all our energies to our self-aggrandisement, compelling all
streams to flow into the Dead Sea of our own interest. But when we love, a
marvellous transformation passes over us. We think more often of the
beloved than of ourselves. We find our plans, contrivings, activities, all
ennobled and transfigured by our one consideration of what will please and
help and bless that choice spirit which has gathered to itself the threads
of our life, weaving them after its own sweet will, and threading them
with blessedness, as black-lettered pages may be illumined by scrolls of
gold and colour. With such love should we love our fellow-Christians.
Do not begin with trying to love every one at once. We do not best descend
from generals to particulars; but ascend from particulars to generals.
Begin with those nearest to you in the church and the home, or in the
little religious coterie with which you are wont to mix. It is through the
love of individuals that we come to love the whole.
You say that this is your difficulty, and that there are Christians in
your immediate circle, whom you cannot get on with. Here, then, is my
advice. Do not try to feel love, but will to love. Tell the dear Master
that you are willing to love, or willing to be made willing to love, but
that He must create the grace of love within your breast. Ask Him to pour
the tides of his love through your heart, that He may love through you;
and you shall finally catch the glow and grace of his tenderness. Offer
Him your lips, that by them He may speak the words you cannot utter; and
your hand, that by it He may do the gentle deeds of ministry which you
cannot bring yourself to perform. Your confessions of inability will bring
out the assurances of his all-sufficiency. What you cannot do, He can and
will do through you. All things are possible to Him, and will be to you if
you believe in Him. Begin, then, to do what you know you ought to do, and
would do, if you felt love. Do it because it is right; do it for Christ's
sake; do it expecting the Lord to work in and through you -- and you will
find ere long that streams of Divine tenderness have commenced to flow
through the channels of your being, long choked with silt and debris. And
love thus practically learnt to one fellow-believer, will open your heart
to all.
(2) To the weak and erring. Be pitiful!-Oh for the compassion of our
blessed Lord! How often it breaks out in the Gospel narrative to the unshepherded sheep, to the hungry multitudes, and to the afflicted who
sought his aid! It is so much easier to scourge, rebuke, criticise, and
condemn, than to pity and heal. We must not condone sin, or allow
ourselves to think lightly of that which has cost God so much, and which
is the object of his wrath. But we may discriminate between sin and the
sinner, between disease and the sufferer; and, whilst we give no quarter
to the one, we may be very merciful to the other.
Think of thine own sins. How near thou hast been to the precipice, how
much thou owest to the grace of God! The measure of thy debt was ten
thousand talents; but it has been freely forgiven. And thy provocation to
sin may have been less urgent, thy passions less fiery, thy opportunities
less frequent, thy temper less persistent. And who can estimate the
blackness of darkness in which the transgressor is tossed, despair at the
helm, whilst the waves rush past to break in thunder on the rocks close
by! Such may be the lot of one near thee! Be pitiful! Consider thyself,
lest thou also be tempted. Refrain speech and action till thou knowest
all.
(3) To equals. Be courteous!--The courtesies of Christianity should be
more inward and constant than those of the world. Be ready to take the
least comfortable seat, to move up to the end of the pew, or to give up
your comfortable corner. Do not sit down at the extreme end of a
meeting-room, compelling late-comers to have the discomfort of passing to
the front before the eyes of all, much to the distraction of the leader.
Let others sit while you stand. Do not push and crowd as you come in or go
out. Step back to let women and children and invalids pass by. Let the
manners of your Father's court be always evident in your deportment, that
men may feel that you come of a noble line, and learn that Christianity
produces not simply the heroism of a great occasion, but the thousand
minute courtesies of daily living.
(4) To enemies. Do not retaliate!--"Not rendering evil for evil, but
contrariwise blessing." The old law of "an eye for an eye" is repealed, in
favour of that nobler legislation which bids us do good to those that hate
us, and pray for them who despitefully use and persecute us. Let us be
like the rock on the wilderness march, which when smitten yielded water to
the thirsty hosts.
We can afford to do this; for we have been called to inherit such a
blessing that, though we give it away with both hands, in spendthrift
prodigality, we can never exhaust it. Besides, this is the policy of
living a calm, good, and blessed life. He that loves life, and would see
good days, must keep his tongue from evil, and his lips from guile. The
man who is always vindicating himself and standing up for his rights, will
be perpetually in a ferment, and will miss the cream of life, which rises
when all is still. But, better than all, our God will see to us,
protecting and delivering us. Not a blow reaches us which He does not
notice. Not a threat which He does not hear. He will not let us be tempted
beyond what we can bear. He will put an arrest on the enemy when his
purpose is accomplished. And then, from out the cloud, He will look upon
the armies of our foes, and discomfit them, and overthrow them in the
heart of the sea. "His face is against them that do evil."
XVIII.
SUFFERING FOR
RIGHTEOUSNESS' SAKE
"Who is he that will harm you, if ye be followers of that which is good?
But and if ye suffer for righteousness sake, happy are ye: and be not
afraid of their terror, neither be troubled; but sanctify the Lord God in
your hearts: and be ready always to give an answer to every man that
asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you, with meekness and fear:
having a good conscience; that whereas they speak evil of you, as of
evil-doers, they may be ashamed flint falsely accuse your good
conversation in Christ. For it is better, if the will of God be so, that
ye suffer for well-doing than for evil-doing." 1 Peter 3:13-17.
TWICE in this paragraph we meet the word suffer; and in each case it is
associated with that special kind of suffering which is inflicted on the
innocent and holy by those who hate the light flung in on their own
darkness, and who desire to extinguish it if they may.
The Incarnation led inevitably to the cross. Any attentive student of
human nature who stood with Jesus on the threshold of his life, and heard
Him speak or saw Him act, must have been convinced that there was but one
fate reserved for such a one as He was. And though the acts of love and
power which marked his busy days--as the silver bells which made music at
every movement of Israel's high priest--averted the crisis for some few
months, it came; as from the first it was evident that it must come. Amid
every sign of vehement hatred, the Lamb of God was led to his death;
hurried out of the world as millions of his followers have been since.
