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Charles Haddon Spurgeon |
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All Of Grace
An Earnest Word with Those
Who Are Seeking Salvation
by the Lord Jesus Christ
"Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound" (Romans 5:20).
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HE WHO SPOKE and wrote this message will
be greatly disappointed if it does not lead many to the Lord Jesus. It is sent forth in
childlike dependence upon the power of God the Holy Ghost, to use it in the conversion of
millions, if so He pleases. No doubt many poor men and women will take up this little
volume, and the Lord will visit them with grace. To answer this end, the very plainest
language has been chosen, and many homely expressions have been used. But if those of
wealth and rank should glance at this book, the Holy Ghost can impress them also;
since that which can be understood by the unlettered is none the less attractive to the
instructed. Oh that some might read it who will become great winners of souls!
Who knows how many will find their way to
peace by what they read here? A more important question to you, dear reader, is thisWill
you be one of them?
A certain man placed a fountain by the
wayside, and he hung up a cup near to it by a little chain. He was told some time after
that a great art-critic had found much fault with its design. "But," said he,
"do many thirsty persons drink at it?" Then they told him that thousands of poor
people, men, women, and children, slaked their thirst at this fountain; and he smiled and
said, that he was little troubled by the critic's observation, only he hoped that on some
sultry summer's day the critic himself might fill the cup, and he refreshed, and praise
the name of the Lord.
Here is my fountain, and here is my cup:
find fault if you please; but do drink of the water of life. I only care for this.
I had rather bless the soul of the poorest crossing-sweeper, or rag-gatherer, than please
a prince of the blood, and fail to convert him to God.
Reader, do you mean business in reading
these pages? If so, we are agreed at the outset; but nothing short of your finding Christ
and Heaven is the business aimed at here. Oh that we may seek this together! I do so by
dedicating this little book with prayer. Will not you join me by looking up to God, and
asking Him to bless you while you read? Providence has put these pages in your way, you
have a little spare time in which to read them, and you feel willing to give your
attention to them. These are good signs. Who knows but the set time of blessing is come
for you? At any rate, "The Holy Ghost saith, Today, if ye will hear his voice, harden
not your hearts. "
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HEARD A STORY; I think it came from the
North Country: A minister called upon a poor woman, intending to give her help; for he
knew that she was very poor. With his money in his hand, he knocked at the door; but she
did not answer. He concluded she was not at home, and went his way. A little after he met
her at the church, and told her that he had remembered her need: "I called at your
house, and knocked several times, and I suppose you were not at home, for I had no
answer." "At what hour did you call, sir?" "It was about noon."
"Oh, dear," she said, "I heard you, sir, and I am so sorry I did not
answer; but I thought it was the man calling for the rent." Many a poor woman
knows what this meant. Now, it is my desire to be heard, and therefore I want to say that
I am not calling for the rent; indeed, it is not the object of this book to ask anything
of you, but to tell you that salvation is all of grace, which means, free, gratis, for
nothing.
Oftentimes, when we are anxious to win
attention, our hearer thinks, " Ah! now I am going to be told my duty. It is the man
calling for that which is due to God, and I am sure I have nothing wherewith to pay. I
will not be at home." No, this book does not come to make a demand upon you, but to
bring you something. We are not going to talk about law, and duty, and punishment, but
about love, and goodness, and forgiveness, and mercy, and eternal life. Do not, therefore,
act as if you were not at home: do not turn a deaf ear, or a careless heart. I am asking
nothing of you in the name of God or man. It is not my intent to make any requirement at
your hands; but I come in God's name, to bring you a free gift, which it shall be to your
present and eternal joy to receive. Open the door, and let my pleadings enter. "Come
now, and let us reason together." The Lord himself invites you to a conference
concerning your immediate and endless happiness, and He would not have done this if He did
not mean well toward you. Do not refuse the Lord Jesus who knocks at your door; for He
knocks with a hand which was nailed to the tree for such as you are. Since His only and
sole object is your good, incline your ear and come to Him. Hearken diligently, and let
the good word sink into your soul. It may be that the hour is come in which you shall
enter upon that new life which is the beginning of heaven. Faith cometh by hearing, and
reading is a sort of hearing: faith may come to you while you are reading this book. Why
not? O blessed Spirit of all grace, make it so!
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HIS MESSAGE is for you. You will find the text in the Epistle to the Romans, in the fourth chapter and the fifth verse:
To him that worketh not, but believeth
on him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness.
I call your attention to those words, "Him
that justifieth the ungodly." They seem to me to be very wonderful words.
Are you not surprised that there should be such an expression as that in the Bible,
"That justifieth the ungodly?" I have heard that men that hate the doctrines of
the cross bring it as a charge against God, that He saves wicked men and receives to
Himself the vilest of the vile. See how this Scripture accepts the charge, and plainly
states it! By the mouth of His servant Paul, by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, He
takes to Himself the title of "Him that justifieth the ungodly." He makes those
just who are unjust, forgives those who deserve to be punished, and favors those who
deserve no favor. You thought, did you not, that salvation was for the good? that God's
grace was for the pure and holy, who are free from sin? It has fallen into your mind that,
if you were excellent, then God would reward you; and you have thought that because you
are not worthy, therefore there could be no way of your enjoying His favor. You must be
somewhat surprised to read a text like this: "Him that justifieth the ungodly. "
I do not wonder that you are surprised; for with all my familiarity with the great grace
of God, I never cease to wonder at it. It does sound surprising, does it not, that it
should be possible for a holy God to justify an unholy man? We, according to the natural
legality of our hearts, are always talking about our own goodness and our own worthiness,
and we stubbornly hold to it that there must be somewhat in us in order to win the notice
of God. Now, God, who sees through all deceptions, knows that there is no goodness
whatever in us. He says that "there is none righteous, no not one." He knows
that "all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags," and, therefore the Lord Jesus
did not come into the world to look after goodness and righteousness with him, and to
bestow them upon persons who have none of them. He comes, not because we are just,
but to make us so: he justifieth the ungodly.
When a counsellor comes into court, if he is
an honest man, he desires to plead the case of an innocent person and justify him before
the court from the things which are falsely laid to his charge. It should be the lawyer's
object to justify the innocent person, and he should not attempt to screen the guilty
party. It lies not in man's right nor in man's power truly to justify the guilty. This is
a miracle reserved for the Lord alone. God, the infinitely just Sovereign, knows that
there is not a just man upon earth that doeth good and sinneth not, and therefore, in the
infinite sovereignty of His divine nature and in the splendor of His ineffable love, He
undertakes the task, not so much of justifying the just as of justifying the ungodly. God
has devised ways and means of making the ungodly man to stand justly accepted before Him:
He has set up a system by which with perfect justice He can treat the guilty as if he had
been all his life free from offence, yea, can treat him as if he were wholly free from
sin. He justifieth the ungodly.
Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners.
It is a very surprising thinga thing to be marveled at most of all by those who
enjoy it. I know that it is to me even to this day the greatest wonder that I ever heard
of, that God should ever justify me. I feel myself to be a lump of unworthiness, a
mass of corruption, and a heap of sin, apart from His almighty love. I know by a full
assurance that I am justified by faith which is in Christ Jesus, and treated as if I had
been perfectly just, and made an heir of God and a joint heir with Christ; and yet by
nature I must take my place among the most sinful. I, who am altogether undeserving, am
treated as if I had been deserving. I am loved with as much love as if I had always been
godly, whereas aforetime I was ungodly. Who can help being astonished at this? Gratitude
for such favor stands dressed in robes of wonder.
Now, while this is very surprising, I want
you to notice how available it makes the gospel to you and to me. If God justifieth the ungodly,
then, dear friend, He can justify you. Is not that the very kind of person that you
are? If you are unconverted at this moment, it is a very proper description of you; you
have lived without God, you have been the reverse of godly; in one word, you have been and
are ungodly. Perhaps you have not even attended a place of worship on Sunday, but
have lived in disregard of God's day, and house, and Wordthis proves you to have
been ungodly. Sadder still, it may be you have even tried to doubt God's existence, and
have gone the length of saying that you did so. You have lived on this fair earth, which
is full of the tokens of God's presence, and all the while you have shut your eyes to the
clear evidences of His power and Godhead. You have lived as if there were no God. Indeed,
you would have been very pleased if you could have demonstrated to yourself to a certainty
that there was no God whatever. Possibly you have lived a great many years in this way, so
that you are now pretty well settled in your ways, and yet God is not in any of them. If
you were labeled
UNGODLY
it would as well describe you as if the sea were to be labeled salt water. Would
it not?
Possibly you are a person of another
sort; you have regularly attended to all the outward forms of religion, and yet you have
had no heart in them at all, but have been really ungodly. Though meeting with the people
of God, you have never met with God for yourself; you have been in the choir, and yet have
not praised the Lord with your heart. You have lived without any love to God in your
heart, or regard to his commands in your life. Well, you are just the kind of man to whom
this gospel is sentthis gospel which says that God justifieth the ungodly. It
is very wonderful, but it is happily available for you. It just suits you. Does it not?
How I wish that you would accept it! If you are a sensible man, you will see the
remarkable grace of God in providing for such as you are, and you will say to yourself,
"Justify the ungodly! Why, then, should not I be justified, and justified at
once?"
Now, observe further, that it must be sothat
the salvation of God is for those who do not deserve it, and have no preparation for it.
It is reasonable that the statement should be put in the Bible; for, dear friend, no
others need justifying but those who have no justification of their own. If any of my
readers are perfectly righteous, they want no justifying. You feel that you are doing your
duty well, and almost putting heaven under an obligation to you. What do you want with a
Saviour, or with mercy? What do you want with justification? You will be tired of my book
by this time, for it will have no interest to you.
If any of you are giving yourselves such
proud airs, listen to me for a little while. You will be lost, as sure as you are alive.
You righteous men, whose righteousness is all of your own working, are either deceivers or
deceived; for the Scripture cannot lie, and it saith plainly, "There is none
righteous, no, not one." In any case I have no gospel to preach to the
self-righteous, no, not a word of it. Jesus Christ himself came not to call the righteous,
and I am not going to do what He did not do. If I called you, you would not come, and,
therefore, I will not call you, under that character. No, I bid you rather look at that
righteousness of yours till you see what a delusion it is. It is not half so substantial
as a cobweb. Have done with it! Flee from it! Oh believe that the only persons that can
need justification are those who are not in themselves just! They need that s omething
should be done for them to make them just before the judgment seat of God. Depend upon it,
the Lord only does that which is needful. Infinite wisdom never attempts that which is
unnecessary. Jesus never undertakes that which is superfluous. To make him just who is
just is no work for Godthat were a labor for a fool; but to make him just who is
unjustthat is work for infinite love and mercy. To justify the ungodlythis is
a miracle worthy of a God. And for certain it is so.
Now, look. If there be anywhere in the world
a physician who has discovered sure and precious remedies, to whom is that physician sent?
To those who are perfectly healthy? I think not. Put him down in a district where there
are no sick persons, and he feels that he is not in his place. There is nothing for him to
do. "The whole have no need of a physician, but they that are sick." Is it not
equally clear that the great remedies of grace and redemption are for the sick in soul?
They cannot be for the whole, for they cannot be of use to such. If you, dear friend, feel
that you are spiritually sick, the Physician has come into the world for you. If you are
altogether undone by reason of your sin, you are the very person aimed at in the plan of
salvation. I say that the Lord of love had just such as you are in His eye when He
arranged the system of grace. Suppose a man of generous spirit were to resolve to forgive
all those who were indebted to him; it is clear that this can only apply to those really
in his debt. One person owes him a thousand pounds; another owes him fifty pounds; each
one has but to have his bill receipted, and the liability is wiped out. But the most
generous person cannot forgive the debts of those who do not owe him anything. It is out
of the power of Omnipotence to forgive where there is no sin. Pardon, therefore, cannot be
for you who have no sin. Pardon must be for the guilty. Forgiveness must be for the
sinful. It were absurd to talk of forgiving those who do not need
forgivenesspardoning those who have never offended.
Do you think that you must be lost because
you are a sinner? This is the reason why you can be saved. Because you own yourself to be
a sinner I would encourage you to believe that grace is ordained for such as you are. One
of our hymn-writers even dared to say:
A sinner is a sacred thing;
The Holy Ghost hath made him so.
It is truly so, that Jesus seeks and
saves that which is lost. He died and made a real atonement for real sinners. When men are
not playing with words, or calling themselves "miserable sinners," out of mere
compliment, I feel overjoyed to meet with them. I would be glad to talk all night to bona
fide sinners. The inn of mercy never closes its doors upon such, neither weekdays nor
Sunday. Our Lord Jesus did not die for imaginary sins, but His heart's blood was spilt to
wash out deep crimson stains, which nothing else can remove.
He that is a black sinnerhe is the
kind of man that Jesus Christ came to make white. A gospel preacher on one occasion
preached a sermon from, " Now also the axe is laid to the root of the trees,"
and he delivered such a sermon that one of his hearers said to him, "One would have
thought that you had been preaching to criminals. Your sermon ought to have been delivered
in the county jail." "Oh, no," said the good man, "if I were preaching
in the county jail, I should not preach from that text, there I should preach 'This is a
faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to
save sinners.' " Just so. The law is for the self-righteous, to humble their pride:
the gospel is for the lost, to remove their despair.
If you are not lost, what do you want with a
Saviour? Should the shepherd go after those who never went astray? Why should the woman
sweep her house for the bits of money that were never out of her purse? No, the medicine
is for the diseased; the quickening is for the dead; the pardon is for the guilty;
liberation is for those who are bound: the opening of eyes is for those who are blind. How
can the Saviour, and His death upon the cross, and the gospel of pardon, be accounted for,
unless it be upon the supposition that men are guilty and worthy of condemnation? The
sinner is the gospel's reason for existence. You, my friend, to whom this word now comes,
if you are undeserving, ill-deserving, hell-deserving, you are the sort of man for whom
the gospel is ordained, and arranged, and proclaimed. God justifieth the ungodly.
I would like to make this very plain. I hope
that I have done so already; but still, plain as it is, it is only the Lord that can make
a man see it. It does at first seem most amazing to an awakened man that salvation should
really be for him as a lost and guilty one. He thinks that it must be for him as a
penitent man, forgetting that his penitence is a part of his salvation. "Oh,"
says he, "but I must be this and that," all of which is true, for he shall
be this and that as the result of salvation; but salvation comes to him before he has any
of the results of salvation. It comes to him, in fact, while he deserves only this bare,
beggarly, base, abominable description, "ungodly." That is all he is when
God's gospel comes to justify him.
May I, therefore, urge upon any who have no
good thing about themwho fear that they have not even a good feeling, or anything
whatever that can recommend them to Godthat they will firmly believe that our
gracious God is able and willing to take them without anything to recommend them, and to
forgive them spontaneously, not because they are good, but because He is
good. Does He not make His sun to shine on the evil as well as on the good? Does He not
give fruitful seasons, and send the rain and the sunshine in their time upon the most
ungodly nations? Ay, even Sodom had its sun, and Gomorrah had its dew. Oh friend, the
great grace of God surpasses my conception and your conception, and I would have you think
worthily of it ! As high as the heavens are above the earth; so high are God's thoughts
above our thoughts. He can abundantly pardon. Jesus Christ came into the w orld to save
sinners: forgiveness is for the guilty.
Do not attempt to touch yourself up and make
yourself something other than you really are; but come as you are to Him who justifies the
ungodly. A great artist some short time ago had painted a part of the corporation of the
city in which he lived, and he wanted, for historic purposes, to include in his picture
certain characters well known in the town. A crossing-sweeper, unkempt, ragged, filthy,
was known to everybody, and there was a suitable place for him in the picture. The artist
said to this ragged and rugged individual, "I will pay you well if you will come down
to my studio and let me take your likeness." He came round in the morning, but he was
soon sent about his business; for he had washed his face, and combed his hair, and donned
a respectable suit of clothes. He was needed as a beggar, and was not invited in any other
capacity. Even so, the gospel will receive you into its halls if you come as a sinner, not
otherwise. Wait not for reformation, but come at once for salvation. God justifieth the
ungodly, and that takes you up where you now are: it meets you in your worst
estate.
Come in your deshabille [disorder]. I
mean, come to your heavenly Father in all your sin and sinfulness. Come to Jesus just as
you are, leprous, filthy, naked, neither fit to live nor fit to die. Come, you that are
the very sweepings of creation; come, though you hardly dare to hope for anything but
death. Come, though despair is brooding over you, pressing upon your bosom like a horrible
nightmare. Come and ask the Lord to justify another ungodly one. Why should He not? Come
for this great mercy of God is meant for such as you are. I put it in the language of the
text, and I cannot put it more strongly: the Lord God Himself takes to Himself this
gracious title, " Him that justifieth the ungodly." He makes just, and causes to
be treated as just, those who by nature are ungodly. Is not that a wonderful word for
you? Reader, do not delay till you have well considered this matter.