From Bethlehem the road lay straight to Calvary
And what was true of the Son of God in his human flesh is true of each
incarnation of Him in our hearts and lives. Where, by the Holy Spirit, He
enters into the nature of those who consecrate themselves wholly to Him,
and begins to live freely and mightily within them, He will not only
manifest much of the grace and power of his own human life, but He will
also come into collision with the prejudices and interests of worldly and
evil men, incurring as of old their most virulent dislike, and probably
their violent resistance.
THE ORIGIN
OF PERSECUTION
We cannot analyze at length all the causes of the inevitable dislike which
the world feels towards the Christian. They are many, and obvious. For
instance: The man of God should be an embodied conscience. The one
endeavour of ungodly men is to drown the remonstrances of conscience. For
this they plunge into gaiety, or business, or exploration; for this they
hurry from scene to scene; for this they studiously avoid all that savours
of God or his claims. But in a holy life they meet with a devout and
constant recognition of those claims, coupled with a faithful endeavour to
fulfil them. There is an embodiment of righteousness without them, which
arouses into instant and unwelcome activity those convictions of their
duty which they have done their best to quell. There is the pride of heart
which resents superiority in another. There is the envy which grudges the
influence that goodness always attracts. There is the malice which broods
over the contrast that purity presents to impurity, until the fact of its
doing so bulks as a positive injury. All these strong passions of the
unrenewed heart, like Pilate and Herod of old, become friends in their
common antagonism to the saintliness which intrudes upon their privacy and
menaces their peace.
Besides, there is always an aggressiveness in true Christianity which
arouses strong resistance. We readily admit that, in one aspect, it does
not strive, nor cry, nor lift up, nor cause its voice to be heard. Soft as
the zephyr which scarcely stirs the bearded wheat; light as the tread of
the morning; gentle as distilling dew-drops--does the religion of Jesus
spread onwards over the world. And yet it endangers crafts; undermines
profitable but nefarious trades; steals away customers from the devil's
shrines; attacks vested interests; and turns the world upside down. A
tiresome, annoying, gain-sapping thing is pure and undefiled religion; and
the devil's servants have a bad time of it when the Puritan reigns, or the
Revival sweeps as a prairie fire through the community. "If we let Him
alone, all men will believe on Him; and the Romans will come and take away
both our place and nation."
Have we not here the clue to the subsidence of persecution in our days?
True, each age has its peculiar discipline; and ours is cursed by a soft,
luxurious worldliness, which is most hostile to the manifestation of
strong and heroic principle. But is not there too great a contrast between
our lives and those of our forefathers? Where is the saintliness of
living, the zeal for souls, the uncompromising rebuke of evil, the sturdy
adherence to principle at all costs, which littered the Alpine summits
with the bones of slaughtered saints, and lit the fires of Smithfield? If
these virtues were more generally embodied in the daily practice of the
majority, as they are in that of a small minority of professing
Christians, can there be much doubt as to the issue? Men might not adopt
the barbarous expedients of former days, for even in this they
unconsciously do homage to Jesus of Nazareth; but they would find some
other method of ridding themselves of the unwelcome protests of holy lives
against the selfishness and evil of their own condition.
Ah, it is one of the most terrible rebukes that Incarnate Love can
administer, when it says of any now, as it did of some in the days of his
flesh: "The world cannot hate you." Not to be hated by the world; to be
loved and flattered and caressed by the world--is one of the most terrible
positions in which a Christian can find himself. "What bad thing have I
done," asked the ancient sage, "that he should speak well of me?" The
absence of the world's hate proves that we do not testify against it that
its works are evil. The warmth of the world's love proves that we are of
its own. The friendship of the world is enmity with God. Whosoever
therefore will be a friend of the world is the enemy of God (John 7:7;
15:19; James 4:4).
THE BLESSEDNESS
OF THE PERSECUTED
"Blessed are ye." A beatitude caught from the lips of Jesus, and ringing
but again in our next chapter (Matt. 5:10 and 1 Pet. 4:14). Blessedness is
a higher thing than happiness, and is consistent with the most trying
circumstances. But what a universal testimony has been given to that
blessedness shining from the faces and breathing from the lips of those
who have suffered for righteousness' sake!
A recent writer has culled the words from dying martyr-testimonies; and
they testify to this inner blessedness. "I was glad when they said unto
me, Let us go into the house of the Lord," said one martyr, as he was
condemned to die.
This prison very sweet to me
Hath been since I came here;
And so would also hanging be.
If Thou didst then appear
Sang Bunyan in Bedford Gaol
(Jail), his eyes dazzled with frescoes painted by
angel hands on the damp walls. "Methinks they strew roses at my feet,"
said another, as the faggots were lighted about him.
And wherein does this blessedness consist? It comes through the inner
possession by the spirit of that heavenly temper, which is inspired by the
Spirit of God, and is close akin to Him, and is in itself blessedness. It
comes through the enforced constraint laid upon the soul to seek its
delight and rapture in the love and friendship of Christ, the Friend of
the persecuted, who is always nearest to those who are most like Him in
suffering, because most like in character and life. It comes through the
glad consciousness of being on the path trodden already by prophets and
righteous men, who have gone through flood and flame, but who have
overcome, and are set down with Christ on his throne. It comes because the
Spirit of glory and of God rests brooding in the heart. It comes because
the exceeding great reward beckons from on high.
There are many gates into blessedness. It stands four-square; and, judging
from our Lord's words, it has two gateways on each side, so that no life
is so far away or obscure, but it may enter in and dwell there. Choose you
which gate you will! And if you are not able to lay claim to poverty of
spirit, or mercifulness, or purity in heart, then dare to do well at all
costs; pursue patiently the path of lofty integrity and blameless purity;
bear the suffering which will inevitably fall to your lot with
uncomplaining patience and fortitude--and there will be administered to
you a blessed and abundant entrance into that kingdom of blessedness which
is already established on earth, standing with its sapphire walls and
gates amid the erections of men, unstained by their pollutions, as it is
unseen by any but purged eyes. "If ye suffer for righteousness sake,
blessed are ye."
THE BEHAVIOUR
OF THE PERSECUTED
(1) Be not afraid.
There seems here a reminiscence on Peter's part of
words heard long before: "Be not afraid of them that kill the body; and
after that have no more that they can do." "Let not your heart be
troubled, neither let it be afraid." No pallor on your face. No clammy
sweat on your brow. No quiver through your frame.
How may we obtain this lion-heart, which knows no fear in the presence of
our foes? There is but one answer possible. Expel fear by fear. Drive out
the fear of man by the fear of God. "Sanctify the Lord God in your
hearts." These words come back to us from a very stormy era in Jewish
history. "It was told the house of David, saying, Syria is confederate
with Ephraim. And his heart was moved, and the heart of his people, as the
trees of the wood are moved with the wind." And the Lord spake to Isaiah
his servant, "with a strong hand," saying, Do not join in this
panic-stricken cry, or seek to meet confederacy by confederacy; fear ye
not their fear, nor be afraid. Sanctify the Lord of hosts Himself; and let
Him be your fear, and let Him be your dread. And He shall be for a
sanctuary (Isa. 7-8.).
How often we see fear expel fear! The fear of being burnt will nerve a
woman to let herself down by a water-pipe from the upper storeys of a
house in flames. The fear of losing her young will inspire the timid bird
to throw herself before the steps of man, attracting his notice from them
to herself. The fear of the whip will expel the horse's dread of the
object at which it has taken fright. Oh for that Divine habit of soul
which so conceives of the majesty, and power, and love of God, that it
dares not sin against Him, but would rather brave a world in arms than
bring a shadow over his face! "So did not I," said a sincere and noble
man, "because of the fear of God.” And when a man so fears God as that he
fears to sin against Him, he will find God to be a sanctuary into which he
may retreat, and enjoy an inviolable defence. "Though an host should
encamp against me, my heart shall not fear. For in the time of trouble He
shall hide me in his pavilion. And now shall mine head he lifted up above
mine enemies round about me."
(2) Be ready always with a reason for your hope.--We are not always to be
talking about our faith, but proving it by divine deeds. But when men,
seeing the fruits of our faith, begin to inquire as to its ground and
reason, we should always be ready to give them a satisfactory reply.
How remarkable it is, in opposition to many of the contradictory voices of
our time, to meet with this clear insistance on the sweet reasonableness
of the Christian's hope! The Bible does not appeal to a blind credulity.
Many of its statements are above reason; but none of them are against it.
God's continuous appeal is contained in the inspired summons, "Come, let
us reason together, saith the Lord." The reasonings of pride will be
assuredly puzzled and non-plussed; but those of meekness will find
abundant scope for adoring wonder and assured conviction, in the mighty
depths of the thoughts of God.
Young people, the Bible has nothing to fear from the exercise of your
reason! It is not possible that the God who built up your brains and
endowed you with that marvellous faculty of reason will ever do violence
to one of his noblest gifts. Reasoning was a favourite pursuit with the
greatest of the Apostles. But reason must ever hold the torch to faith:
she must be the handmaid to collect materials for the sanctified judgment;
the analyst to test and separate and re-combine and think over again, as
Kepler said, the first thoughts of God. Where reason is the servant of a
reverent and holy spirit, as in Newton or Faraday, or the Magi who knelt
before the infant Saviour, it is the glory and boast of man. The mistake
of so many is not in the exercise of reason, but in putting reason in its
wrong place. If you put reason on the throne of your inner life, you may
profess to see; but you will be blind. But if you enthrone faith and hope,
whilst reason waits their bidding and obeys their behest, you will be
wiser than foe, or teacher, or grey-haired sage (Psa. 119:98-100).
Let us have a reason for our faith, based on personal experience, or
observation, or the study of evidence, or of fulfilled prophecy; or, above
all, wrought by the Holy Spirit in our hearts; and, though we need not be
ever obtruding it, let us never flinch from stating it when asked. And let
us give our reasons, or conduct our arguments, in a temper which shall be
the best evidence of the divine character of our faith. Let there be
meekness toward the face of man, and reverential fear toward the face of
God--the temper of those who confess that, at the best, they are but
children, gathering a few shells on the shores of the boundless ocean of
truth, which sweeps far away to the horizon where eternity and infinity
blend.
(3) Have a flood conscience.--The Apostle Paul also speaks much of
conscience, and of the necessity of perpetually exercising ourselves to
have a conscience void of offence toward God and man. It is well to obey
these repeated commands. The Christian, who faithfully follows the inner
voice, and conforms in all things to its behests, will not be far wrong. A
"good conscience" implies a "good conversation" in Christ.
There are many kinds of conscience spoken of in Scripture, but this
epithet flood is very comprehensive. Do my readers know what a good
conscience is? It is a conscience which is purged from dead works (Heb.
9:4); sprinkled with the blood of Christ (Heb. 10:22), borne witness to by
the Holy Ghost (Rom. 9:1): whilst a joy, which is full of glory, wells up
within it (2 Cor. 1:12); and as a calm, unruffled lake of peace it
reflects the cloudless heaven of God's good pleasure above. Such a
conscience is a good companion for our days, and a good bedfellow for our
nights. Every effort should be made to preserve its integrity. And when
life is moulded by such an inward influence, it will live down all
misrepresentation and slander; it will outshine all the mists of envy and
malice which have obscured its earliest beams; it will falsify false
reports. Detractors shall be ashamed at the triumphant answer made to
their accusations by the unblemished beauty of a holy Christian life;
whilst those that love God shall take heart. "The righteous shall see it,
and rejoice; and all iniquity shall stop her mouth."
Let all who are persecuted possess their souls in patience. Suffering
comes to all men; but if we must suffer, it is a thousand times better to
suffer for well-doing than for evil-doing. Even here and now it is fraught
with blessedness: but who can estimate the exceeding and eternal weight of
glory which awaits each member of the noble army of martyrs --from Jesus
Christ, who, before Pontius Pilate, witnessed the good confession, to the
least in his kingdom who has stood up for Him unmoved, amid the mockery of
schoolfellows, or the taunts of a group of shop mates?
XIX.