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WONDERFUL THING it is, this being
justified, or made just. If we had never broken the laws of God we should not have needed
it, for we should have been just in ourselves. He who has all his life done the things
which he ought to have done, and has never done anything which he ought not to have done,
is justified by the law. But you, dear reader, are not of that sort, I am quite sure. You
have too much honesty to pretend to be without sin, and therefore you need to be
justified.
Now, if you justify yourself, you will simply be a self-deceiver. Therefore do not attempt
it. It is never worth while.
If you ask your fellow mortals to justify you, what can they do? You can make some of them
speak well of you for small favors, and others will backbite you for less. Their judgment
is not worth much.
Our text says, "It is God that
justifieth," and this is a deal more to the point. It is an astonishing fact, and one
that we ought to consider with care. Come and see.
In the first place, nobody else but God
would ever have thought of justifying those who are guilty. They have lived in open
rebellion; they have done evil with both hands; they have gone from bad to worse; they
have turned back to sin even after they have smarted for it, and have therefore for a
while been forced to leave it. They have broken the law, and trampled on the gospel. They
have refused proclamations of mercy, and have persisted in ungodliness. How can they be
forgiven and justified? Their fellowmen, despairing of them, say, "They are hopeless
cases." Even Christians look upon them with sorrow rather than with hope. But not so
their God. He, in the splendor of his electing grace having chosen some of them before the
foundation of the world, will not rest till He has justified them, and made them to be
accepted in the Beloved. Is it not written, " Whom he did predestinate, them he also
called: and whom he called them he also justified: and whom he justified, them he also
glorified"? Thus you see there are some whom the Lord resolves to justify: why should
not you and I be of the number?
None but God would ever have thought of justifying me. I am a wonder to myself. I
doubt not that grace is equally seen in others. Look at Saul of Tarsus, who foamed at the
mouth, against God's servants. Like a hungry wolf, he worried the lambs and the sheep
right and left; and yet God struck him down on the road to Damascus, and changed his
heart, and so fully justified him that ere long, this man became the greatest preacher of
justification by faith that ever lived. He must often have marveled that he was justified
by faith in Christ Jesus; for he was once a determined stickler for salvation by the works
of the law. None but God would have ever thought of justifying such a man as Saul the
persecutor; but the Lord God is glorious in grace.
But, even if anybody had thought of
justifying the ungodly, none but God could have done it. It is quite impossible for
any person to forgive offences which have not been committed against himself. A person has
greatly injured you; you can forgive him, and I hope you will; but no third person can
forgive him apart from you. If the wrong is done to you, the pardon must come from you. If
we have sinned against God, it is in God's power to forgive; for the sin is against
Himself. That is why David says, in the fifty-first Psalm: "Against thee, thee only,
have I sinned, and done this evil in thy sight"; for then God, against whom the
offence is committed, can put the offence away. That which we owe to God, our great
Creator can remit, if so it pleases Him; and if He remits it, it is remitted. None but the
great God, against whom we have committed the sin, can blot out that sin; let us,
therefore, see that we go to Him and seek mercy at His hands. Do not let us be led aside
by those who would have us confess to them; they have no warrant in the Word of God for
their pretensions. But even if they were ordained to pronounce absolution in God's name,
it must still be better to go ourselves to the great Lord through Jesus Christ, the
Mediator, and seek and find pardon at His hand; since we are sure that this is the right
way. Proxy religion involves too great a risk: you had better see to your soul's matters
yourself, and leave them in no man's hands.
Only God can justify the ungodly; but He
can do it to perfection. He casts our sins behind His back, He blots them out; He says
that though they be sought for, they shall not be found. With no other reason for it but
His own infinite goodness, He has prepared a glorious way by which He can make scarlet
sins as white as snow, and remove our transgressions from us as far as the east is from
the west. He says, "I will not remember your sins. " He goes the length of
making an end of sin. One of old called out in amazement, "Who is a God like unto
thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his
heritage? he retaineth not his anger for ever, because he delighteth in mercy" (Micah
7:18).
We are not now speaking of justice, nor of
God's dealing with men according to their deserts. If you profess to deal with the
righteous Lord on law terms, everlasting wrath threatens you, for that is what you
deserve. Blessed be His name, He has not dealt with us after our sins; but now He treats
with us on terms of free grace and infinite compassion, and He says, "I will receive
you graciously, and love you freely." Believe it, for it is certainly true that the
great God is able to treat the guilty with abundant mercy; yea, He is able to treat the
ungodly as if they had been always godly. Read carefully the parable of the prodigal son,
and see how the forgiving father received the returning wanderer with as much love as if
he had never gone away, and had never defiled himself with harlots. So far did he carry
this that the elder brother began to grumble at it; but the father never withdrew his
love. Oh my brother, however guilty you may be, if you will only come back to your God and
Father, He will treat you as if you had never done wrong! He will regard you as just, and
deal with you accordingly. What say you to this?
Do you not seefor I want to bring this
out clearly, what a splendid thing it isthat as none but God would think of
justifying the ungodly, and none but God could do it, yet the Lord can do it? See how the
apostle puts the challenge, "Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect? It
is God that justifieth." If God has justified a man it is well done, it is rightly
done, it is justly done, it is everlastingly done. I read a statement in a magazine which
is full of venom against the gospel and those who preach it, that we hold some kind of
theory by which we imagine that sin can be removed from men. We hold no theory, we publish
a fact. The grandest fact under heaven is thisthat Christ by His precious blood does
actually put away sin, and that God, for Christ's sake, dealing with men on terms of
divine mercy, forgives the guilty and justifies them, not according to anything that He
sees in them, or foresees will be in them, but according to the riches of His mercy which
lie in His own heart. This we have preached, do preach, and will preach as long as we
live. "It is God that justifieth"that justifieth the ungodly; He is not
ashamed of doing it, nor are we of preaching it.
The justification which comes from God
himself must be beyond question. If the Judge acquits me, who can condemn me? If the
highest court in the universe has pronounced me just, who shall lay anything to my charge?
Justification from God is a sufficient answer to an awakened conscience. The Holy Spirit
by its means breathes peace over our entire nature, and we are no longer afraid. With this
justification we can answer all the roarings and railings of Satan and ungodly men. With
this we shall be able to die: with this we shall boldly rise again, and face the last
great assize.
Bold shall I stand in that great day,
For who aught to my charge shall lay?
While by my Lord absolved I am
From sin's tremendous curse and blame.
Zinzendorf
Friend, the Lord can blot out all your
sins. I make no shot in the dark when I say this. "All manner of sin and
of blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men." Though you are steeped up to your throat in
crime, He can with a word remove the defilement, and say, "I will, be thou
clean." The Lord is a great forgiver.
"I believe in the Forgiveness of Sins." Do You?
He can even at this hour pronounce the
sentence, "Thy sins be forgiven thee; go in peace;" and if He do this, no power
in Heaven, or earth, or under the earth, can put you under suspicion, much less under
wrath. Do not doubt the power of Almighty love. You could not forgive your fellow
man had he offended you as you have offended God; but you must not measure God's corn with
your bushel; His thoughts and ways are as much above yours as the heavens are high above
the earth.
"Well," say you, "it would be
a great miracle if the Lord were to pardon me." Just so. It would be a supreme
miracle, and therefore He is likely to do it; for He does "great things and
unsearchable" which we looked not for.
I was myself stricken down with a horrible
sense of guilt, which made my life a misery to me; but when I heard the command,
"Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth, for I am God and there is
none else "I looked, and in a moment the Lord justified me. Jesus Christ, made
sin for me, was what I saw, and that sight gave me rest. When those who were bitten by the
fiery serpents in the wilderness looked to the serpent of brass they were healed at once;
and so was I when I looked to the crucified Saviour. The Holy Spirit, who enabled me to
believe, gave me peace through believing. I felt as sure that I was forgiven, as before I
felt sure of condemnation. I had been certain of my condemnation because the Word of God
declared it, and my conscience bore witness to it; but when the Lord justified me I was
made equally certain by the same witnesses. The word of the Lord in the Scripture saith,
"He that believeth on him is not condemned," and my conscience bears witness
that I believed, and that God in pardoning me is just. Thus I have the witness of the Holy
Spirit and my own conscience, and these two agree in one. Oh, how I wish that my reader
would receive the testimony of God upon this matter, and then full soon he would also have
the witness in himself!
I venture to say that a sinner justified by
God stands on even a surer footing than a righteous man justified by his works, if such
there be. We could never be surer that we had done enough works; conscience would always
be uneasy lest, after all, we should come short, and we could only have the trembling
verdict of a fallible judgment to rely upon; but when God himself justifies, and the Holy
Spirit bears witness thereto by giving us peace with God, why then we feel that the matter
is sure and settled, and we enter into rest. No tongue can tell the depth of that calm
which comes over the soul which has received the peace of God which passeth all
understanding.
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WE HAVE SEEN the ungodly justified, and
have considered the great truth, that only God can justify any man; we now come a step
further and make the inquiryHow can a just God justify guilty men? Here we
are met with a full answer in the words of Paul, in Romans 3:21-26. We will read six
verses from the chapter so as to get the run of the passage:
"But now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested, being witnessed by the law and the prophets; even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe: for there is no difference; for all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus: whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God; to declare, I say, at this time his righteousness; that he might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus."
Here suffer me to give you a bit of personal
experience. When I was under the hand of the Holy Spirit, under conviction of sin, I had a
clear and sharp sense of the justice of God. Sin, whatever it might be to other people,
became to me an intolerable burden. It was not so much that I feared hell, but that I
feared sin. I knew myself to be so horribly guilty that I remember feeling that if God did
not punish me for sin He ought to do so. I felt that the Judge of all the earth ought to
condemn such sin as mine. I sat on the judgment seat, and I condemned myself to perish;
for I confessed that had I been God I could have done no other than send such a guilty
creature as I was down to the lowest hell. All the while, I had upon my mind a deep
concern for the honor of God's name, and the integrity of His moral government. I felt
that it would not satisfy my conscience if I could be forgiven unjustly. The sin I had
committed must be punished. But then there was the question how God could be just, and yet
justify me who had been so guilty. I asked my heart: "How can He be just and yet the
justifier? " I was worried and wearied with this question; neither could I see any
answer to it. Certainly, I could never have invented an answer which would have satisfied
my conscience.
The doctrine of the atonement is to my mind
one of the surest proofs of the divine inspiration of Holy Scripture. Who would or could
have thought of the just Ruler dying for the unjust rebel? This is no teaching of human
mythology, or dream of poetical imagination. This method of expiation is only known among
men because it is a fact; fiction could not have devised it. God Himself ordained it; it
is not a matter which could have been imagined.
I had heard the plan of salvation by the
sacrifice of Jesus from my youth up; but I did not know any more about it in my innermost
soul than if I had been born and bred a Hottentot. The light was there, but I was blind;
it was of necessity that the Lord himself should make the matter plain to me. It came to
me as a new revelation, as fresh as if I had never read in Scripture that Jesus was
declared to be the propitiation for sins that God might be just. I believe it will have to
come as a revelation to every newborn child of God whenever he sees it; I mean that
glorious doctrine of the substitution of the Lord Jesus. I came to understand that
salvation was possible through vicarious sacrifice; and that provision had been made in
the first constitution and arrangement of things for such a substitution. I was made to
see that He who is the Son of God, co-equal, and co-eternal with the Father, had of old
been made the covenant Head of a chosen people that He might in that capacity suffer for
them and save them. Inasmuch as our fall was not at the first a personal one, for we fell
in our federal representative, the first Adam, it became possible for us to be recovered
by a second representative, even by Him who has undertaken to be the covenant head of His
people, so as to be their second Adam. I saw that ere I actually sinned I had fallen by my
first father's sin; and I rejoiced that therefore it became possible in point of law for
me to rise by a second head and representative. The fall by Adam left a loophole of
escape; another Adam can undo the ruin made by the first. When I was anxious about the
possibility of a just God pardoning me, I understood and saw by faith that He who is the
Son of God became man, and in His own blessed person bore my sin in His own body on the
tree. I saw the chastisement of my peace was laid on Him, and that with His stripes I was
healed. Dear friend, have you ever seen that? Have you ever understood how God can
be just to the full, not remitting penalty nor blunting the edge of the sword, and yet can
be infinitely merciful, and can justify the ungodly who turn to Him? It was because the
Son of God, supremely glorious in His matchless person, undertook to vindicate the law by
bearing the sentence due to me, that therefore God is able to pass by my sin. The law of
God was more vindicated by the death of Christ than it would have been had all
transgressors been sent to Hell. For the Son of God to suffer for sin was a more glorious
establishment of the government of God, than for the whole race to suffer.
Jesus has borne the death penalty on our
behalf. Behold the wonder! There He hangs upon the cross! This is the greatest sight you
will ever see. Son of God and Son of Man, there He hangs, bearing pains unutterable, the
just for the unjust, to bring us to God. Oh, the glory of that sight! The innocent
punished! The Holy One condemned! The Ever-blessed made a curse! The infinitely glorious
put to a shameful death! The more I look at the sufferings of the Son of God, the more
sure I am that they must meet my case. Why did He suffer, if not to turn aside the penalty
from us? If, then, He turned it aside by His death, it is turned aside, and those who
believe in Him need not fear it. It must be so, that since expiation is made, God is able
to forgive without shaking the basis of His throne, or in the least degree blotting the
statute book. Conscience gets a full answer to her tremendous question. The wrath of God
against iniquity, whatever that may be, must be beyond all conception terrible. Well did
Moses say, "Who knoweth the power of thine anger?" Yet when we hear the Lord of
glory cry, "Why hast thou forsaken me?" and see Him yielding up the ghost, we
feel that the justice of God has received abundant vindication by obedience so perfect and
death so terrible, rendered by so divine a person. If God himself bows before His own law,
what more can be done? There is more in the atonement by way of merit, than there is in
all human sin by way of demerit.
The great gulf of Jesus' loving
self-sacrifice can swallow up the mountains of our sins, all of them. For the sake of the
infinite good of this one representative man, the Lord may well look with favor upon other
men, however unworthy they may be in and of themselves. It was a miracle of miracles that
the Lord Jesus Christ should stand in our stead and
Bear that we might never bear
His Father's righteous ire.
But he has done so. "It is
finished." God will spare the sinner because He did not spare His Son. God can pass
by your transgressions because He laid those transgressions upon His only begotten Son
nearly two thousand years ago. If you believe in Jesus (that is the point), then your sins
were carried away by Him who was the scapegoat for His people.
What is it to believe in Him? It is not merely to say, "He is God and the
Saviour," but to trust Him wholly and entirely, and take Him for all your salvation
from this time forth and foreveryour Lord, your Master, your all. If you will have
Jesus, He has you already. If you believe on Him, I tell you you cannot go to hell; for
that were to make the sacrifice of Christ of none effect. It cannot be that a sacrifice
should be accepted, and yet the soul should die for whom that sacrifice has been received.
If the believing soul could be condemned, then why a sacrifice? If Jesus died in my stead,
why should I die also? Every believer can claim that the sacrifice was actually made for
him: by faith he has laid his hands on it, and made it his own, and therefore he may rest
assured that he can never perish. The Lord would not receive this offering on our behalf,
and then condemn us to die. The Lord cannot read our pardon written in the blood of His
own Son, and then smite us. That were impossible. Oh that you may have grace given you at
once to look away to Jesus and to begin at the beginning, even at Jesus, who is the
Fountain-head of mercy to guilty man!
"He justifieth the ungodly."
"It is God that justifieth, " therefore, and for that reason only it can be
done, and He does it through the atoning sacrifice of His divine Son. Therefore it can be
justly doneso justly done that none will ever question itso thoroughly done
that in the last tremendous day, when heaven and earth shall pass away, there shall be
none that shall deny the validity of the justification. "Who is he that condemneth?
It is Christ that died. Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect? It is God
that justifieth."
Now, poor soul! will you come into this
lifeboat, just as you are? Here is safety from the wreck! Accept the sure deliverance.
"I have nothing with me," say you. You are not asked to bring anything with you.
Men who escape for their lives will leave even their clothes behind. Leap for it, just as
you are.
I will tell you this thing about myself to
encourage you. My sole hope for heaven lies in the full atonement made upon Calvary's
cross for the ungodly. On that I firmly rely. I have not the shadow of a hope anywhere
else. You are in the same condition as I am; for we neither of us have anything of our own
worth as a ground of trust. Let us join hands and stand together at the foot of the cross,
and trust our souls once for all to Him who shed His bloo d for the guilty. We will be
saved by one and the same Saviour. If you perish trusting Him, I must perish too. What can
I do more to prove my own confidence in the gospel which I set before you?
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IN THIS PLACE I would say a
plain word or two to those who understand the method of justification by faith which is in
Christ Jesus, but whose trouble is that they cannot cease from sin. We can never be happy,
restful, or spiritually healthy till we become holy. We must be rid of sin; but how is the
riddance to be wrought? This is the life-or-death question of many. The old nature is very
strong, and they have tried to curb and tame it; but it will not be subdued, and they find
themselves, though anxious to be better, if anything growing worse than before. The heart
is so hard, the will is so obstinate, the passions are so furious, the thoughts are so
volatile, the imagination is so ungovernable, the desires are so wild, that the man feels
that he has a den of wild beasts within him, which will eat him up sooner than be ruled by
him. We may say of our fallen nature what the Lord said to Job concerning Leviathan:
"Wilt thou play with him as with a bird? or wilt thou bind him for thy maidens?"
A man might as well hope to hold the north wind in the hollow of his hand as expect to
control by his own strength those boisterous powers which dwell within his fallen nature.
This is a greater feat than any of the fabled labors of Hercules: God is wanted here.
"I could believe that Jesus would
forgive sin," says one, "but then my trouble is that I sin again, and
that I feel such awful tendencies to evil within me. As surely as a stone, if it be
flung up into the air, soon comes down again to the ground, so do I, though I am sent up
to heaven by earnest preaching, return again to my insensible state. Alas ! I am easily
fascinated with the basilisk eyes of sin, and am thus held as under a spell, so that I
cannot escape from my own folly."
Dear friend, salvation would be a sadly incomplete affair if it did not deal with this
part of our ruined estate. We want to be purified as well as pardoned. Justification
without sanctification would not be salvation at all. It would call the leper clean, and
leave him to die of his disease; if would forgive the rebellion and allow the rebel to
remain an enemy to his king. It would remove the consequences but overlook the cause, and
this would leave an endless and hopeless task before us. It would stop the stream for a
time, but leave an open fountain of defilement, which would sooner or later break forth
with increased power. Remember that the Lord Jesus came to take away sin in three ways; He
came to remove the penalty of sin, the power of sin, and, at last, the
presence of sin. At once you may reach to the second partthe power of sin may
immediately be broken; and so you will be on the road to the third, namely, the removal of
the presence of sin. "We know that he was manifested to take away our sins."
The angel said of our Lord, "Thou shalt
call his name Jesus, for he shall save his people from their sins." Our Lord Jesus
came to destroy in us the works of the devil. That which was said at our Lord's birth was
also declared in His death; for when the soldier pierced His side forthwith came there out
blood and water, to set forth the double cure by which we are delivered from the guilt and
the defilement of sin.
If, however, you are troubled about the
power of sin, and about the tendencies of your nature, as you well may be, here is a
promise for you. Have faith in it, for it stands in that covenant of grace which is
ordered in all things and sure. God, who cannot lie, has said in Ezekiel 36:26:
A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh.
You see, it is all "I will,"
and "I will." "I will give," and "I will take away." This is
the royal style of the King of kings, who is able to accomplish all His will. No word of
His shall ever fall to the ground.
The Lord knows right well that you cannot
change your own heart, and cannot cleanse your own nature; but He also knows that He can
do both. He can cause the Ethiopian to change his skin, and the leopard his spots. Hear
this, and be astonished: He can create you a second time; He can cause you to be born
again. This is a miracle of grace, but the Holy Ghost will perform it. It would be a very
wonderful thing if one could stand at the foot of the Niagara Falls, and could speak a
word which should make the river Niagara begin to run up stream, and leap up that great
precipice over which it now rolls in stupendous force. Nothing but the power of God could
achieve that marvel; but that would be more than a fit parallel to what would take place
if the course of your nature were altogether reversed. All things are possible with God.
He can reverse the direction of your desires and the current of your life, and instead of
going downward from God, He can make your whole being tend upward toward God. That is, in
fact, what the Lord has promised to do for all who are in the covenant; and we know from
Scripture that all believers are in the covenant. Let me read the words again:
A new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and will give an heart of flesh. (Ezekiel 11:19).
What a wonderful promise! And it is yea
and amen in Christ Jesus to the glory of God by us. Let us lay hold of it; accept it as
true, and appropriate it to ourselves. Then shall it be fulfilled in us, and we shall
have, in after days and years, to sing of that wondrous change which the sovereign grace
of God has wrought in us.
It is well worthy of consideration that when
the Lord takes away the stony heart, that deed is done; and when that is once done, no
known power can ever take away that new heart which He gives, and that right spirit which
He puts within us. "The gifts and calling of God are without repentance "; that
is, without repentance on His part; He does not take away what He once has given. Let Him
renew you and you will be renewed. Man's reformations and cleanings up soon come to an
end, for the dog returns to his vomit; but when God puts a new heart into us, the new
heart is there forever, and never will it harden into stone again. He who made it flesh
will keep it so. Herein we may rejoice and be glad forever in that which God creates in
the kingdom of His grace.
To put the matter very simplydid you
ever hear of Mr. Rowland Hill's illustration of the cat and the sow? I will give it in my
own fashion, to illustrate our Saviour's expressive words"Ye must be born
again. " Do you see that cat? What a cleanly creature she is! How cleverly she washes
herself with her tongue and her paws! It is quite a pretty sight! Did you ever see a sow
do that? No, you never did. It is contrary to its nature. It prefers to wallow in the
mire. Go and teach a sow to wash itself, and see how little success you would gain. It
would be a great sanitary improvement if swine would be clean. Teach them to wash and
clean themselves as the cat has been doing! Useless task. You may by force wash that sow,
but it hastens to the mire, and is soon as foul as ever. The only way in which you can get
a sow to wash itself is to transform it into a cat; then it will wash and be clean, but
not till then! Suppose that transformation to be accomplished, and then what was difficult
or impossible is easy enough; the swine will henceforth be fit for your parlor and your
hearth-rug. So it is with an ungodly man; you cannot force him to do what a renewed man
does most willingly; you may teach him, and set him a good example, but he cannot learn
the art of holiness, for he has no mind to it; his nature leads him another way. When the
Lord makes a new man of him, then all things wear a different aspect. So great is this
change, that I once heard a convert say, "Either all the world is changed, or else I
am." The new nature follows after right as naturally as the old nature wanders after
wrong. What a blessing to receive such a nature! Only the Holy Ghost can give it.
Did it ever strike you what a wonderful
thing it is for the Lord to give a new heart and a right spirit to a man? You have seen a
lobster, perhaps, which has fought with another lobster, and lost one of its claws, and a
new claw has grown. That is a remarkable thing; but it is a much more astounding fact that
a man should have a new heart given to him. This, indeed, is a miracle beyond the powers
of nature. There is a tree. If you cut off one of its limbs, another one may grow in its
place; but can you change the tree; can you sweeten sour sap; can you make the thorn bear
figs? You can graft something better into it and that is the analogy which nature gives us
of the work of grace; but absolutely to change the vital sap of the tree would be a
miracle indeed. Such a prodigy and mystery of power God works in all who believe in Jesus.
If you yield yourself up to His divine
working, the Lord will alter your nature; He will subdue the old nature, and breathe new
life into you. Put your trust in the Lord Jesus Christ, and He will take the stony heart
out of your flesh, and He will give you a heart of flesh. Where everything was hard,
everything shall be tender; where everything was vicious, everything shall be virtuous:
where everything tended downward, everything shall rise upward with impetuous force. The
lion of anger shall give place to the lamb of meekness; the raven of uncleanness shall fly
before the dove of purity; the vile serpent of deceit shall be trodden under the heel of
truth.
I have seen with my own eyes such marvellous
changes of moral and spiritual character that I despair of none. I could, if it were
fitting, point out those who were once unchaste women who are now pure as the driven snow,
and blaspheming men who now delight all around them by their intense devotion. Thieves are
made honest, drunkards sober, liars truthful, and scoffers zealous. Wherever the grace of
God has appeared to a man it has trained him to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts, and to
live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present evil world: and, dear reader, it
will do the same for you.
"I cannot make this change," says one. Who said you could? The Scripture
which we have quoted speaks not of what man will do, but of what God will
do. It is God's promise, and it is for Him to fulfill His own engagements. Trust in Him to
fulfill His Word to you, and it will be done.
"But how is it to be done?" What
business is that of yours? Must the Lord explain His methods before you will believe him?
The Lord's working in this matter is a great mystery: the Holy Ghost performs it. He who
made the promise has the responsibility of keeping the promise, and He is equal to the
occasion. God, who promises this marvellous change, will assuredly carry it out in all who
receive Jesus, for to all such He gives power to become the Sons of God. Oh that you would
believe it! Oh that you would do the gracious Lord the justice to believe that He can and
will do this for you, great miracle though it will be! Oh that you would believe that God
cannot lie! Oh that you would trust Him for a new heart, and a right spirit, for He can
give them to you! May the Lord give you faith in His promise, faith in His Son, faith in
the Holy Spirit, and faith in Him, and to Him shall be praise and honor and glory forever
and ever! Amen.
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"By grace are ye saved, through faith" (Ephesians 2:8 ).
THINK IT WELL to turn a little to one
side that I may ask my reader to observe adoringly the fountain-head of our
salvation, which is the grace of God. "By grace are ye saved." Because God is
gracious, therefore sinful men are forgiven, converted, purified, and saved. It is not
because of anything in them, or that ever can be in them, that they are saved; but because
of the boundless love, goodness, pity, compassion, mercy, and grace of God. Tarry a
moment, then, at the well-head. Behold the pure river of water of life, as it proceeds out
of the throne of God and of the Lamb!
What an abyss is the grace of God! Who can
measure its breadth? Who can fathom its depth? Like all the rest of the divine attributes,
it is infinite. God is full of love, for "God is love." God is full of goodness;
the very name "God" is short for "good." Unbounded goodness and love
enter into the very essence of the Godhead. It is because "his mercy endureth for
ever" that men are not destroyed; because "his compassions fail not" that
sinners are brought to Him and forgiven.
Remember this; or you may fall into error by
fixing your minds so much upon the faith which is the channel of salvation as to forget
the grace which is the fountain and source even of faith itself. Faith is the work of
God's grace in us. No man can say that Jesus is the Christ but by the Holy Ghost. "No
man cometh unto me," saith Jesus, "except the Father which hath sent me draw
him." So that faith, which is coming to Christ, is the result of divine drawing.
Grace is the first and last moving cause of salvation; and faith, essential as it is, is
only an important part of the machinery which grace employs. We are saved "through
faith," but salvation is "by grace." Sound forth those words as with the
archangel's trumpet: "By grace are ye saved." What glad tidings for the
undeserving!
Faith occupies the position of a channel
or conduit pipe. Grace is the fountain and the stream; faith is the aqueduct along
which the flood of mercy flows down to refresh the thirsty sons of men. It is a great pity
when the aqueduct is broken. It is a sad sight to see around Rome the many noble aqueducts
which no longer convey water into the city, because the arches are broken and the
marvelous structures are in ruins. The aqueduct must be kept entire to convey the current;
and, even so, faith must be true and sound, leading right up to God and coming right down
to ourselves, that it may become a serviceable channel of mercy to our souls.
Still, I again remind you that faith is only
the channel or aqueduct, and not the fountainhead, and we must not look so much to it as
to exalt it above the divine source of all blessing which lies in the grace of God. Never
make a Christ out of your faith, nor think of as if it were the independent source of
your salvation. Our life is found in "looking unto Jesus," not in looking to our
own faith. By faith all things become possible to us; yet the power is not in the faith,
but in the God upon whom faith relies. Grace is the powerful engine, and faith is the
chain by which the carriage of the soul is attached to the great motive power. The
righteousness of faith is not the moral excellence of faith, but the righteousness of
Jesus Christ which faith grasps and appropriates. The peace within the soul is not derived
from the contemplation of our own faith; but it comes to us from Him who is our peace, the
hem of whose garment faith touches, and virtue comes out of Him into the soul.
See then, dear friend, that the weakness of
your faith will not destroy you. A trembling hand may receive a golden gift. The Lord's
salvation can come to us though we have only faith as a grain of mustard seed. The power
lies in the grace of God, and not in our faith. Great messages can be sent along slender
wires, and the peace-giving witness of the Holy Spirit can reach the heart by means of a
thread-like faith which seems almost unable to sustain its own weight. Think more of Him
to whom you look than of the look itself. You must look away even from your own looking,
and see nothing but Jesus, and the grace of God revealed in Him.
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WHAT IS THIS FAITH concerning which it is
said, "By grace are ye saved, through faith?" There are many descriptions
of faith; but almost all the definitions I have met with have made me understand it less
than I did before I saw them. The Negro said, when he read the chapter, that he would confound
it; and it is very likely that he did so, though he meant to expound it. We may
explain faith till nobody understands it. I hope I shall not be guilty of that fault.
Faith is the simplest of all things, and perhaps because of its simplicity it is the more
difficult to explain.
What is faith? It is made up of three
thingsknowledge, belief, and trust. Knowledge comes first. "How
shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard?" I want to be informed of a
fact before I can possibly believe it. "Faith cometh by hearing"; we must first
hear, in order that we may know what is to be believed. "They that know thy name
shall put their trust in thee." A measure of knowledge is essential to faith; hence
the importance of getting knowledge. "Incline your ear, and come unto me; hear, and
your soul shall live." Such was the word of the ancient prophet, and it is the word
of the gospel still. Search the Scriptures and learn what the Holy Spirit teacheth
concerning Christ and His salvation. Seek to know God: "For he that cometh to God
must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him."
May the Holy Spirit give you the spirit of knowledge, and of the fear of the Lord! Know
the gospel: know what the good news is, how it talks of free forgiveness, and of change of
heart, of adoption into the family of God, and of countless other blessings. Know
especially Christ Jesus the Son of God, the Saviour of men, united to us by His human
nature, and yet one with God; and thus able to act as Mediator between God and man, able
to lay His hand upon both, and to be the connecting link between the sinner and the Judge
of all the earth. Endeavour to know more and more of Christ Jesus. Endeavour especially to
know the doctrine of the sacrifice of Christ; for the point upon which saving faith mainly
fixes itself is this "God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto himself,
not imputing their trespasses unto them." Know that Jesus was "made a curse for
us, as it is written, Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree." Drink deep of the
doctrine of the substitutionary work of Christ; for therein lies the sweetest possible
comfort to the guilty sons of men, since the Lord "made him to be sin for us, that we
might be made the righteousness of God in him." Faith begins with knowledge.
The mind goes on to believe that
these things are true. The soul believes that God is, and that He hears the cries of
sincere hearts; that the gospel is from God; that justification by faith is the grand
truth which God hath revealed in these last days by His Spirit more clearly than before.
Then the heart believes that Jesus is verily and in truth our God and Saviour, the
Redeemer of men, the Prophet, Priest, and King of His people. All this is accepted as sure
truth, not to be called in question. I pray that you may at once come to this. Get firmly
to believe that "the blood of Jesus Christ, God's dear Son, cleanseth us from all
sin"; that His sacrifice is complete and fully accepted of God on man's behalf, so
that he that believeth on Jesus is not condemned. Believe these truths as you believe any
other statements; for the difference between common faith and saving faith lies mainly in
the subjects upon which it is exercised. Believe the witness of God just as you believe
the testimony of your own father or friend. "If we receive the witness of men, the
witness of God is greater."
So far you have made an advance toward
faith; only one more ingredient is needed to complete it, which is trust. Commit
yourself to the merciful God; rest your hope on the gracious gospel; trust your soul on
the dying and living Saviour; wash away your sins in the atoning blood; accept His perfect
righteousness, and all is well. Trust is the lifeblood of faith; there is no saving faith
without it. The Puritans were accustomed to explain faith by the word
"recumbency." It meant leaning upon a thing. Lean with all your weight upon
Christ. It would be a better illustration still if I said, fall at full length, and lie on
the Rock of Ages. Cast yourself upon Jesus; rest in Him; commit yourself to Him. That
done, you have exercised saving faith. Faith is not a blind thing; for faith begins with
knowledge. It is not a speculative thing; for faith believes facts of which it is sure. It
is not an unpractical, dreamy thing; for faith trusts, and stakes its destiny upon the
truth of revelation. That is one way of describing what faith is.