THE SUBSTITUTIONARY
WORK OF CHRIST
"For Christ also hath once suffered for sins, the Just for the unjust,
that He might bring us to God."--1 Peter 3:18.
CHRIST suffered!
That is the key-note. These believers were
suffering--suffering for well-doing. Suffering for conscience' sake. And
they were in heaviness through manifold trials. So the Apostle reminds
them that Christ also suffered. How sweet is that little word also! Caesar
was wont to cheer his troops by addressing them as fellow-soldiers. Such
is the force of this word. Are you homeless? Christ also had not where to
lay his head. Are you poor? Christ also for our sakes became poor. Are you
tempted? Christ also hath suffered, being tempted.
But Christ's sufferings are unique! Though He was righteous, He suffered
as no other one has for sins; for it is clearly taught here that He
suffered as a substitute, "the Just for the unjust."
It is quite true, as we are so often told, that the death of the Lord
Jesus has had a great moral effect upon men, revealing the love of God,
teaching the law of self-sacrifice, showing how keenly sin makes itself
felt in the holy sensitive nature of eternal love. But, besides this
subjective side of our Saviour's death, there is another, an objective
one. He has not only done something towards men, softening and moving them
to thoughts of unselfishness, and deeds of heroism, to which otherwise
they must have been for ever strangers; but He has done something also
toward the satisfaction of the great laws of the Divine nature, which make
for righteousness. And if He had not done the latter, his work in the
former had been in vain. It was not enough to touch men, there must be a
public reparation made to that violated law, of which both Scripture and
conscience speak. So only could penitent sinners he accepted.
It is not necessary that men should understand the philosophy of the
Atonement in order to be saved by it. No doubt, thousands have been saved
by it who had an erroneous conception of its true significance, in some or
even many of its aspects. Certainly our comfort and assurance become
stronger in proportion to the clearness and Scripturalness of our views
about the death of our Saviour. Still, our salvation does not depend on
the accuracy of our intellectual conceptions; but on our trust in the Lord
Jesus Christ as a Saviour, who through death and resurrection has acquired
the power to save unto the uttermost all that come unto God by Him, their
great High Priest.
The substitutionary character of the death of Christ is woven into the
texture of Scripture, as the cross into a venerable minster. You cannot
eradicate it without destroying the edifice which it underlies. Men must
distort the plain meaning of words, ere they can succeed in its
elimination from the sacred page.
As we study the Levitical law, we find substitution in every sacrifice.
What else is implied in the care to have a stainless victim; in the
imposition of hands; in the confession of guilt on the innocent head; in
the death of the guiltless, while the guilty goes to his home free? What
other truth is taught in the constant reiteration of phrases like that
which accosts us in these words--phrases caught from the lips of the
Master Himself, who spoke of his life being given a ransom for many? What
else can explain the marvellous arguments of the Epistles to the Romans
and Galatians? If only the masses of Christian people would read the Bible
for themselves, instead of reading so many books about the Bible, they
would be compelled to admit that the Scriptures are unanimous in attesting
the substitutionary character of the sufferings of Jesus. He died for us.
He bore our guilt and shame, our curse and penalty. He took to Himself the
penal consequences of human sin, and put them away for ever.
But, in proclaiming this doctrine, let us avoid certain misstatements.
(1) Let us beware of representing God as loving men only in consequence of
Christ's death.--This is as illogical as it is unscriptural. For it is one
of the postulates of all true thinking--that God is; that God is the same;
that God is the same Infinite Being, the I AM, the same in the yesterday
of the past, and in the to-morrow of the future, as in the to-day of the
present. But if the death of Christ be represented as having pacified an
inexorable and avenging Deity, causing Him to love those who else must
have withered under his relentless hate, it makes Him other than He was,
and the Divine nature must have suffered a change, which is unthinkable
and inadmissible.
The death of Christ is due to the love of God. God gave his Son because He
so loved the world. The cross is the expression of a love which is older
than the oldest star; more ancient than the most venerable elder who
stands in the zenith light of heaven; long as eternity, vast as infinity,
deep as the being of God. In this was manifested the love of God, that the
Father sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world.
(2) Let us also beware of making too great a division in the Divine
government between God's righteousness and his love. There is no collision
in God. The nature of God is not defined as righteousness, but as love. If
it had been defined as righteousness, it is doubtful if love could have
been included. But being defined as love, righteousness is of course
included. And there is no collision in God between the two, for his
righteousness is a fruit and offspring of his love. He must be righteous,
because He is love. He loves; and, therefore, as the Judge of all the
earth, He must do right.
It would not be consistent with love if He were to let sin go unnoticed or
unpunished; or if He were to allow the moral law to fall into disuse; or
if He were to permit us to set at defiance those promptings of our
conscience which even we approve. Is it love, which with easy good nature
suffers children to do as they list, unrebuked and unrestrained? Is it
love to allow murder and lust and rapine to curse a nation of unoffending
subjects without an attempt to bring the wrongdoers to justice? Is it love
to a man himself to permit him to go on unchecked in a course of ceaseless
evil? To ask these questions is to answer them. Love involves
Righteousness, and the insistence on the maintenance of right. And in the
cross of Jesus there is no variance between the attributes of God. Mercy
and truth met together; righteousness and peace kissed each other.
But when men demand that we should refuse to believe in substitution
because God is love, and therefore as not requiring an answer to the
demands of his justice, we reply that, because He is love, therefore He
must be just; He must maintain his law; He must exact penalty in respect
of the violation of the demands of his righteousness; He must act in the
moral sphere as He ever acts in the natural, in allowing law to secure its
requisitions and demands when it has been set at nought.
(3) Let us beware of dissociating the persons of the blessed Trinity in
the work of atonement.--The death of Christ is sometimes so stated as if
He stepped in between God and man, and did something on the prompting of
his own heart, apart altogether from the Father. And then, of course, the
objection arises, Why did God make or permit the innocent One to suffer?
But it must never be forgotten that the death of the cross was the act of
the whole Deity. "God was in Christ reconciling the world unto Himself."