Let me try again. Faith is believing that
Christ is what He is said to be, and that He will do what He has promised to do, and then
to expect this of Him. The Scriptures speak of Jesus Christ as being God, God is human
flesh; as being perfect in His character; as being made of a sin-offering on our behalf;
as bearing our sins in His own body on the tree. The Scripture speaks of Him as having
finished transgression, made an end of sin, and brought in everlasting righteousness. The
sacred records further tell us that He "rose again from the dead," that He
"ever liveth to make intercession for us," that He has gone up into the glory,
and has taken possession of Heaven on the behalf of His people, and that He will shortly
come again "to judge the world in righteousness, and his people with equity." We
are most firmly to believe that it is even so; for this is the testimony of God the Father
when He said, "This is my beloved Son; hear ye him." This also is testified by
God the Holy Spirit; for the Spirit has borne witness to Christ, both in the inspired Word
and by divers miracles, and by His working in the hearts of men. We are to believe this
testimony to be true.
Faith also believes that Christ will do what
He has promised; that since He has promised to cast out none that come to Him, it is
certain that He will not cast us out if we come to Him. Faith believes that since
Jesus said, "The water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water
springing up into everasting life, it must be true; and if we get this living Water
from Christ it will abide in us, and will well up within us in streams of
holy life. Whatever Christ has promised to do He will do, and we must believe this, so as
to look for pardon, justification, preservation, and eternal glory from His hands,
according as He has promised them to believers in Him.
Then comes the next necessary step. Jesus is
what He is said to be, Jesus will do what He says He will do; therefore we must each one trust
Him , saying, "He will be to me what He says He is, and He will do to me what He
has promised to do; I leave myself in the hands of Him who is appointed to save, that He
may save me. I rest upon His promise that He will do even as He has said." This is a
saving faith, and he that hath it hath everlasting life. Whatever his dangers and
difficulties, whatever his darkness and depression, whatever his infirmities and sins, he
that believeth thus on Christ Jesus is not condemned, and shall never come into
condemnation.
May that explanation be of some service! I
trust it may be used by the Spirit of God to direct my reader into immediate peace.
"Be not afraid; only believe." Trust, and be at rest.
My fear is lest the reader should rest
content with understanding what is to be done, and yet never do it. Better the poorest
real faith actually at work, than the best ideal of it left in the region of speculation.
The great matter is to believe on the Lord Jesus at once. Never mind distinctions
and definitions. A hungry man eats though he does not understand the composition of his
food, the anatomy of his mouth, or the process of digestion: he lives because he eats.
Another far more clever person understands thoroughly the science of nutrition; but if he
does not eat he will die, with all his knowledge. There are, no doubt, many at this hour
in Hell who understood the doctrine of faith, but did not believe. On the other hand, not
one who has trusted in the Lord Jesus has ever been cast out, though he may never have
been able intelligently to define his faith. Oh dear reader, receive the Lord Jesus into
your soul, and you shall live forever! "He that believeth in Him hath everlasting
life."
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TO MAKE THE MATTER Of faith clearer
still, I will give you a few illustrations. Though the Holy Spirit alone can make my
reader see, it is my duty and my joy to furnish all the light I can, and to pray the
divine Lord to open blind eyes. Oh that my reader would pray the same prayer for himself!
The faith which saves has its analogies in
the human frame.
It is the eye which looks. By the eye
we bring into the mind that which is far away; we can bring the sun and the far-off stars
into the mind by a glance of the eye. So by trust we bring the Lord Jesus near to us; and
though He be far away in Heaven, He enters into our heart. Only look to Jesus; for the
hymn is strictly true
There is life in a look at the Crucified One,
There is life at this moment for thee.
Faith is the hand which grasps. When our hand takes hold of anything for itself,
it does precisely what faith does when it appropriates Christ and the blessings of His
redemption. Faith says, "Jesus is mine." Faith hears of the pardoning blood, and
cries, "I accept it to pardon me." Faith calls the legacies of the dying
Jesus her own; and they are her own, for faith is Christ's heir; He has given Himself and
all that He has to faith. Take, O friend, that which grace has provided for thee. You will
not be a thief, for you have a divine permit: "Whosoever will, let him take the water
of life freely." He who may have a treasure simply by his grasping it will be foolish
indeed if he remains poor.
Faith is the mouth which feeds upon
Christ. Before food can nourish us, it must be received into us. This is a simple
matterthis eating and drinking. We willingly receive into the mouth that which is
our food, and then we consent that it should pass down into our inward parts, wherein it
is taken up and absorbed into our bodily frame. Paul says, in his Epistle to the Romans,
in the tenth chapter, "The word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth." Now then, all
that is to be done is to swallow it, to suffer it to go down into the soul. Oh that men
had an appetite! For he who is hungry and sees meat before him does not need to be taught
how to eat. "Give me," said one, "a knife and a fork and a chance." He
was fully prepared to do the rest. Truly, a heart which hungers and thirsts after Christ
has but to know that He is freely given, and at once it will receive Him. If my reader is
in such a case, let him not hesitate to receive Jesus; for he may be sure that he will
never be blamed for doing so: for unto "as many as received him, to them gave he
power to become the sons of God." He never repulses one, but He authorizes all who
come to remain sons for ever.
The pursuits of life illustrate faith in
many ways. The farmer buries good seed in the earth, and expects it not only to live but
to be multiplied. He has faith in the covenant arrangement, that "seed-time and
harvest shall not cease," and he is rewarded for his faith.
The merchant places his money in the care of
a banker, and trusts altogether to the honesty and soundness of the bank. He entrusts his
capital to another's hands, and feels far more at ease than if he had the solid gold
locked up in an iron safe.
The sailor trusts himself to the sea. When
he swims he takes his foot from the bottom and rests upon the buoyant ocean. He could not
swim if he did not wholly cast himself upon the water.
The goldsmith puts precious metal into the
fire which seems eager to consume it, but he receives it back again from the furnace
purified by the heat.
You cannot turn anywhere in life without
seeing faith in operation between man and man, or between man and natural law. Now, just
as we trust in daily life, even so are we to trust in God as He is revealed in Christ
Jesus.
Faith exists in different persons in various
degrees, according to the amount of their knowledge or growth in grace. Sometimes faith is
little more than a simple clinging to Christ; a sense of dependence and a
willingness so to depend. When you are down at the seaside you will see limpets sticking
to the rock. You walk with a soft tread up to the rock; you strike the mollusk a rapid
blow with your walking-stick and off he comes. Try the next limpet in that way. You have
given him warning; he heard the blow with which you struck his neighbor, and he clings
with all his might. You will never get him off; not you! Strike, and strike again, but you
may as soon break the rock. Our little friend, the limpet, does not know much, but he
clings. He is not acquainted with the geological formation of the rock, but he clings. He
can cling, and he has found something to cling to: this is all his stock of knowledge, and
he uses it for his security and salvation. It is the limpet's life to cling to the rock,
and it is the sinner's life to cling to Jesus. Thousands of God's people have no more
faith than this; they know enough to cling to Jesus with all their heart and soul, and
this suffices for present peace and eternal safety. Jesus Christ is to them a Saviour
strong and mighty, a Rock immovable and immutable; they cling to him for dear life, and
this clinging saves them. Reader, cannot you cling? Do so at once.
Faith is seen when one man relies upon
another from a knowledge of the superiority of the other. This is a higher faith; the
faith which knows the reason for its dependence, and acts upon it. I do not think the
limpet knows much about the rock: but as faith grows it becomes more and more intelligent.
A blind man trusts himself with his guide because he knows that his friend can see, and,
trusting, he walks where his guide conducts him. If the poor man is born blind he does not
know what sight is; but he knows that there is such a thing as sight, and that it is
possessed by his friend and therefore he freely puts his hand into the hand of the seeing
one, and follows his leadership. "We walk by faith, not by sight." "
Blessed are they which have not seen, and yet have believed." This is as good an
image of faith as well can be; we know that Jesus has about Him merit, and power, and
blessing, which we do not possess, and therefore we gladly trust ourselves to Him to be to
us what we cannot be to ourselves. We trust Him as the blind man trusts his guide. He
never betrays our confidence ; but He "is made of God unto us wisdom, and
righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption."
Every boy that goes to school has to exert
faith while learning. His schoolmaster teaches him geography, and instructs him as to the
form of the earth, and the existence of certain great cities and empires. The boy does not
himself know that these things are true, except that he believes his teacher, and the
books put into his hands. That is what you will have to do with Christ, if you are to be
saved; you must simply know because He tells you, believe because He assures you it is
even so, and trust yourself with Him because He promises you that salvation will be the
result. Almost all that you and I know has come to us by faith. A scientific discovery has
been made, and we are sure of it. On what grounds do we believe it? On the authority of
certain well-known men of learning, whose reputations are established. We have never made
or seen their experiments, but we believe their witness. You must do the like with regard
to Jesus: because He teaches you certain truths you are to be His disciple, and believe
His words; because He has performed certain acts you are to be His client, and trust
yourself with Him. He is infinitely superior to you, and presents himself to your
confidence as your Master and Lord. If you will receive Him and His words you shall be
saved.
Another and a higher form of faith is that
faith which grows out of love. Why does a boy trust his father? The reason why the
child trusts his father is because he loves him. Blessed and happy are they who have a
sweet faith in Jesus, intertwined with deep affection for Him, for this is a restful
confidence. These lovers of Jesus are charmed with His character, and delighted with His
mission, they are carried away by the lovingkindness that He has manifested, and therefore
they cannot help trusting Him, because they so much admire, revere, and love Him.
The way of loving trust in the Saviour may
thus be illustrated. A lady is the wife of the most eminent physician of the day. She is
seized with a dangerous illness, and is smitten down by its power; yet she is wonderfully
calm and quiet, for her husband has made this disease his special study, and has healed
thousands who were similarly afflicted. She is not in the least troubled, for she feels
perfectly safe in the hands of one so dear to her, and in whom skill and love are blended
in their highest forms. Her faith is reasonable and natural; her husband, from every point
of view, deserves it of her. This is the kind of faith which the happiest of believers
exercise toward Christ. There is no physician like Him, none can save as He can; we love
Him, and He loves us, and therefore we put ourselves into His hands, accept whatever He
prescribes, and do whatever He bids. We feel that nothing can be wrongly ordered while He
is the director of our affairs; for He loves us too well to let us perish, or suffer a
single needless pang.
Faith is the root of obedience, and this may
be clearly seen in the affairs of life. When a captain trusts a pilot to steer his vessel
into port he manages the vessel according to his direction. When a traveler trusts a guide
to conduct him over a difficult pass, he follows the track which his guide points out.
When a patient believes in a physician, he carefully follows his prescriptions and
directions. Faith which refuses to obey the commands of the Saviour is a mere pretence,
and will never save the soul. We trust Jesus to save us; He gives us directions as to the
way of salvation; we follow those directions and are saved. Let not my reader forget this.
Trust Jesus, and prove your trust by doing whatever He bids you.
A notable form of faith arises out of
assured knowledge; this comes of growth in grace, and is the faith which believes
Christ because it knows Him, and trusts Him because it has proved Him to be infallibly
faithful. An old Christian was in the habit of writing T and P in the margin of her Bible
whenever she had tried and proved a promise. How easy it is to trust a tried and proved
Saviour! You cannot do this as yet, but you will do so. Everything must have a beginning.
You will rise to strong faith in due time. This matured faith asks not for signs and
tokens, but bravely believes. Look at the faith of the master marinerI have often
wondered at it. He looses his cable, he steams away from the land. For days, weeks, or
even months, he never sees sail or shore; yet on he goes day and night without fear, till
one morning he finds himself exactly opposite to the desired haven toward which he has
been steering. How has he found his way over the trackless deep ? He has trusted in his
compass, his nautical almanac, his glass, and the heavenly bodies; and obeying their
guidance, without sighting land, he has steered so accurately that he has not to change a
point to enter into port. It is a wonderful thingthat sailing or steaming without
sight. Spiritually it is a blessed thing to leave altogether the shores of sight and
feeling, and to say, "Good-by" to inward feelings, cheering providences, signs,
tokens, and so forth. It is glorious to be far out on the ocean of divine love, believing
in God, and steering for Heaven straight away by the direction of the Word of God.
"Blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed"; to them shall be
administered an abundant entrance at the last, and a safe voyage on the way. Will not my
reader put his trust in God in Christ Jesus. There I rest with joyous confidence. Brother,
come with me, and believe our Father and our Saviour. Come at once.
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WHY IS FAITH SELECTED as the channel of
salvation? No doubt this inquiry is often made. "By grace are ye saved through
faith," is assuredly the doctrine of Holy Scripture, and the ordinance of God;
but why is it so? Why is faith selected rather than hope, or love, or patience?
It becomes us to be modest in answering such
a question, for God's ways are not always to be understood; nor are we allowed
presumptuously to question them. Humbly we would reply that, as far as we can tell, faith
has been selected as the channel of grace, because there is a natural adaptation in
faith to be used as the receiver. Suppose that I am about to give a poor man an alms: I
put it into his handwhy? Well, it would hardly be fitting to put it into his ear, or
to lay it upon his foot; the hand seems made on purpose to receive. So, in our mental
frame, faith is created on purpose to be a receiver: it is the hand of the man, and there
is a fitness in receiving grace by its means.
Do let me put this very plainly. Faith which
receives Christ is as simple an act as when your child receives an apple from you, because
you hold it out and promise to give him the apple if he comes for it. The belief and the
receiving relate only to an apple; but they make up precisely the same act as the faith
which deals with eternal salvation. What the child's hand is to the apple, that your faith
is to the perfect salvation of Christ. The child's hand does not make the apple, nor
improve the apple, nor deserve the apple; it only takes it; and faith is chosen by God to
be the receiver of salvation, because it does not pretend to create salvation, nor to help
in it, but it is content humbly to receive it. "Faith is the tongue that begs pardon,
the hand which receives it, and the eye which sees it; but it is not the price which buys
it." Faith never makes herself her own plea, she rests all her argument upon the
blood of Christ. She becomes a good servant to bring the riches of the Lord Jesus to the
soul, because she acknowledges whence she drew them, and owns that grace alone entrusted
her with them.
Faith, again, is doubtless selected because it
gives all the glory to God. It is of faith that it might be by grace, and it is of
grace that there might be no boasting; for God cannot endure pride. "The proud he
knoweth afar off," and He has no wish to come nearer to them. He will not give
salvation in a way which will suggest or foster pride. Paul saith, "Not of works,
lest any man should boast." Now, faith excludes all boasting. The hand which receives
charity does not say, "I am to be thanked for accepting the gift"; that would be
absurd. When the hand conveys bread to the mouth it does not say to the body, "Thank
me; for I feed you." It is a very simple thing that the hand does though a very
necessary thing; and it never arrogates glory to itself for what it does. So God has
selected faith to receive the unspeakable gift of His grace, because it cannot take to
itself any credit, but must adore the gracious God who is the giver of all good. Faith
sets the crown upon the right head, and therefore the Lord Jesus was wont to put the crown
upon the head of faith, saying, "Thy faith hath saved thee; go in peace."
Next, God selects faith as the channel of
salvation because it is a sure method, linking man with God. When man confides in
God, there is a point of union between them, and that union guarantees blessing. Faith
saves us because it makes us cling to God, and so brings us into connection with Him. I
have often used the following illustration, but I must repeat it, because I cannot think
of a better. I am told that years ago a boat was upset above the falls of Niagara, and two
men were being carried down the current, when persons on the shore managed to float a rope
out to them, which rope was seized by them both. One of them held fast to it and was
safely drawn to the bank; but the other, seeing a great log come floating by, unwisely let
go the rope and clung to the log, for it was the bigger thing of the two, and apparently
better to cling to. Alas! the log with the man on it went right over the vast abyss,
because there was no union between the log and the shore. The size of the log was no
benefit to him who grasped it; it needed a connection with the shore to produce safety. So
when a man trusts to his works, or to sacraments, or to anything of that sort, he will not
be saved, because there is no junction between him and Christ; but faith, though it may
seem to be like a slender cord, is in the hands of the great God on the shore side;
infinite power pulls in the connecting line, and thus draws the man from destruction. Oh
the blessedness of faith, because it unites us to God!
Faith is chosen again, because it touches
the springs of action. Even in common things faith of a certain sort lies at the root
of all. I wonder whether I shall be wrong if I say that we never do anything except
through faith of some sort. If I walk across my study it is because I believe my legs will
carry me. A man eats because he believes in the necessity of food; he goes to business
because he believes in the value of money; he accepts a check because he believes that the
bank will honor it. Columbus discovered America because he believed that there was another
continent beyond the ocean; and the Pilgrim Fathers colonized it because they believed
that God would be with them on those rocky shores. Most grand deeds have been born of
faith; for good or for evil, faith works wonders by the man in whom it dwells. Faith in
its natural form is an all-prevailing force, which enters into all manner of human
actions. Possibly he who derides faith in God is the man who in an evil form has the most
of faith; indeed, he usually falls into a credulity which would be ridiculous, if it were
not disgraceful. God gives salvation to faith, because by creating faith in us He thus
touches the real mainspring of our emotions and actions. He has, so to speak, taken
possession of the battery and now He can send the sacred current to every part of our
nature. When we believe in Christ, and the heart has come into the possession of God, then
we are saved from sin, and are moved toward repentance, holiness, zeal, prayer,
consecration, and every other gracious thing. "What oil is to the wheels, what
weights are to a clock, what wings are to a bird, what sails are to a ship, that faith is
to all holy duties and services." Have faith, and all other graces will follow and
continue to hold their course.
Faith, again, has the power of working by
love; it influences the affections toward God, and draws the heart after the best
things. He that believes in God will beyond all question love God. Faith is an act of the
understanding; but it also proceeds from the heart. "With the heart man believeth
unto righteousness"; and hence God gives salvation to faith because it resides next
door to the affections, and is near akin to love; and love is the parent and the nurse of
every holy feeling and act. Love to God is obedience, love to God is holiness. To love God
and to love man is to be conformed to the image of Christ; and this is salvation.
Moreover, faith creates peace and joy;
he that hath it rests, and is tranquil, is glad and joyous, and this is a preparation for
heaven. God gives all heavenly gifts to faith, for this reason among others, that faith
worketh in us the life and spirit which are to be eternally manifested in th e upper and
better world. Faith furnishes us with armor for this life, and education for the life to
come. It enables a man both to live and to die without fear; it prepares both for action
and for suffering; and hence the Lord selects it as a most convenient medium for conveying
grace to us, and thereby securing us for glory.
Certainly faith does for us what nothing
else can do; it gives us joy and peace, and causes us to enter into rest. Why do men
attempt to gain salvation by other means? An old preacher says, "A silly servant who
is bidden to open a door, sets his shoulder to it and pushes with all his might ; but the
door stirs not, and he cannot enter, use what strength he may. Another comes with a key,
and easily unlocks the door, and enters right readily. Those who would be saved by works
are pushing at heaven's gate without result; but faith is the key which opens the gate at
once." Reader, will you not use that key? The Lord commands you to believe in His
dear Son, therefore you may do so; and doing so you shall live. Is not this the promise of
the gospel, "He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved"? (Mark 16:16).
What can be your objection to a way of salvation which commends itself to the mercy and
the wisdom of our gracious God?
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AFTER THE ANXIOUS HEART has accepted the
doctrine of atonement, and learned the great truth that salvation is by faith in the Lord
Jesus, it is often sore troubled with a sense of inability toward that which is good. Many
are groaning, "I can do nothing." They are not making this into an excuse, but
they feel it as a daily burden. They would if they could. They can each one honestly say,
"To will is present with me, but how to perform that which I would I find not."
This feeling seems to make all the gospel
null and void; for what is the use of food to a hungry man if he cannot get at it? Of what
avail is the river of the water of life if one cannot drink? We recall the story of the
doctor and the poor woman's child. The sage practitioner told the mother that her little
one would soon be better under proper treatment, but it was absolutely needful that her
boy should regularly drink the best wine, and that he should spend a season at one of the
German spas. This, to a widow who could hardly get bread to eat! Now, it sometimes seems
to the troubled heart that the simple gospel of "Believe and live," is not,
after all, so very simple; for it asks the poor sinner to do what he cannot do. To the
really awakened, but half instructed, there appears to be a missing link ; yonder is the
salvation of Jesus, but how is it to be reached? The soul is without strength, and knows
not what to do. It lies within sight of the city of refuge, and cannot enter its gate.
Is this want of strength provided for in the
plan of salvation? It is. The work of the Lord is perfect. It begins where we are, and
asks nothing of us in order to its completion. When the good Samaritan saw the traveler
lying wounded and half dead, he did not bid him rise and come to him, and mount the ass
and ride off to the inn. No, "he came where he was," and ministered to him, and
lifted him upon the beast and bore him to the inn. Thus doth the Lord Jesus deal with us
in our low and wretched estate.
We have seen that God justifieth, that He
justifieth the ungodly and that He justifies them through faith in the precious blood of
Jesus; we have now to see the condition these ungodly ones are in when Jesus works out
their salvation. Many awakened persons are not only troubled about their sin, but about
their moral weakness. They have no strength with which to escape from the mire into which
they have fallen, nor to keep out of it in after days. They not only lament over what they
have done, but over what they cannot do. They feel themselves to be powerless, helpless,
and spiritually lifeless. It may sound odd to say that they feel dead, and yet it is even
so. They are, in their own esteem, to all good incapable. They cannot travel the road to
Heaven, for their bones are broken. "None of the men of strength have found their
hands;" in fact, they are "without strength." Happily, it is written, as
the commendation of God's love to us:
When we were yet without strength, in due time Christ died for the
ungodly (Romans 5:6).
Here we see conscious helplessness
succoredsuccored by the interposition of the Lord Jesus. Our helplessness is
extreme. It is not written, " When we were comparatively weak Christ died for
us"; or, "When we had only a little strength"; but the description is
absolute and unrestricted; "When we were yet without strength." We had no
strength whatever which could aid in our salvation; our Lord's words were emphatically
true, "Without me ye can do nothing." I may go further than the text, and remind
you of the great love wherewith the Lord loved us, "even when we were dead in
trespasses and sins." To be dead is even more than to be without strength.
The one thing that the poor strengthless
sinner has to fix his mind upon, and firmly retain, as his one ground of hope, is the
divine assurance that "in due time Christ died for the ungodly." Believe this,
and all inability will disappear. As it is fabled of Midas that he turned everything into
gold by his touch, so it is true of faith that it turns everything it touches into good.
Our very needs and weaknesses become blessings when faith deals with them.
Let us dwell upon certain forms of this want
of strength. To begin with, one man will say, "Sir, I do not seem to have strength to
collect my thoughts, and keep them fixed upon those solemn topics which concern my
salvation; a short prayer is almost too much for me. It is so partly, p erhaps, through
natural weakness, partly because I have injured myself through dissipation, and partly
also because I worry myself with wordly cares, so that I am not capable of those high
thoughts which are necessary ere a soul can be saved." This is a very common form of
sinful weakness. Note this! You are without strength on this point; and there are many
like you. They could not carry out a train of consecutive thought to save their lives.
Many poor men and women are illiterate and untrained, and these would find deep thought to
be very heavy work. Others are so light and trifling by nature, that they could no more
follow out a long process of argument and reasoning, than they could fly. They could never
attain to the knowledge of any profound mystery if they expended their whole life in the
effort. You need not, therefore, despair: that which is necessary to salvation is
not continuous thought, but a simple reliance upon Jesus. Hold you on to this one
fact"In due time Christ died for the ungodly. " This truth will not
require from you any deep research or profound reasoning, or convincing argument. There it
stands: "In due time Christ died for the ungodly." Fix your mind on that, and
rest there.
Let this one great, gracious, glorious fact
lie in your spirit till it perfumes all your thoughts, and makes you rejoice even though
you are without strength, seeing the Lord Jesus has become your strength and your song,
yea, He has become your salvation. According to the Scriptures it is a revealed fact, that
in due time Christ died for the ungodly when they were yet without strength. You have
heard these words hundreds of times, maybe, and yet you have never before perceived their
meaning. There is a cheering savor about them, is there not? Jesus did not die for our
righteousness, but He died for our sins. He did not come to save us because we were worth
the saving, but because we were utterly worthless, ruined, and undone. He came not to
earth out of any reason that was in us, but solely and only out of reasons which He
fetched from the depths of His own divine love. In due time He died for those whom He
describes, not as godly, but as ungodly, applying to them as hopeless an adjective
as He could well have selected. If you have but little mind, yet fasten it to this truth,
which is fitted to the smallest capacity, and is able to cheer the heaviest heart. Let
this text lie under your tongue like a sweet morsel, till it dissolves into your heart and
flavors all your thoughts; and then it will little matter though those thoughts should be
as scattered as autumn leaves. Persons who have never shone in science, nor displayed the
least originality of mind, have nevertheless been fully able to accept the doctrine of the
cross, and have been saved thereby. Why should not you?
I hear another man cry, "Oh, sir my
want of strength lies mainly in this, that I cannot repent sufficiently!" A
curious idea men have of what repentance is! Many fancy that so many tears are to be shed,
and so many groans are to be heaved, and so much despair is to be endured. Whence comes
this unreasonable notion? Unbelief and despair are sins, and therefore I do not see how
they can be constituent elements of acceptable repentance; yet there are many who regard
them as necessary parts of true Christian experience. They are in great error. Still, I
know what they mean, for in the days of my darkness I used to feel in the same way. I
desired to repent, but I thought that I could not do it, and yet all the while I was
repenting. Odd as it may sound, I felt that I could not feel. I used to get into a corner
and weep, because I could not weep; and I fell into bitter sorrow because I could not
sorrow for sin. What a jumble it all is when in our unbelieving state we begin to judge
our own condition! It is like a blind man looking at his own eyes. My heart was melted
within me for fear, because I thought that my heart was as hard as an
adamant stone. My heart was broken to think that it would
not break. Now I can see that I was exhibiting the very thing which I thought I did
not possess; but then I knew not where I was.
Oh that I could help others into the light
which I now enjoy! Fain would I say a word which might shorten the time of their
bewilderment. I would say a few plain words, and pray "the Comforter" to apply
them to the heart.
Remember that the man who truly repents is
never satisfied with his own repentance. We can no more repent perfectly than we can live
perfectly. However pure our tears, there will always be some dirt in them: there will be
something to be repented of even in our best repentance. But listen! To repent is to
change your mind about sin, and Christ, and all the great things of God. There is sorrow
implied in this; but the main point is the turning of the heart from sin to Christ. If
there be this turning, you have the essence of true repentance, even though no alarm and
no despair should ever have cast their shadow upon your mind.
If you cannot repent as you would, it will
greatly aid you to do so if you will firmly believe that "in due time Christ died for
the ungodly. " Think of this again and again. How can you continue to be hard-hearted
when you know that out of supreme love "Christ died for the ungodly"? Let me
persuade you to reason with yourself thus: Ungodly as I am, though this heart of steel
will not relent, though I smite in vain upon my breast, yet He died for such as I am,
since He died for the ungodly. Oh that I may believe this and feel the power of it upon my
flinty heart!
Blot out every other reflection from your
soul, and sit down by the hour together, and meditate deeply on this one resplendent
display of unmerited, unexpected, unexampled love, "Christ died for the
ungodly." Read over carefully the narrative of the Lord's death, as you find it in
the four evangelists. If anything can melt your stubborn heart, it will be a sight of the
sufferings of Jesus, and the consideration that he suffered all this for His enemies.
O Jesus! sweet the tears I shed,
While at Thy feet I kneel,
Gaze on Thy wounded, fainting head,
And all Thy sorrows feel.
My heart dissolves to see Thee bleed,
This heart so hard before;
I hear Thee for the guilty plead,
And grief o'erflows the more.
'Twas for the sinful Thou didst die,
And I a sinner stand:
Convinc'd by Thine expiring eye,
Slain by Thy pierced hand.
Ray Palmer
Surely the cross is that wonder-working
rod which can bring water out of a rock. If you understand the full meaning of the divine
sacrifice of Jesus, you must repent of ever having been opposed to One who is so full of
love. It is written, "They shall look upon him whom they have pierced, and
they shall mourn for him, as one mourneth for his only son, and shall be in
bitterness for him, as one that is in bitterness for his firstborn." Repentance will
not make you see Christ; but to see Christ will give you repentance. You may not make a
Christ out of your repentance, but you must look for repentance to Christ. The Holy Ghost,
by turning us to Christ, turns us from sin. Look away, then, from the effect to the cause,
from your own repenting to the Lord Jesus, who is exalted on high to give repentance.
I have heard another say, "I am
tormented with horrible thoughts. Wherever I go, blasphemies steal in upon me. Frequently
at my work a dreadful suggestion forces itself upon me, and even on my bed I am startled
from my sleep by whispers of the evil one. I cannot get away from this h orrible
temptation." Friend, I know what you mean, for I have myself been hunted by this
wolf. A man might as well hope to fight a swarm of flies with a sword as to master his own
thoughts when they are set on by the devil. A poor tempted soul, assailed by satanic
suggestions, is like a traveler I have read of, about whose head and ears and whole body
there came a swarm of angry bees. He could not keep them off nor escape from them. They
stung him everywhere and threatened to be the death of him. I do not wonder you feel that
you are without strength to stop these hideous and abominable thoughts which Satan pours
into your soul; but yet I would remind you of the Scripture before us"When we
were yet without strength, in due time Christ died for the ungodly." Jesus knew where
we were and where we should be; He saw that we could not overcome the prince of the power
of the air; He knew that we should be greatly worried by him; but even then, when He saw
us in that condition, Christ died for the ungodly. Cast the anchor of your faith upon
this. The devil himself cannot tell you that you are not ungodly; believe, then, that
Jesus died even for such as you are. Remember Martin Luther's way of cutting the devil's
head off with his own sword. "Oh," said the devil to Martin Luther, "you
are a sinner. " "Yes," said he, "Christ died to save sinners."
Thus he smote him with his own sword. Hide you in this refuge, and keep there: "In
due time Christ died for the ungodly." If you stand to that truth, your blasphemous
thoughts which you have not the strength to drive away will go away of themselves; for
Satan will see that he is answering no purpose by plaguing you with them.
These thoughts, if you hate them, are none
of yours, but are injections of the Devil, for which he is responsible, and not you. If
you strive against them, they are no more yours than are the cursings and falsehoods of
rioters in the street. It is by means of these thoughts that the Devil would drive you to
despair, or at least keep you from trusting Jesus. The poor diseased woman could not come
to Jesus for the press, and you are in much the same condition, because of the rush and
throng of these dreadful thoughts. Still, she put forth her finger, and touched the fringe
of the Lord's garment, and she was healed. Do you the same.
Jesus died for those who are guilty of
"all manner of sin and blasphemy," and therefore I am sure He will not refuse
those who are unwillingly the captives of evil thoughts. Cast yourself upon Him, thoughts
and all, and see if He be not mighty to save. He can still those horrible whisperings of
the fiend, or He can enable you to see them in their true light, so that you may not be
worried by them. In His own way He can and will save you, and at length give you perfect
peace. Only trust Him for this and everything else.
Sadly perplexing is that form of inability
which lies in a supposed want of power to believe. We are not strangers to the cry:
Oh that I could believe,
Then all would easy be;
I would, but cannot; Lord, relieve,
My help must come from thee.
Many remain in the dark for years because
they have no power, as they say, to do that which is the giving up of all power and
reposing in the power of another, even the Lord Jesus. Indeed, it is a very curious thing,
this whole matter of believing; for people do not get much help by trying to believe.
Believing does not come by trying. If a person were to make a statement of something that
happened this day, I should not tell him that I would try to believe him. If I believed in
the truthfulness of the man who told the incident to me and said that he saw it, I should
accept the statement at once. If I did not think him a true man, I should, of course,
disbelieve him ; but there would be no trying in the matter. Now, when God declares
that there is salvation in Christ Jesus, I must either believe Him at once, or make Him a
liar. Surely you will not hesitate as to which is the right path in this case, The witness
of God must be true, and we are bound at once to believe in Jesus.
But possibly you have been trying to believe
too much. Now do not aim at great things. Be satisfied to have a faith that can hold in
its hand this one truth, "While we were yet without strength, in due time Christ died
for the ungodly." He laid down His life for men while as yet they were not believing
in Him, nor were able to believe in Him. He died for men, not as believers, but as
sinners. He came to make these sinners into believers and saints; but when He died for
them He viewed them as utterly without strength. If you hold to the truth that Christ died
for the ungodly, and believe it, your faith will save you, and you may go in peace. If you
will trust your soul with Jesus, who died for the ungodly, even though you cannot believe
all things, nor move mountains, nor do any other wonderful works, yet you are saved. It is
not great faith, but true faith, that saves; and the salvation lies not in the faith, but
in the Christ in whom faith trusts. Faith as a grain of mustard seed will bring salvation.
It is not the measure of faith, but the sincerity of faith, which is the point to be
considered. Surely a man can believe what he knows to be true; and as you know Jesus to be
true, you, my friend, can believe in Him.
The cross which is the object of faith, is
also, by the power of the Holy Spirit, the cause of it. Sit down and watch the dying
Saviour till faith springs up spontaneously in your heart. There is no place like Calvary
for creating confidence. The air of that sacred hill brings health to trembling faith.
Many a watcher there has said:
While I view Thee, wounded, grieving,
Breathless on the cursed tree,
Lord, I feel my heart believing
That Thou suffer'dst thus for me.