"Christ, through the eternal Spirit, offered Himself to God." "My Father,
which dwelleth in Me, He doeth the works." The Son did nothing of Himself:
and how much less could He have wrought his greatest work apart from his
Father! He was only translating into human guise and language acts and
deeds which He saw his Father do.
And so in the cross we find the eternal God taking to Himself the
consequences of human sin; Himself becoming the propitiation for the sin
of the world; bearing it Himself; pressed under it as a cart is pressed
under sheaves; and putting it away.
This cannot be unjust. It would be unjust to take a good boy and make him
suffer for a naughty one; but it cannot be unjust for Brunson Alcott to
suffer himself the penalty which should be borne by the boys who have
broken the regulations of his school. It cannot be unjust for one to
substitute his life for another--else some of the noblest deeds of human
history must be expunged.
Yes, reader, you may take this home as yours, and say, thankfully: God has
suffered for me in the person of Jesus, the Just for the unjust. You may
never have thanked Him, or availed yourself of the benefits of his death,
as a man might leave bank-stock to accumulate unclaimed; you may even
secure for yourself eternal condemnation by shutting out the love and
light of God, and electing to live in the darkness of selfishness and
godlessness. And yet it is true that out of his great love the eternal God
has done something for you which He never did for angels, and which might
make you blessed for ever.
(4) Let us beware of suggesting that Christ has ceased to suffer.--There
is a sense, of course, in which our Saviour suffered for sins once. The
direct work of substitution was accomplished on the cross, and was
definitely concluded when Jesus cried, "it is finished!" The Resurrection
proves that the work of propitiation is an accomplished fact.
But we must not suppose that Jesus has passed into an unsuffering heaven.
He still suffers .in each of his members. He is crucified afresh when we
yield to wilful sins. He travails in birth until his kingdom come. He is
touched with the feeling of our infirmities. How can He be at rest, whilst
his beloved are tossing in the storm, and the members of his bride are not
complete? And through his sufferings blessing is accruing; they cannot be
in vain: we shall see all soon; meanwhile let us bear fellowship with Him
in his anguish, drinking of his cup, that we may share his glory.
We stand now on the verge of a mysterious and difficult passage; but this
much is true and clear, that Christ suffered for us to bring us to God.
Let us understand that, through faith in Him, we are made one with Him,
and stand where He does in the very presence of God. "Made nigh by the
blood of the cross." Let us in private prayer, or at the Lord's table,
remember that nothing brings us so near as those precious sufferings. And,
whenever we feel estranged and distant, let us betake ourselves to the
cross; and, sitting there, meditate on those wounds, till we are brought
again into rapturous fellowship with our God, our Light, our Love, our
exceeding Joy. And then from our sure fellowship with God we may dare to
look out on all mysteries, not trying to explain God by the mystery, but
the mystery by what we, in our own happy fellowship, know God to be. To
whom be glory for ever!
XX.
THE DAYS
OF NOAH
"Put To death in the flesh, but quickened in the spirit, in which also He
went and preached unto the spirits in prison, which aforetime were
disobedient, when the longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noah,
while the ark was a-preparing, wherein few--that is, eight--souls were
saved through water: which also after a true likeness doth now save you,
even baptism; not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the
interrogation of a good conscience toward God through the resurrection of
Jesus Christ: who is on the right hand of God, having gone into heaven;
angels and authorities and powers being made subject unto Him." 1 Peter
3:18-22 (R. V.).
IT would be unwise to load these pages with laboured references to the
various and conflicting interpretations which have been put upon this
difficult and much-debated passage. It appears better, after much studying
of them, to take the words as they stand, and seek to set forth in clear
outline the thought which seems to have been in the Apostle's mind; so far
at least as the present writer conceives of it.
The main idea is of course a comparison between the experiences of our
Lord and those of his suffering followers. The sacred writer was striving
to the utmost to sustain and comfort them under the severe stress of
persecution through which they were passing. "Take heart," he seems to
say, "your sufferings are not exceptional; they run in the Divine family;
even our Master was not exempt from them: He also suffered in the flesh;
but his sufferings did not stay his blessed ministry; nay, they even
augmented his sphere of usefulness; "He was quickened in spirit," in which
also He went forth to herald his accomplished work in regions to which,
but for death, He had not obtained access. So shall it also be with you.
Your sufferings shall not clip your wings, but add to your powers of
flight. The things which happen to you shall fall out rather to the
furtherance of the Gospel; and it is through death that you must pass up
to share his glorious resurrection and imperial power.
1.
AN HISTORICAL FACT
"Put to death in the flesh, but quickened in the spirit, in which also He
went and preached unto the spirits in prison, which aforetime were
disobedient, when the longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noah."
In one of Isaiah's most splendid passages, the king of Babylon, having
fallen at last before that mightier Monarch who comes with equal foot to
the hut of the peasant and the palace of the king, is depicted as a thin,
pale ghost entering the abodes of the departed. And as he comes, the
shades of the kings of the nations and chiefs of the peoples stir
themselves, and with thin voices accost him in tones of withering sarcasm:
"Art thou also become weak as we? Art thou become like unto us? Is this
the man that made the earth to tremble?--that did shake kingdoms?"
But surely the abodes of the departed were stirred after another fashion
when the Son of God, having welcomed the dying thief to Paradise, refused
to rest there after the strain of his long conflict and agony, but started
forth to spend the brief interval until his resurrection in proclaiming
with herald voice the wondrous news of accomplished redemption. This is
surely the emphatic teaching, not of this passage only, but also of that
marvellous announcement of the Apostle Paul in the Epistle to the
Ephesians: "He descended into the lower parts of the earth," a phrase
which was constantly used among the Jews for the nethermost abyss, the
unseen Hadean world, the abode of the departed. On such testimony as this,
the Church in all ages has affirmed, He descended into Hell (the word
Hell, of course, standing, as it does so often on the page of Scripture,
for Hades). We do not know the full burden of our Master's message there.
It is not declared; and all our surmisings must fall short of the reality.
All that we need to notice is that the word employed of his ministry is
carefully chosen, and only includes the work of a herald, as distinguished
from that of an evangelist.