"Alas!" cries another, "my
want of strength lies in this direction, that I cannot quit my sin, and I know that I
cannot go to Heaven and carry my sin with me." I am glad that you know that,
for it is quite true. You must be divorced from your sin, or you cannot be married to
Christ. Recollect the question which flashed into the mind of young Bunyan when at his
sports on the green on Sunday: "Wilt thou have thy sins and go to hell, or wilt thou
quit thy sins and go to heaven?" That brought him to a dead stand. That is a question
which every man will have to answer: for there is no going on in sin and going to heaven.
That cannot be. You must quit sin or quit hope. Do you reply, "Yes, I am willing
enough. To will is present with me, but how to perform that which l would I find not. Sin
masters me, and I have no strength." Come, then, if you have no strength, this text
is still true, "When we were yet without strength, in due time Christ died for the
ungodly." Can you still believe that? However other things may seem to
contradict it, will you believe it? God has said it, and it is a fact; therefore, hold on
to it like grim death, for your only hope lies there. Believe this and trust Jesus, and
you shall soon find power with which to slay your sin; but apart from Him, the strong man
armed will hold you for ever his bond slave. Personally, I could never have overcome my
own sinfulness. I tried and failed. My evil propensities were too many for me, till, in
the belief that Christ died for me, I cast my guilty soul on Him, and then I received a
conquering principle by which I overcame my sinful self. The doctrine of the cross can be
used to slay sin, even as the old warriors used their huge two-handed swords, and mowed
down their foes at every stroke. There is nothing like faith in the sinner's Friend: it
overcomes all evil. If Christ has died for me, ungodly as I am, without strength as I am,
then I cannot live in sin any longer, but must arouse myself to love and serve Him who
hath redeemed me. I cannot trifle with the evil which slew my best Friend. I must be holy
for His sake. How can I live in sin when He has died to save me from it?
See what a splendid help this is to you that
are without strength, to know and believe that in due time Christ died for such ungodly
ones as you are. Have you caught the idea yet? It is, somehow, so difficult for our
darkened, prejudiced, and unbelieving minds to see the essence of the gospel. At times I
have thought, when I have done preaching, that I have laid down the gospel so clearly,
that the nose on one's face could not be more plain; and yet I perceive that even
intelligent hearers have failed to understand what was meant by "Look unto me and be
ye saved." Converts usually say that they did not know the gospel till such and such
a day; and yet they had heard it for years. The gospel is unknown, not from want of
explanation, but from absence of personal revelation. This the Holy Ghost is ready to
give, and will give to those who ask Him. Yet when given, the sum total of the truth
revealed all lies within these words: "Christ died for the ungodly."
I hear another bewailing himself thus:
"Oh, sir, my weakness lies in this, that I do not seem to keep long in one mind! I
hear the word on a Sunday, and I am impressed; but in the week I meet with an evil
companion, and my good feelings are all gone. My fellow workmen do not believe in
anything, and they say such terrible things, and I do not know how to answer them, and so
I find myself knocked over." I know this Plastic Pliable very well, and I tremble
for him; but at the same time, if he is really sincere, his weakness can be met by divine
grace. The Holy Spirit can cast out the evil spirit of the fear of man. He can make the
coward brave. Remember, my poor vacillating friend, you must not remain in this state. It
will never do to be mean and beggarly to yourself. Stand upright, and look at yourself,
and see if you were ever meant to be like a toad under a harrow, afraid for your life
either to move or to stand still. Do have a mind of your own. This is not a spiritual
matter only, but one which concerns ordinary manliness. I would do many things to please
my friends; but to go to hell to please them is more than I would venture. It may be very
well to do this and that for good fellowship; but it will never do to lose the friendship
of God in order to keep on good terms with men. "I know that," says the man,
"but still, though I know it, I cannot pluck up courage. I cannot show my colors. I
cannot stand fast." Well, to you also I have the same text to bring: "When we
were yet without strength, in due time Christ died for the ungodly." If Peter were
here, he would say, "The Lord Jesus died for me even when I was such a poor weak
creature that the maid who kept the fire drove me to lie, and to swear that I knew not the
Lord." Yes, Jesus died for those who forsook him and fled. Take a firm grip on this
truth"Christ died for the ungodly while they were yet without strength."
This is your way out of your cowardice. Get this wrought into your soul, "Christ died
for me," and you will soon be ready to die for Him. Believe it, that He suffered in
your place and stead, and offered for you a full, true, and satisfactory expiation. If you
believe that fact, you will be forced to feel, "I cannot be ashamed of Him who died
for me." A full conviction that this is true will nerve you with a dauntless courage.
Look at the saints in the martyr age. In the early days of Christianity, when this great
thought of Christ's exceeding love was sparkling in all its freshness in the church, men
were not only ready to die, but they grew ambitious to suffer, and even presented
themselves by hundreds at the judgment seats of the rulers, confessing the Christ. I do
not say that they were wise to court a cruel death; but it proves my point, that a sense
of the love of Jesus lifts the mind above all fear of what man can do to us. Why should it
not produce the same effect in you? Oh that it might now inspire you with a brave resolve
to come out upon the Lord's side, and be His follower to the end!
May the Holy Spirit help us to come thus far by faith in the Lord Jesus, and it will be well!
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HOW CAN WE OBTAIN an increase of faith?
This is a very earnest question to many. They say they want to believe, but cannot. A
great deal of nonsense is talked upon this subject. Let us be strictly practical in our
dealing with it. Common sense is as much needed in religion as anywhere else. "What
am I to do in order to believe?" One who was asked the best way to do a certain
simple act, replied that the best way to do it was to do it at once. We waste time in
discussing methods when the action is simple. The shortest way to believe is to believe.
If the Holy Spirit has made you candid, you will believe as soon as truth is set before
you. You will believe it because it is true. The gospel command is clear; "Believe in
the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved." It is idle to evade this by
questions and quibbles. The order is plain; let it be obeyed.
But still, if you have difficulty, take
it before God in prayer. Tell the great Father exactly what it is that puzzles you,
and beg Him by His Holy Spirit to solve the question. If I cannot believe a statement in a
book, I am glad to inquire of the author what he means by it; and if he is a true man his
explanation will satisfy me; much more will the divine explanation of the hard points of
Scripture satisfy the heart of the true seeker. The Lord is willing to make himself known;
go to Him and see if it is not so. Repair at once to your closet, and cry, "O Holy
Spirit, lead me into the truth! What I know not, teach Thou me."
Furthermore, if faith seems difficult, it is
possible that God the Holy Spirit will enable you to believe if you hear very
frequently and earnestly that which you are commanded to believe. We believe many
things because we have heard them so often. Do you not find it so in common life, that if
you hear a thing fifty times a day, at last you come to believe it? Some men have come to
believe very unlikely statements by this process, and therefore I do not wonder that the
good Spirit often blesses the method of often hearing the truth, and uses it to work faith
concerning that which is to be believed. It is written, "Faith cometh by hearing
"; therefore hear often. If I earnestly and attentively hear the gospel, one of these
days I shall find myself believing that which I hear, through the blessed operation of the
Spirit of God upon my mind. Only mind you hear the gospel, and do not distract your
mind with either hearing or reading that which is designed to stagger you.
If that, however, should seem poor advice, I
would add next, consider the testimony of others. The Samaritans believed because
of what the woman told them concerning Jesus. Many of our beliefs arise out of the
testimony of others. I believe that there is such a country as Japan; I never saw it, and
yet I believe that there is such a place because others have been there. I believe that I
shall die; I have never died, but a great many have done so whom I once knew, and
therefore I have a conviction that I shall die also. The testimony of many convinces me of
that fact. Listen, then, to those who tell you how they were saved, how they were
pardoned, how they were changed in character. If you will look into the matter you will
find that somebody just like yourself has been saved. If you have been a thief, you will
find that a thief rejoiced to wash away his sin in the fountain of Christ's blood. If
unhappily you have been unchaste, you will find that men and women who have fallen in that
way have been cleansed and changed. If you are in despair, you have only to get among
God's people, and inquire a little, and you will discover that some of the saints have
been equally in despair at times and they will be pleased to tell you how the Lord
delivered them. As you listen to one after another of those who have tried the word of
God, and proved it, the divine Spirit will lead you to believe. Have you not heard of the
African who was told by the missionary that water sometimes became so hard that a man
could walk on it? He declared that he believed a great many things the missionary had told
him; but he would never believe that. When he came to England it came to pass that one
frosty day he saw the river frozen, but he would not venture on it. He knew that it was a
deep river, and he felt certain that he would be drowned if he ventured upon it. He could
not be induced to walk the frozen water till his friend and many others went upon it; then
he was persuaded, and trusted himself where others had safely ventured. So, while you see
others believe in the Lamb of God, and notice their joy and peace, you will yourself be
gently led to believe. The experience of others is one of God's ways of helping us to
faith. You have e ither to believe in Jesus or die; there is no hope for you but in Him.
A better plan is thisnote the
authority upon which you are commanded to believe, and this will greatly help you to
faith. The authority is not mine, or you might well reject it. But you are commanded to
believe upon the authority of God himself. He bids you believe in Jesus Christ, and you
must not refuse to obey your Maker. The foreman of a certain works had often heard the
gospel, but he was troubled with the fear that he might not come to Christ. His good
master one day sent a card around to the works" Come to my house immediately
after work." The foreman appeared at his master's door, and the master came out, and
said somewhat roughly, " What do you want, John, troubling me at this time? Work is
done, what right have you here?" "Sir," said he, "I had a card from
you saying that I was to come after work." "Do you mean to say that merely
because you had a card from me you are to come up to my house and call me out after
business hours?" "Well, Sir," replied the foreman, "I do not
understand you, but it seems to me that, as you sent for me, I had a right to come."
"Come in, John," said his master, "I have another message that I want to
read to you," and he sat down and read these words: "Come unto me, all ye that
labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." "Do you think after such a
message from Christ that you can be wrong in coming to him?" The poor man saw it all
at once, and believed in the Lord Jesus unto eternal life, because he perceived that he
had good warrant and authority for believing. So have you, poor soul! You have good
authority for coming to Christ, for the Lord himself bids you trust Him.
If that does not breed faith in you, think
over what it is that you have to believethat the Lord Jesus Christ suffered in
the place and stead of sinners, and is able to save all who trust Him. Why, this is the
most blessed fact that ever men were told to believe; the most suitable, the most
comforting, the most divine truth that was ever set before mortal minds. I advise you to
think much upon it, and search out the grace and love which it contains. Study the four
Evangelists, study Paul's epistles, and then see if the message is not such a credible one
that you are forced to believe it.
If that does not do, then think upon the
person of Jesus Christ think of who He is, and what He did, and where
He is, and what He is. How can you doubt Him? It is cruelty to distrust the
ever truthful Jesus. He has done nothing to deserve distrust; on the contrary, it should
be easy to rely upon Him. Why crucify Him anew by unbelief? Is not this crowning Him with
thorns again, and spitting upon Him again? What! is He not to be trusted? What worse
insult did the soldiers pour upon Him than this? They made Him a martyr; but you make Him
a liarthis is worse by far. Do not ask how can I believe? But answer another
questionHow can you disbelieve?
If none of these things avail, then there is
something wrong about you altogether, and my last word is, submit yourself to God!
Prejudice or pride is at the bottom of this unbelief. May the Spirit of God take away your
enmity and make you yield. You are a rebel, a proud rebel, and that is why you do not
believe your God. Give up your rebellion; throw down your weapons; yield at discretion,
surrender to your King. I believe that never did a soul throw up its hands in
self-despair, and cry, "Lord, I yield, " but what faith became easy to it before
long. It is because you still have a quarrel with God, and resolve to have your own will
and your own way, that therefore you cannot believe. "How can ye believe," said
Christ, "that have honor one of another?" Proud self creates unbelief. Submit, O
man. Yield to your God, and then shall you sweetly believe in your Saviour. May the Holy
Ghost now work secretly but effectually with you, and bring you at this very moment to
believe in the Lord Jesus! Amen.
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WE MUST BE BORN AGAIN." This word of
our Lord Jesus has appeared to flame in the way of many, like the drawn sword of the
cherub at the gate of Paradise. They have despaired, because this change is beyond their
utmost effort. The new birth is from above, and therefore it is not in the creature's
power. Now, it is far from my mind to deny, or ever to conceal, a truth in order to create
a false comfort. I freely admit that the new birth is supernatural, and that it cannot be
wrought by the sinner's own self. It would be a poor help to my reader if I were wicked
enough to try to cheer him by persuading him to reject or forget what is unquestionably
true.
But is it not remarkable that the very
chapter in which our Lord makes this sweeping declaration also contains the most explicit
statement as to salvation by faith? Read the third chapter of John's Gospel and do not
dwell alone upon its earlier sentences. It is true that the third verse says:
Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.
But, then, the fourteenth and fifteenth
verses speak:
And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up: that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life.
The eighteenth verse repeats the same
doctrine in the broadest terms:
He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.
It is clear to every reader that these
two statements must agree, since they came from the same lips, and are recorded on the
same inspired page. Why should we make a difficulty where there can be none? If one
statement assures us of the necessity to salvation of a something, which only God can
give, and if another assures us that the Lord will save us upon our believing in Jesus,
then we may safely conclude that the Lord will give to those who believe all that is
declared to be necessary to salvation. The Lord does, in fact, produce the new birth in
all who believe in Jesus; and their believing is the surest evidence that they are born
again.
We trust in Jesus for what we cannot do
ourselves: if it were in our own power, what need of looking to Him? It is ours to
believe, it is the Lord's to create us anew. He will not believe for us, neither are we to
do regenerating work for Him. It is enough for us to obey the gracious command; it is for
the Lord to work the new birth in us. He who could go so far as to die on the cross for
us, can and will give us all things that are needful for our eternal safety.
"But a saving change of heart is the
work of the Holy Spirit. " This also is most true, and let it be far from us to
question it, or to forget it. But the work of the Holy Spirit is secret and mysterious,
and it can only be perceived by its results. There are mysteries about our natural birth
into which it would be an unhallowed curiosity to pry: still more is this the case with
the sacred operations of the Spirit of God. "The wind bloweth where it listeth, and
thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, or whither it goeth;
so is every one that is born of the Spirit." This much, however, we do knowthe
mysterious work of the Holy Spirit cannot be a reason for refusing to believe in Jesus to
whom that same Spirit beareth witness.
If a man were bidden to sow a field, he
could not excuse his neglect by saying that it would be useless to sow unless God caused
the seed to grow. He would not be justified in neglecting tillage because the secret
energy of God alone can create a harvest. No one is hindered in the ordinary pursuits of
life by the fact that unless the Lord build the house they labor in vain that build it. It
is certain that no man who believes in Jesus will ever find that the Holy Spirit refuses
to work in him: in fact, his believing is the proof that the Spirit is already at work in
his heart.
God works in providence, but men do not
therefore sit still. They could not move without the divine power giving them life and
strength, and yet they proceed upon their way without question; the power being bestowed
from day to day by Him in whose hand their breath is, and whose are all their ways. So is
it in grace. We repent and believe, though we could do neither if the Lord did not enable
us. We forsake sin and trust in Jesus, and then we perceive that the Lord has wrought in
us to will and to do of His own good pleasure. It is idle to pretend that there is any
real difficulty in the matter.
Some truths which it is hard to explain in
words are simple enough in actual experience. There is no discrepancy between the truth
that the sinner believes, and that his faith is wrought in him by the Holy Spirit. Only
folly can lead men to puzzle themselves about plain matters while their souls are in
danger. No man would refuse to enter a lifeboat because he did not know the specific
gravity of bodies; neither would a starving man decline to eat till he understood the
whole process of mutrition. If you, my reader, will not believe till you can understand
all mysteries, you will never be saved at all; and if you allow self-invented difficulties
to keep you from accepting pardon through your Lord and Saviour, you will perish in a
condemnation which will be richly deserved. Do not commit spiritual suicide through a
passion for discussing metaphysical subtleties.
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CONTINUALLY have I spoken to the reader
concerning Christ crucified, who is the great hope of the guilty; but it is our wisdom to
remember that our Lord has risen from the dead and lives eternally.
You are not asked to trust in a dead Jesus,
but in One who, though He died for our sins, has risen again for our justification. You
may go to Jesus at once as to a living and present friend. He is not a mere memory, but a
continually existent Person who will hear your prayers and answer them. He lives on
purpose to carry on the work for which He once laid down His life. He is interceding for
sinners at the right hand of the Father, and for this reason He is able to save them to
the uttermost who come unto God by Him. Come and try this living Saviour, if you have
never done so before.
This living Jesus is also raised to an
eminence of glory and power. He does not now sorrow as "a humble man before his
foes," nor labor as "the carpenter's son"; but He is exalted far above
principalities and power and every name that is named. The Father has given Him all power
in Heaven and in earth, and he exercises this high endowment in carrying out His work of
grace. Hear what Peter and the other apostles testified concerni ng Him before the high
priest and the council:
The God of our fathers raised up Jesus, whom ye slew and hanged on a tree. Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour, for to give repentance to Israel, and forgiveness of sins (Acts 5:30, 31).