It may be asked why He preached only to those who were disobedient in the
days of Noah? Why were his messages confined to these? Were there not many
more who had been disobedient at other periods of the world's sad story?
But none of these are excluded. The sacred writer does not say that the
Lord addressed no others, but that He certainly addressed these. And our
attention is thus focussed on them, because it was his desire to guide our
thoughts to a comparison, already forming in his mind, and casting its
shadow over his words, and which would draw lessons from the days of Noah
for our own.
Are we then to think that these spirits had another chance, and swarmed,
as the mediaeval artists loved to depict, in rejoicing crowds after Christ
into Paradise? There is nothing of this sort in these words. And it is a
mistake to trust to inference in a case so utterly removed from human
cognizance and experience. The Bible turns our thought from speculation
about the future to life in the living present. "What is that to thee?
follow thou Me!"
All that we need to concern ourselves with now is this fragment which
Peter has handed down to us from the posthumous sayings of Christ, when He
taught them for forty days, and "spoke to them of the things pertaining to
the kingdom of God." We must clearly understand that Christ's death did
not stop his usefulness, but that He ministered still; just as Joseph,
when cut off from his duties in the palace, ministered to his
fellow-prisoners, proclaiming to one his deliverance and to another his
doom.
2.
A CONFESSION
The story of the Flood seems to have made a great impression on the mind
and heart of the Apostle; and the event is constantly on his lips (2 Peter
2:5; 3:5-6). And here he follows closely on the words of his Master, who
compared the days of Noah with those of the Son of Man.
We need not stay to describe in detail the days which were before the
Flood, or the condition of the old world. Its course was precisely similar
to that of the world around us still "They ate; they drank; they married,
and were given in marriage." The arts and sciences were richly cultivated.
Gigantic engineering and architectural works must have abounded, or it
would have been impossible to construct such a marvellous vessel as the
ark. Refinement and civilization, side by side with abnormal and horrid
crimes. The giddy pursuit of pleasure; the eager search for wealth; the
lawless gratification of evil propensity; the reckless disregard of the
claims of God; the rush of the torrent of evil and unholiness, in spite of
the remonstrances and pleadings of the grey-headed preacher for a hundred
years. All these are what we see today around us in confused and grievous
manifestation.
And there is as little need to describe the new world into which Noah and
his children stepped down from the mountain slopes on which their ark
grounded. How delicious the balmy air, the green grass carpeting the
earth, the luxuriant growth of vegetation from the soil enriched and
fructified by the alluvial deposit of the waters! It was a world from
which sin, and crime, and evil, had been purged, and Creation seemed
already to anticipate the vision of the seer: "And I saw a new heaven and
a new earth; for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away,
and there was no more sea."
But surely that old world is very significant of the old life into which
we are born by nature; and that new world of the new life into which we
enter in regeneration. And the Flood of water, through which Noah passed
from the old into the new, bearing him onwards on its broad and swelling
bosom, from evil and familiar scenes into new and ecstatic surroundings,
is a type of the blessed experience of which the Epistles so often speak;
when believers through faith in Jesus pass out of the old life of
selfishness and death, into the glorious new life of resurrection
blessedness; when they sit with Christ in the Heavenlies; when they reckon
themselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God; sharing the
spirit of the Saviour's death, and of his resurrection: at such times they
may be said to repeat the experience of the patriarch, when he passed from
the old world into the new.
The early Church was accustomed to set forth this spiritual experience by
the outward act of immersion in water. Believers, in confession that they
had passed from their previous life of sin into the blessed life of
fellowship with the risen Saviour, were buried under water in the likeness
of his death, and were lifted again above the water in the likeness of his
resurrection. The water in the pool or river might thus be compared to the
waters of Noah's Flood, because through each there was a passage from the
old to the new, just as in the grave of Jesus there was a passage from the
more limited life of the flesh into the freer life of the spirit. "Though
we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now henceforth know we Him no
more. Therefore if any man be in Christ he is a new creature: old things
are passed away; behold, all things are become new." Baptism, indeed, has
no sacramental efficacy; but there are no trifles in the kingdom of God;
and obedience to a mere outward rite may make a world of difference
between the uneasiness of an evil conscience and the answer of a good one.
3.
AN ANALOGY
We have now seen three facts. First, that Christ's suffering did not
hinder his heralding his finished work. Second, that He heralded it to the
spirits who in Noah's day were disobedient. Third, that we are like Noah,
and Christ, too, in having passed through the waters of death: not the
death of the body; but the death of the spirit to its former tastes and
delights, because it has entered so fully into the meaning of Christ's
death, and into participation with his new life.
What then? Since we have entered into this new and blessed life, are we to
be indifferent to those who belong to the old world and life from which we
profess to have passed away? Nay, that cannot be; the very metaphors on
which we have been dwelling exclude such a thought, and banish it from our
serious consideration. In the light of these analogies it cannot be
tolerated for a moment.
Of course it would have made the analogy more complete if it could have
been said that Noah, after the Flood, had continued preaching to his old
companions. But that could not have happened. Yet the same purpose was
served, though with a slight change in the person of the herald. For
Jesus, whose death and burial were symbolized in the Flood, of whom Noah
was a type, and with whose death we are identified, went to these
self-same spirits, and spake with them. It was equivalent to Noah going;
nay, it was better. Certainly the spirit of Noah's ministry was fully
realized in that of his great Antitype.
In my opinion, then, the drift of this passage is to show that it becomes
us to herald the tidings of the cross to the old companions of our former
life; we are, as it were, to go back to them across the waters of the
death-flood, not to live again in that world which we have abjured, but to
declare the glad tidings of salvation.
Yes, and even their persecution of us should not hinder our efforts for
their salvation. Indeed, we shall probably discover that our very
sufferings will loose our tongues and enlarge our opportunities. In the
stocks we may so sing praise that the prisoners may hear. In Caesar's
house, our bonds for Christ will be manifest in all the palace. In our
martyrdoms we shall light fires which shall flame up over the world, and
shall never be put out.