The glory which surrounds the ascended Lord
should breathe hope into every believer's breast. Jesus is no mean personHe is
"a Saviour and a great one." He is the crowned and enthroned Redeemer of men.
The sovereign prerogative of life and death is vested in Him; the Father has put all men
under the mediatorial government of the Son, so that He can quicken whom He will. He
openeth, and no man shutteth. At His word the soul which is bound by the cords of sin and
condemnation can be unloosed in a moment. He stretches out the silver scepter, and
whosoever touches it lives.
It is well for us that as sin lives, and the
flesh lives, and the devil lives, so Jesus lives; and it is also well that whatever might
these may have to ruin us, Jesus has still greater power to save us.
All His exaltation and ability are on our
account. "He is exalted to be," and exalted "to give." He is exalted
to be a Prince and a Saviour, that He may give all that is needed to accomplish the
salvation of all who come under His rule. Jesus has nothing which He will not use for a
sinner's salvation, and He is nothing which He will not display in the aboundings of His
grace. He links His princedom with His Saviour-ship, as if He would not have the one
without the other; and He sets forth His exaltation as designed to bring blessings to men,
as if this were the flower and crown of His glory. Could anything be more calculated to
raise the hopes of seeking sinners who are looking Christward?
Jesus endured great humiliation, and
therefore there was room for Him to be exalted. By that humiliation He accomplished and
endured all the Father's will, and therefore He was rewarded by being raised to glory. He
uses that exaltation on behalf of His people. Let my reader raise his eyes to these hills
of glory, whence his help must come. Let him contemplate the high glories of the Prince
and Saviour. Is it not most hopeful for men that a Man is now on the throne of the
universe? Is it not glorious that the Lord of all is the Saviour of sinners? We have a
Friend at court; yea, a Friend on the throne. He will use all His influence for those who
entrust their affairs in His hands. Well does one of our poets sing:
He ever lives to intercede
Before His Father's face;
Give Him, my soul, Thy cause to plead,
No doubt the Father's grace.
Come, friend, and commit your cause and
your case to those once pierced hands, which are now glorified with the signet rings of
royal power and honor. No suit ever failed which was left with this great Advocate.
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T IS CLEAR from the text which we have
lately quoted that repentance is bound up with the forgiveness of sins. In Acts 5:31 we
read that Jesus is "exalted to give repentance and forgiveness of sins."
These two blessings come from that sacred hand which once was nailed to the tree, but is
now raised to glory. Repentance and forgiveness are riveted together by the eternal
purpose of God. What God hath joined together let no man put asunder.
Repentance must go with remission, and you
will see that it is so if you think a little upon the matter. It cannot be that pardon
of sin should be given to an impenitent sinner; this were to confirm him in his evil
ways, and to teach him to think little of evil. If the Lord were to say, "You love
sin, and live in it, and you are going on from bad to worse, but, all the same, I forgive
you," this were to proclaim a horrible license for iniquity. The foundations of
social order would be removed, and moral anarchy would follow. I cannot tell what
innumerable mischiefs would certainly occur if you could divide repentance and
forgiveness, and pass by the sin while the sinner remained as fond of it as ever. In the
very nature of things, if we believe in the holiness of God, it must be so, that if
we continue in our sin, and will not repent of it, we cannot be forgiven, but must reap
the consequence of our obstinacy. According to the infinite goodness of God, we are
promised that if we will forsake our sins, confessing them, and will, by faith, accept the
grace which is provided in Christ Jesus, God is faithful and just to forgive us our sins,
and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. But, so long as God lives, there can be no
promise of mercy to those who continue in their evil ways, and refuse to acknowledge their
wrongdoing. Surely no rebel can expect the King to pardon his treason while he remains in
open revolt. No one can be so foolish as to imagine that the Judge of all the earth will
put away our sins if we refuse to put them away ourselves.
Moreover, it must be so for the
completeness of divine mercy. That mercy which could forgive the sin and yet let the
sinner live in it would be scant and superficial mercy. It would be unequal and deformed
mercy, lame upon one of its feet, and withered as to one of its hands. Which, think you,
is the greater privilege, cleansing from the guilt of sin, or deliverance from the power
of sin? I will not attempt to weigh in the scales two mercies so surpassing. Neither of
them could have come to us apart from the precious blood of Jesus. But it seems to me that
to be delivered from the dominion of sin, to be made holy, to be made like to God, must be
reckoned the greater of the two, if a comparison has to be drawn. To be forgiven is an
immeasurable favor. We make this one of the first notes of our psalm of praise: "Who
forgiveth all thine iniquities." But if we could be forgiven, and then could be
permitted to love sin, to riot in iniquity, and to wallow in lust, what would be the use
of such a forgiveness? Might it not turn out to be a poisoned sweet, which would most
effectually destroy us? To be washed, and yet to lie in the mire; to be pronounced clean,
and yet to have the leprosy white on one's brow, would be the veriest mockery of mercy.
What is it to bring the man out of his sepulcher if you leave him dead? Why lead him into
the light if he is still blind? We thank God, that He who forgives our iniquities also
heals our diseases. He who washes us from the stains of the past also uplifts us from the
foul ways of the present, and keeps us from failing in the future. We must joyfully accept
both repentance and remission; they cannot be separated. The covenant heritage is one and
indivisible, and must not be parceled out. To divide the work of grace would be to cut the
living child in halves, and those who would permit this have no interest in it.
I will ask you who are seeking the Lord,
whether you would be satisfied with one of these mercies alone? Would it content you, my
reader, if God would forgive you your sin and then allow you to be as worldly and wicked
as before? Oh, no! The quickened spirit is more afraid of sin itself than of the penal
results of it. The cry of your heart is not, "Who shall deliver me from
punishment?" but, "O wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me from the body
of this death? Who shall enable me to live above temptation, and to become holy, even as
God is holy?" Since the unity of repentance with remission agrees with gracious
desire, and since it is necessary for the completeness of salvation, and for holiness'
sake, rest you sure that it abides.
Repentance and forgiveness are joined
together in the experience of all believers. There never was a person yet who did
unfeignedly repent of sin with believing repentance who was not forgiven; and on the other
hand, there never was a person forgiven who had not repented of his sin. I do not hesitate
to say that beneath the copes of Heaven there never was, there is not, and there never
will be, any case of sin being washed away, unless at the same time the heart was led to
repentance and faith in Christ. Hatred of sin and a sense of pardon come together into the
soul, and abide together while we live.
These two things act and react upon each
other: the man who is forgiven, therefore repents; and the man who repents is also
most assuredly forgiven. Remember first, that forgiveness leads to repentance. As we sing
in Hart's words:
Law and terrors do but harden,
All the while they work alone;
But a sense of blood-bought pardon
Soon dissolves a heart of stone.
When we are sure that we are forgiven,
then we abhor iniquity; and I suppose that when faith grows into full assurance, so that
we are certain beyond a doubt that the blood of Jesus has washed us whiter than snow, it
is then that repentance reaches to its greatest height. Repentance grows as faith grows.
Do not make any mistake about it; repentance is not a thing of days and weeks, a temporary
penance to be over as fast as possible! No; it is the grace of a lifetime, like faith
itself. God's little children repent, and so do the young men and the fathers. Repentance
is the inseparable companion of faith. All the while that we walk by faith and not by
sight, the tear of repentance glitters in the eye of faith. That is not true repentance
which d oes not come of faith in Jesus, and that is not true faith in Jesus which is not
tinctured with repentance. Faith and repentance, like Siamese twins, are vitally joined
together. In proportion as we believe in the forgiving love of Christ, in that proportion
we repent; and in proportion as we repent of sin and hate evil, we rejoice in the fullness
of the absolution which Jesus is exalted to bestow. You will never value pardon unless you
feel repentance ; and you will never taste the deepest draught of repentance until you
know that you are pardoned. It may seem a strange thing, but so it isthe bitterness
of repentance and the sweetness of pardon blend in the flavor of every gracious life, and
make up an incomparable happiness.
These two covenant gifts are the mutual
assurance of each other. If I know that I repent, I know that I am forgiven. How am I to
know that I am forgiven except I know also that I am turned from my former sinful course?
To be a believer is to be a penitent. Faith and repentance are but two spokes in the same
wheel, two handles of the same plough. Repentance has been well described as a heart
broken for sin, and from sin; and it may equally well be spoken of as
turning and returning. It is a change of mind of the most thorough and radical sort, and
it is attended with sorrow for the past, and a resolve of amendment in the future.
Repentance is to leave
The sins we loved before;
And show that we in earnest grieve,
By doing so no more.
Now, when that is the case, we may be certain that we are forgiven; for the Lord never
made a heart to be broken for sin and broken from sin, without pardoning it. If, on the
other hand, we are enjoying pardon, through the blood of Jesus, and are justified by
faith, and have peace with God, through Jesus Christ our Lord, we know that our repentance
and faith are of the right sort.
Do not regard your repentance as the cause
of your remission, but as the companion of it. Do not expect to be able to repent until
you see the grace of our Lord Jesus, and His readiness to blot out your sin. Keep these
blessed things in their places, and view them in their relation to each other. They are
the Jachin and Boaz of a saving experience; I mean that they are comparable to Solomon's
two great pillars which stood in the forefront of the house of the Lord, and formed a
majestic entrance to the holy place. No man comes to God aright except he passes between
the pillars of repentance and remission. Upon your heart the rainbow of covenant grace has
been displayed in all its beauty when the tear-drops of repentance have been shone upon by
the light of full forgiveness. Repentance of sin and faith in divine pardon are the warp
and woof of the fabric of real conversion. By these tokens shall you know an Israelite
indeed.
To come back to the Scripture upon which we
are meditating: both forgiveness and repentance flow from the same source, and are given
by the same Saviour. The Lord Jesus in His glory bestows both upon the same persons. You
are neither to find the remission nor the repentance elsewhere. Jesus has both ready, and
He is prepared to bestow them now, and to bestow them most freely on all who will accept
them at His hands. Let it never be forgotten that Jesus gives all that is needful for our
salvation. It is highly important that all seekers after mercy should remember this. Faith
is as much the gift of God as is the Saviour upon whom that faith relies. Repentance of
sin is as truly the work of grace as the making of an atonement by which sin is blotted
out. Salvation, from first to last, is of grace alone. You will not misunderstand me. It
is not the Holy Spirit who repents. He has never done anything for which He should repent.
If He could repent, it would not meet the case; we must ourselves repent of our own sin,
or we are not saved from its power. It is not the Lord Jesus Christ who repents. What
should He repent of? We ourselves repent with the full consent of every faculty of our
mind. The will, the affections, the emotions, all work together most heartily in the
blessed act of repentance for sin; and yet at the back of all that is our personal act,
there is a secret holy influence which melts the heart, gives contrition, and produces a
complete change. The Spirit of God enlightens us to see what sin is, and thus makes it
loathsome in our eyes. The Spirit of God also turns us toward holiness, makes us heartily
to appreciate, love, and desire it, and thus gives us the impetus by which we are led
onward from stage to stage of sanctification. The Spirit of God works in us to will and to
do according to God's good pleasure. To that good Spirit let us submit ourselves at once,
that He may lead us to Jesus, who will freely give us the double benediction of repentance
and remission, according to the riches of His grace.
"By grace are ye saved."
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O RETURN to the grand text: "Him
hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour, for to give repentance
to Israel, and forgiveness of sins." Our Lord Jesus Christ has gone up that grace
may come down. His glory is employed to give greater currency to His grace. The Lord has
not taken a step upward except with the design of bearing believing sinners upward with
Him. He is exalted to give repentance; and this we shall see if we remember a few great
truths.
The work which our Lord Jesus has done
has made repentance possible, available, and acceptable. The law makes no mention of
repentance, but says plainly, "The soul that sinneth, it shall die." If the Lord
Jesus had not died and risen again and gone unto the Father, what would your repenting or
mine be worth? We might feel remorse with its horrors, but never repentance with its
hopes. Repentance, as a natural feeling, is a common duty deserving no great praise:
indeed, it is so generally mingled with a selfish fear of punishment, that the kindliest
estimate makes but little of it. Had not Jesus interposed and wrought out a wealth of
merit, our tears of repentance would have been so much water spilled upon the ground.
Jesus is exalted on high, that through the virtue of His intercession repentance may have
a place before God. In this respect He gives us repentance, because He puts repentance
into a position of acceptance, which otherwise it could never have occupied.
When Jesus was exalted on high, the
Spirit of God was poured out to work in us all needful graces. The Holy Ghost creates
repentance in us by supernaturally renewing our nature, and taking away the heart of stone
out of our flesh. Oh, sit not down straining those eyes of yours to fetch out impossible
tears! Repentance comes not from unwilling nature, but from free and sovereign grace. Get
not to your chamber to smite your breast in order to fetch from a heart of stone feelings
which are not there. But go to Calvary and see how Jesus died. Look upward to the hills
whence comes your help. The Holy Ghost has come on purpose that He may overshadow men's
spirits and breed repentance within them, even as once He brooded over chaos and brought
forth order. Breathe your prayer to Him, "Blessed Spirit, dwell with me. Make me
tender and lowly of heart, that I may hate sin and unfeignedly repent of it." He will
hear your cry and answer you.
Remember, too, that when our Lord
Jesus was exalted, He not only gave us repentance by sending forth the Holy Spirit, but by
consecrating all the works of nature and of providence to the great ends of our salvation,
so that any one of them may call us to repentance, whether it crow like Peter's cock, or
shake the prison like the jailer's earthquake. From the right hand of God our Lord Jesus
rules all things here below, and makes them work together for the salvation of His
redeemed. He uses both bitters and sweets, trials and joys, that He may produce in sinners
a better mind toward their God. Be thankful for the providence which has made you poor, or
sick, or sad ; for by all this Jesus works the life of your spirit and turns you to
Himself. The Lord's mercy often rides to the door of our hearts on the black horse of
affliction. Jesus uses the whole range of our experience to wean us from earth and woo us
to Heaven. Christ is exalted to the throne of Heaven and earth in order that, by all the
processes of His providence, He may subdue hard hearts unto the gracious softening of
repentance.
Besides, He is at work at this
hour by all His whispers in the conscience, by His inspired Book, by those of us who speak
out of that Book, and by praying friends and earnest hearts. He can send a word to you
which shall strike your rocky heart as with the rod of Moses, and cause streams of
repentance to flow forth. He can bring to your mind some heart-breaking text out of Holy
Scripture which shall conquer you right speedily. He can mysteriously soften you, and
cause a holy frame of mind to steal over you when you least look for it. Be sure of this,
that He who is gone into His glory, raised into all the splendor and majesty of God, has
abundant ways of working repentance in those to whom He grants forgiveness. He is even
now waiting to give repentance to you. Ask Him for it at once.
Observe with much comfort that
the Lord Jesus Christ gives this repentance to the most unlikely people in the world.
He is exalted to give repentance to Israel. To Israel! In the days when the
apostles thus spoke, Israel was the nation which had most grossly sinned against light and
love, by daring to say, "His blood be on us and on our children." Yet Jesus is
exalted to give them repentance! What a marvel of grace! If you have been brought
up in the brightest of Christian light, and yet have rejected it, there is still hope. If
you have sinned against conscience, and against the Holy Spirit, and against the love of
Jesus, there is yet space for repentance. Though you may be as hard as unbelieving Israel
of old, softening may yet come to you, since Jesus is exalted, and clothed with boundless
power. For those who went the furthest in iniquity, and sinned with special aggravation,
the Lord Jesus is exalted to give to them repentance and forgiveness of sins. Happy am I
to have so full a gospel to proclaim! Happy are you to be allowed to read it!
The hearts of the children of
Israel had grown hard as an adamant stone. Luther used to think it impossible to convert a
Jew. We are far from agreeing with him, and yet we must admit that the seed of Israel have
been exceedingly obstinate in their rejection of the Saviour during these many centuries.
Truly did the Lord say, "Israel would none of me." "He came to his own and
his own received him not." Yet on behalf of Israel our Lord Jesus is exalted for the
giving of repentance and remission. Probably my reader is a Gentile; but yet he may have a
very stubborn heart, which has stood out against the Lord Jesus for many years; and yet in
him our Lord can work repentance. It may be that you will yet feel compelled to write as
William Hone did when he yielded to divine love. He was the author of those most
entertaining volumes called the " Everyday Book," but he was once a
stout-hearted infidel. When subdued by sovereign grace, he wrote:
The proudest heart that ever beat
Hath been subdued in me;
The wildest will that ever rose
To scorn Thy cause and aid Thy foes
Is quell'd my Lord, by Thee.