Noah's Flood makes us think, not only of that symbolic death which is as
much the theme of Rom. 6 as of this passage, but of that literal death,
which these believers had to face in the form of martyrdom, and which,
unless the Lord come first, we too must experience. But in whatever form
death comes to the believer, whether in the acts of daily self-denial, or
in the definite abjuring of some form of evil, or in the dissolution of
this natural body, it may be met calmly and joyfully, because it is always
followed by resurrection.
Through death we follow our Master's steps, which lead to the upland lawns
through the valley of the shadow of death. Let us fix our constant gaze on
his resurrection, which is a type of ours also, as He takes his place on
the right hand of God, "having gone into heaven, angels and authorities
and powers being made subject unto Him." We shall share that power only in
proportion as we are willing to share his death.
XXI.
ONE WITH
HIM IN DEATH
"Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm
yourselves likewise with the same mind: for he that hath suffered in the
flesh hath ceased from sin; that he no longer should live the rest of his
time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God."--1 Peter
4:1-2.
THE rest of his time in the flesh!" Who can tell how long that may be for
any one of us? Shorter to some of us than we think; but, in a sense, short
to all. The sands run swiftly through life's hour-glass. The shadow
hastens to go down upon the dial. The waves eat away so quickly the
dwindling shoal of land which crumbles beneath us. And the years, with
inexorable pressure, lay their hands on us, and urge us to flee towards
the goal. Such thoughts were much in the Apostle's mind. In the next
Epistle, he says, "the putting off of my tabernacle cometh swiftly" (R.V.).
The Christian finds nothing in such thoughts to make him sad. Every
milestone marks the growing nearness of his home. The waves cannot be
crossed too swiftly by the eager traveller who impatiently counts the
hours that interpose between him and the embrace of wife or child. Before
us lie the ages of eternity. Hark to the murmur of their waves, as the
trained ear catches the beat of the ocean's music, borne on the night
breeze! Ages filled with a blessedness of personal enjoyment and rapturous
ministry which defy tongue to tell or heart to picture. The dim outlines
already sketched stir the heart with ecstasy; but what will the completed
picture be, when God fills in the details with his own hand! Take heart,
fellow-sufferers and fellow-workers, our redemption draweth nigh. Day is
breaking. "Now is our salvation nearer than when we believed?
But the blessed future must not divert our thoughts from the duties to be
discharged during the rest of the time which we are to spend in the flesh.
We must not be dreamers, but warriors. We must fill our shortening clays
with strenuous endeavour; like the weary toiler who hastens with redoubled
energy to finish the garment at which she has been working with sore
fingers, because the only candle she can afford is burning low, and must
soon flicker out. There is therefore a noise of war in this verse. To
arms! To arms! Arm yourselves with the same mind; and when we ask What
mind? we are told to arm ourselves with the mind that took Jesus to his
death.
In a venerable old church at Innsbruck, famous for containing the tomb of
the great Emperor Maximilian, there is a magnificent bronze statue of
Godfrey of Boulogne, the illustrious crusader. His head is covered with a
helmet, and on the helmet rests a crown of thorns. Of course, there was a
meaning in the mind of the artist other than that with which we now invest
the strange conjunction. He doubtless designed to represent the sacred
cause for which that helmet was donned. But we may discover an apt symbol
of the teaching of our Apostle, who unites in these verses the armour of
the Christian soldier, and the recollection of Christ's suffering in the
flesh.
This witness of the sufferings of Christ first takes us to the cross; and
after gazing reverently on that spectacle of love, we are brought to a
point where two ways diverge. And the only way of discovering and
maintaining the right path is to imbibe the spirit of that wondrous death;
and to glory in the cross of Christ. In hoc signo vinces. And thus we
shall "no longer live the rest of our time in the flesh, to the lusts of
men, but to the will of God."
1.
DIVERGENT PATHS
(1) On the one
side the broad way, trodden by so many feet, of indulgence of the flesh. "The lusts of men." Lust is appetite run wild. There is no
harm in any natural appetite, considered in itself. Each is implanted in
us for wise and necessary purposes. Man is made as a self-acting machine;
and he is not only reminded of necessary duties by the whirr of the
alarum, but is driven to perform them by the goad of hungry appetites on
the one hand, and by the attraction of satisfied appetites on the other.
But appetite has been spoilt by the Fall. It has become disturbed in its
action, so that it does not now work as God intended it to do, when He
made man, and pronounced his nature very good. When man fell, appetite
broke from the enfeebled grasp of the will, and began to seek after its
own gratification, irrespective of those necessary uses and legitimate
bounds which had been assigned by the Creator's love and wisdom. And so
all down the ages, the appetites of man's nature have treated the Imperial
will as the barons of the middle ages often treated their Liege Sovereign,
whom they practically set at nought, following their own wild and lawless
ways. And the mischief of this revolt has been manifested by the way in
which the lawlessness of the flesh has infected the mind; so that mind and
heart have followed its leadings towards unnatural and excessive
indulgence, and men have "fulfilled the desires (or lusts) of the flesh
and of the mind."
These habits have descended to us from the generations which have preceded
us. Each one of us is therefore born into the world, subject to the action
of appetites which are no longer in the same pure and holy state in which
they crone from the Creator's hand, but are biased strongly in the
direction of lawless and unholy manifestation. And if we obey their
promptings, as so many do, we become their slaves; sink to the level of
the brute creation, which know no law but that of appetite; and come under
the wrath of God (Eph. 2:3).
Now, what we need is, not that these appetites should be eradicated--but
that they should be controlled; kept only for necessary uses; deprived of
all those evil gratifications which have become to them a second nature.
Never in this life will they lose the capability of desiring unholy
gratification; but those desires, passing as a momentary thrill through
our being, and failing to attract or master the will, are not necessarily
sins; and it is clearly possible to live in the flesh, which is very
sensitive and susceptible to evil suggestion, and yet not to gratify its
demands in a single iota beyond the limits of the will and law of God.
This is what the Gospel promises. Not that we should be deprived of any
part of our nature. Not that we should never feel the thrill of
temptation, and the tendency on the part of our flesh to respond. Not that
we should even reach a condition in which it would be impossible to sin.
But that the unholy confederacy between the flesh and the spirit should be
broken, so that whatever may be the passing spasms of the flesh in the
direction of unlawful gratification, they may not be accepted or permitted
by the moral nature--the will--the regal individuality of man.
(2) What a glorious contrast to the will of the flesh is "the will of
God!" To do this will Jesus came to earth. To do this was, as He said, his
"meat?" It was the fire-cloud that lit his pathway; the yoke in carrying
which He found rest; the Urim and Thummim, which dimmed or shone with
heavenly guidance. There is no course more safe or blessed than to live in
the will of God. God's will is good will. Where the will of God lies
across the wilderness pathway, there flowers bloom, and waters gush from
rocks of flint. Sometimes the flesh rebels against it, because it means
crucifixion and self-denial: but under the rugged shell the sweetest
kernel nestles; and none know the ecstasy of living save those who refuse
the broad, easy road of the lusts of men, to climb the steep, upward path
of doing the will of God from the heart.
2. THE SECRET AND
POWER OF SELF-DENIAL
It is not easy to refuse that broad, easy road. No effort is required to
take it. Life tends to roll easily and luxuriously down its gentle slopes.
The stream insensibly bears the boat, gaily decked with flags, and filled
with careless or idle pleasure-seekers, toward the fatal rapids. What is
the secret which shall lead a man to say "No" to self; to turn a deaf ear
to its solicitations; and to face the steep ascent? And, supposing he has
the desire to resist, what power is there strong enough to enable him to
stem the torrent, beating and seething against him at every stroke?
The answer is found in the cross of our blessed Lord.--"Christ suffered in
the flesh." "The pious contemplation of his death will most powerfully
kill the love of sin in the soul, and kindle an ardent hatred to it. The
believer--looking on Jesus as crucified for him, and wounded for his
transgressions; and taking in deep thoughts of his spotless innocency,
which deserved no such thing, and of his matchless love, which yet endured
it all for him--will then naturally think: Shall I be a friend to that
which was his deadly enemy? Shall sin be sweet to me, which was so bitter
to Him; and that for my sake? Shall I ever lend it a good look, or
entertain a favourable thought of that which shed my Lord's blood? Shall
live in that for which He died, and died to kill in me? Oh, let it not be!
All this is true; and yet there is a truth beneath. It must never be
forgotten that Christ died "in the likeness of sinful flesh." He died, not
only for sin, but to condemn sin in the flesh. In his death an entire
break was made between the life which He had lived in contact with sin,
though Himself sinless, and that other life which He spends on the
resurrection side of death. And since we are viewed in the mind and
purpose of God, as having died with Him in his death, and being raised in
his resurrection, we must also regard ourselves as having passed out of
the life in which flesh and sense reign supreme, into that other life
where they are for ever left behind, and have no foothold or abode. "In
that He died, He died unto sin once; in that He liveth, He liveth unto
God. Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but
alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord."
Let us take high ground in dealing with the solicitations and promptings
of the flesh. Let us meet every thrill of passion with the complete
indifference, the stony silence, of death. Let us say, as fashionable
people are wont to say of acquaintances whom they do not wish to see, I am
not at home to them. Let us treat them, as Peter treated his Lord, whom
for many months he had known as his bosom friend, and yet denied him,
saying, I know not the man.
And so, when strong desires come through our bodies, and strive to send
evil thoughts and passions through the heart and will, they will find the
fire-proof iron door slammed suddenly in their face, so that the dread
contagion may not spread. The flesh may have its desires; but the cleansed
heart will refuse to yield to them. And thus the flesh will be crucified
and mortified with its affections and lusts, and the conscience kept void
of offence.
This power of refusing to harbour or consider the unholy promptings of the
flesh is a very blessed one. But it is not of man, nor to be built up by
holy resolution or endeavour. It is the power of God in man; the life of
the risen Jesus; the grace of the Holy Spirit, who strives against the
flesh, so that we may not do the things that otherwise we would (Gal.
5:17, R.V.). Realize that as one with Christ you have, in the mind of God,
died. Deliberately choose that death at once and for evermore as your
portion and lot. Then look to the Holy Spirit to put the sentence of death
into daily and hourly execution. And you will find that, though the flesh
still lives, it will no longer govern you; but the Spirit of God will
govern it through you, robbing it of power, and keeping it so utterly in
subjection that you may be tempted to think that it is changed in nature.
This, however, will be a mistake, for if the Spirit's power is relaxed for
only an instant, the old fatal habits will re-assert themselves, and if
persisted in will work with more than their former force.
3. A
STIRRING
INJUNCTION
"Arm yourselves with the same mind." Drink into the spirit of Christ's
death till it be repeated in you, and you die to the flesh as He died to
it. Thus shall be repeated the ancient legend of the stigmata, which grew
in the flesh of the saint engaged perpetually in meditating on the wounds
of Christ. And every time you dare to refuse the lawless strivings of
self, you will enter more into the meaning of his death and of his
resurrection. Let us resolutely put this piece of celestial armour on. It
will need resolution and determination, as the first shocks of battle will
be trying and terrible. But victory is sure. And though there will be no
cessation in the temptation, there will be cessation in the yielding to
it, which is sin: "For he that has died is freed from sin" (Rom. 6:7, R.V.).
And in time the bodily desires, long thwarted, will give less and less
trouble, as if they were weary of the incessant defeat.
"Wouldst thou then have much power against sin, and much increase of
holiness, let thine eye be much on Christ; set thine heart on Him; let it
dwell in Him, and be still with Him. When sin is likely to prevail, go to
Him, tell Him of the insurrection of his enemies, and thy inability to
resist, and desire Him to suppress them, that they may gain nothing by
their stirring but some new wound. If thy heart begin to move towards sin,
lay it before Him: the beams of his love shall eat out that fire of those
sinful lusts. Wouldst thou have thy pride, and passions, and love of the
world killed, go sue for the virtue of his death, and that shall do it.
Seek his spirit--the spirit of meekness, humility, and Divine love. Look
on Him, and He shall draw thy heart heavenwards, and unite it to Himself,
and make it like Himself. And is not that the thing thou desirest?"