Thy will, and not my will be done,
My heart be ever Thine;
Confessing Thee the mighty Word,
My Saviour Christ, my God, my Lord,
Thy cross shall be my sign.
The Lord can give repentance to the most
unlikely, turning lions into lambs, and ravens into doves. Let us look to Him that this
great change may be wrought in us. Assuredly the contemplation of the death of Christ is
one of the surest and speediest methods of gaining repentance. Do not sit down and try to
pump up repentance from the dry well of corrupt nature. It is contrary to the laws of mind
to suppose that you can force your soul into that gracious state. Take your heart in
prayer to Him who understands it, and say, "Lord, cleanse it. Lord, renew it. Lord,
work repentance in it." The more you try to produce penitent emotions in yourself,
the more you will be disappointed; but if you believingly think of Jesus dying for you,
repentance will burst forth. Meditate on the Lord's shedding His heart's blood out of love
to you. Set before your mind's eye the agony and bloody sweat, the cross and passion; and,
as you do this, He who was the bearer of all this grief will look at you, and with that
look He will do for you what He did for Peter, so that you also will go out and weep
bitterly. He who died for you can, by His gracious Spirit, make you die to sin; and He who
has gone into glory on your behalf can draw your soul after Him, away from evil, and
toward holiness.
I shall be content if I leave
this one thought with you; look not beneath the ice to find fire, neither hope in your own
natural heart to find repentance. Look to the Living One for life. Look to Jesus for all
you need between Hell Gate and Heaven Gate. Never seek elsewhere for any part of that
which Jesus loves to bestow; but remember,
Christ is all.
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DARK FEAR haunts the minds of
many who are coming to Christ; they are afraid that they shall not persevere to the end.
I have heard the seeker say: "If I were to cast my soul upon Jesus, yet peradventure
I should after all draw back into perdition. I have had good feelings before now, and they
have died away. My goodness has been as the morning cloud, and as the early dew. It has
come on a sudden, lasted for a season, promised much, and then vanished away."
I believe that this fear is often
the father of the fact; and that some who have been afraid to trust Christ for all time,
and for all eternity, have failed because they had a temporary faith, which never went far
enough to save them. They set out trusting to Jesus in a measure, but looking to
themselves for continuance and perseverance in the heavenward way; and so they set out
faultily, and, as a natural consequence, turned back before long. If we trust to ourselves
for our holding on we shall not hold on. Even though we rest in Jesus for a part of
our salvation, we shall fail if we trust to self for anything. No chain is stronger than
its weakest link : if Jesus be our hope for everything, except one thing, we shall utterly
fail, because in that one point we shall come to nought. I have no doubt whatever that a
mistake about the perseverance of the saints has prevented the perseverance of many who
did run well. What did hinder them that they should not continue to run? They trusted to
themselves for that running, and so they stopped short. Beware of mixing even a little of
self with the mortar with which you build, or you will make it untempered mortar, and the
stones will not hold together. If you look to Christ for your beginnings, beware of
looking to yourself for your endings. He is Alpha. See to it that you make Him Omega also.
If you begin in the Spirit you must not hope to be made perfect by the flesh. Begin as you
mean to go on, and go on as you began, and let the Lord be all in all to you. Oh, that
God, the Holy Spirit, may give us a very clear idea of where the strength must come from
by which we shall be preserved until the day of our Lord's appearing!
Here is what Paul once said upon this subject when he was writing to the
Corinthians:
Our Lord Jesus Christ, who shall also confirm you unto the end, that ye may be blameless in the day of our Lord Jesus Christ. God is faithful, by whom ye were called unto the fellowship of his Son Jesus Christ our Lord (1 Cor. 1:8, 9).
This language silently admits a great need,
by telling us how it is provided for. Wherever the Lord makes a provision, we are quite
sure that there was a need for it, since no superfluities encumber the covenant of grace.
Golden shields hung in Solomon's courts which were never used, but there are none such in
the armory of God. What God has provided we shall surely need. Between this hour and the
consummation of all things every promise of God and every provision of the covenant of
grace will be brought into requisition. The urgent need of the believing soul is
confirmation, continuance, final perseverance, preservation to the end. This is the
great necessity of the most advanced believers, for Paul was writing to saints at
Corinth, who were men of a high order, of whom he could say, "I thank my God always
on your behalf, for the grace of God which is given you by Jesus Christ." Such men
are the very persons who most assuredly feel that they have daily need of new grace if
they are to hold on, and hold out, and come off conquerors at the last. If you were not
saints you would have no grace, and you would feel no need of more grace; but because you
are men of God, therefore you feel the daily demands of the spiritual life. The marble
statue requires no food; but the living man hungers and thirsts, and he rejoices that his
bread and his water are made sure to him, for else he would certainly faint by the way.
The believer's personal wants make it inevitable that he should daily draw from the great
source of all supplies; for what could he do if he could not resort to his God?
This is true of the most
gifted of the saintsof those men at Corinth who were enriched with all utterance
and with all knowledge. They needed to be confirmed to the end, or else their gifts and
attainments would prove their ruin. If we had the tongues of men and of angels, if we did
not receive fresh grace, where should we be? If we had all experience till we were fathers
in the churchif we had been taught of God so as to understand all mysteriesyet
we could not live a single day without the divine life flowing into us from our Covenant
Head. How could we hope to hold on for a single hour, to say nothing of a lifetime, unless
the Lord should hold us on ? He who began the good work in us must perform it unto the day
of Christ, or it will prove a painful failure.
This great necessity arises
very much from our own selves. In some there is a painful fear that they shall not
persevere in grace because they know their own fickleness. Certain persons are
constitutionally unstable. Some men are by nature conservative, not to say obstinate; but
others are as naturally variable and volatile. Like butterflies they flit from flower to
flower, till they visit all the beauties of the garden, and settle upon none of them. They
are never long enough in one place to do any good; not even in their business nor in their
intellectual pursuits. Such persons may well be afraid that ten, twenty, thirty, forty,
perhaps fifty years of continuous religious watchfulness will be a great deal too much for
them. We see men joining first one church and then another, till they box the compass.
They are everything by turns and nothing long. Such have double need to pray that they may
be divinely confirmed, and may be made not only steadfast but unmoveable, or otherwise
they will not be found "always abounding in the work of the Lord."
All of us, even if we have no
constitutional temptation to fickleness, must feel our own weakness if we are really
quickened of God. Dear reader, do you not find enough in any one single day to make you
stumble? You that desire to walk in perfect holiness, as I trust you do; you that have set
before you a high standard of what a Christian should bedo you not find that before
the breakfast things are cleared away from the table, you have displayed enough folly to
make you ashamed of yourselves? If we were to shut ourselves up in the lone cell of a
hermit, temptation would follow us; for as long as we cannot escape from ourselves we
cannot escape from incitements to sin. There is that within our hearts which should make
us watchful and humble before God. If he does not confirm us, we are so weak that we shall
stumble and fall; not overturned by an enemy, but by our own carelessness. Lord, be thou
our strength. We are weakness itself.
Besides that, there is the weariness
which comes of a long life. When we begin our Christian profession we mount up with
wings as eagles, further on we run without weariness; but in our best and truest days we
walk without fainting. Our pace seems slower, but it is more serviceable and better
sustained. I pray God that the energy of our youth may continue with us so far as it is
the energy of the Spirit and not the mere fermentation of proud flesh. He that has long
been on the road to Heaven finds that there was good reason why it was promised that his
shoes should be iron and brass, for the road is rough. He has discovered that there are
Hills of Difficulty and Valleys of Humiliation; that there is a Vale of Deathshade, and,
worse still, a Vanity Fairand all these are to be traversed. If there be Delectable
Mountains (and, thank God, there are,) there are also Castles of Despair, the inside of
which pilgrims have too often seen. Considering all things, those who hold out to the end
in the way of holiness will be " men wondered at."
"O world of wonders, I can
say no less." The days of a Christian's life are like so many Koh-i-noors of mercy
threaded upon the golden string of divine faithfulness. In Heaven we shall tell to angels,
and principalities, and powers, the unsearchable riches of Christ which were spent upon
us, and enjoyed by us while we were here below. We have been kept alive on the brink of
death. Our spiritual life has been a flame burning on in the midst of the sea, a stone
that has remained suspended in the air. It will amaze the universe to see us enter the
pearly gate, blameless in the day of our Lord Jesus Christ. We ought to be full of
grateful wonder if kept for an hour; and I trust we are.
If this were all, there would be
enough cause for anxiety; but there is far more. We have to think of what a place we
live in. The world is a howling wilderness to many of God's people. Some of us are
greatly indulged in the providence of God, but others have a stern fight of it. We
begin our day with prayer, and we hear the voice of holy song full often in our houses;
but many good people have scarcely risen from their knees in the morning before they are
saluted with blasphemy. They go out to work, and all day long they are vexed with filthy
conversation like righteous Lot in Sodom. Can you even walk the open streets without your
ears being afflicted with foul language? The world is no friend to grace. The best we can
do with this world is to get through it as quickly as we can, for we dwell in an enemy's
country. A robber lurks in every bush. Everywhere we need to travel with a "drawn
sword" in our hand, or at least with that weapon which is called all-prayer
ever at our side; for we have to contend for every inch of our way. Make no mistake about
this, or you will be rudely shaken out of your fond delusion. O God, help us, and confirm
us to the end, or where shall we be?
True religion is supernatural at
its beginning, supernatural in its continuance, and supernatural in its close. It is the
work of God from first to last. There is great need that the hand of the Lord should be
stretched out still: that need my reader is feeling now, and I am glad that he should feel
it; for now he will look for his own preservation to the Lord who alone is able to keep us
from failing, and glorify us with His Son.
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WANT YOU TO NOTICE the
security which Paul confidently expected for all the saints. He says"Who
shall confirm you unto the end, that ye may be blameless in the day of our Lord Jesus
Christ." This is the kind of confirmation which is above all things to be
desired. You see it supposes that the persons are right, and it proposes to confirm them
in the right. It would be an awful thing to confirm a man in ways of sin and error. Think
of a confirmed drunkard, or a confirmed thief, or a confirmed liar. It would be a
deplorable thing for a man to be confirmed in unbelief and ungodliness. Divine
confirmation can only be enjoyed by those to whom the grace of God has been already
manifested. It is the work of the Holy Ghost. He who gives faith strengthens and
establishes it: He who kindles love in us preserves it and increases its flame. What He
makes us to know by His first teaching, the good Spirit causes us to know with greater
clearness and certainty by still further instruction. Holy acts are confirmed till they
become habits, and holy feelings are confirmed till they become abiding conditions.
Experience and practice confirm our beliefs and our resolutions. Both our joys and our
sorrows, our successes and our failures, are sanctified to the selfsame end: even as the
tree is helped to root itself both by the soft showers and the rough winds. The mind is
instructed, and in its growing knowledge it gathers reasons for persevering in the good
way: the heart is comforted, and so it is made to cling more closely to the consoling
truth. The grip grows tighter, and the tread grows firmer, and the man himself becomes
more solid and substantial.
This is not a merely natural
growth, but is as distinct a work of the Spirit as conversion. The Lord will surely
give it to those who are relying upon Him for eternal life. By His inward working He
will deliver us from b eing "unstable as water," and cause us to be rooted and
grounded. It is a part of the method by which He saves usthis building us up into
Christ Jesus and causing us to abide in Him. Dear reader, you may daily look for this; and
you shall not be disappointed. He whom you trust will make you to be as a tree planted by
the rivers of waters, so preserved that even your leaf shall not wither.
What a strength to a church is a
confirmed Christian! He is a comfort to the sorrowful, and a help to the weak. Would you
not like to be such? Confirmed believers are pillars in the house of our God. These are
not carried away by every wind of doctrine, nor overthrown by sudden temptation. They are
a great stay to others, and act as anchors in the time of church trouble. You who are
beginning the holy life hardly dare to hope that you will become like them. But you need
not fear; the good Lord will work in you as well as in them. One of these days you who are
now a "babe" in Christ shall be a "father" in the church. Hope for
this great thing; but hope for it as a gift of grace, and not as the wages of work, or as
the product of your own energy.
The inspired apostle Paul speaks
of these people as to be confirmed unto the end. He expected the grace of God to
preserve them personally to the end of their lives, or till the Lord Jesus should come.
Indeed, he expected that the whole church of God in every place and in all time would be
kept to the end of the dispensation, till the Lord Jesus as the Bridegroom should come to
celebrate the wedding-feast with his perfected Bride. All who are in Christ will be
confirmed in Him till that illustrious day. Has He not said, "Because I live ye shall
live also"? He also said, "I give unto my sheep eternal life; and they shall
never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand." He that hath begun a
good work in you will confirm it unto the day of Christ. The work of grace in the soul is
not a superficial reformation; the life implanted as the new birth comes of a living and
incorruptible seed, which liveth and abideth for ever; and the promises of God made to
believers are not of a transient character, but involve for their fulfilment the
believer's holding on his way till he comes to endless glory. We are kept by the power of
God, through faith unto salvation. "The righteous shall hold on his way." Not as
the result of our own merit or strength, but as a gift of free and undeserved favor those
who believe are "preserved in Christ Jesus." Of the sheep of His fold Jesus will
lose none; no member of His Body shall die; no gem of His treasure shall be missing in the
day when He makes up His jewels. Dear reader, the salvation which is received by faith is
not a thing of months and years; for our Lord Jesus hath "obtained eternal
salvation for us," and that which is eternal cannot come to an end.
Paul also declares his
expectation that the Corinthian saints would be "Confirmed to the end blameless."
This blamelessness is a precious part of our keeping. To be kept holy is better than
merely to be kept safe. It is a dreadful thing when you see religious people blundering
out of one dishonor into another; they have not believed in the power of our Lord to make
them blameless. The lives of some professing Christians are a series of stumbles; they are
never quite down, and yet they are seldom on their feet. This is not a fit thing for a
believer; he is invited to walk with God, and by faith he can attain to steady
perseverance in holiness; and he ought to do so. The Lord is able, not only to save us
from hell, but to keep us from falling. We need not yield to temptation. Is it not
written, "Sin shall not have dominion over you?" The Lord is able to keep the
feet of His saints; and He will do it if we will trust Him to do so. We need not defile
our garments, we may by His grace keep them unspotted from the world; we are bound to do
this, "for without holiness no man shall see the Lord."
The apostle prophesied for these
believers, that which he would have us seek afterthat we may be preserved, blameless
unto the day of our Lord Jesus Christ." The revised version has "unreproveable,"
instead of "blameless." Possibly a better rendering would be
"unimpeachable." God grant that in that last great day we may stand free from
all charge, that none in the whole universe may dare to challenge our claim to be the
redeemed of the Lord. We have sins and infirmities to mourn over, but these are not the
kind of faults which would prove us to be out of Christ; we shall be clear of hypocrisy,
deceit, hatred, and delight in sin; for these things would be fatal charges. Despite our
failings, the Holy Spirit can work in us a character spotless before men ; so that, like
Daniel, we shall furnish no occasion for accusing tongues, except in the matter of our
religion. Multitudes of godly men and women have exhibited lives so transparent, so
consistent throughout, that none could gainsay them. The Lord will be able to say of many
a believer, as he did of Job, when Satan stood before Him, "Hast thou considered my
servant, a perfect and an upright man, one that feareth God and escheweth evil?" This
is what my reader must look for at the Lord's hands. This is the triumph of the
saintsto continue to follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth, maintaining our
integrity as before the living God. May we never turn aside into crooked ways, and give
cause to the adversary to blaspheme. Of the true believer it is written, "He keepeth
himself, and that wicked one toucheth him not." May it be so written concerning us!
Friend just beginning in the
divine life, the Lord can give you an irreproachable character. Even though in your past
life you may have gone far into sin, the Lord can altogether deliver you from the power of
former habits, and make you an example of virtue. He can not only make you moral, but He
can make you abhor every false way and follow after all that is saintly. Do not doubt it.
The chief of sinners need not be a whit behind the purest of the saints. Believe for this,
and according to your faith shall it be unto you.
Oh, what a joy it will be to be
found blameless in the day of judgment! We sing not amiss, when we join in that charming
hymn:
Bold shall I stand in that great day,
For who aught to my charge shall lay;
While through Thy blood absolved I am,
From sin's tremendous curse and shame?
What bliss it will be to enjoy that
dauntless courage, when heaven and earth shall flee away from the face of the Judge of
all! This bliss shall be the portion of everyone who looks alone to the grace of God in
Christ Jesus, and in that sacred might wages continual war with all sin.
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HE HOPE which filled the heart of Paul
concerning the Corinthian brethren we have already seen to be full of comfort to those who
trembled as to their future. But why was it that he believed that the brethren would be
confirmed unto the end?
I want you to notice that he gives his
reasons. Here they are:
God is faithful, by whom ye were called unto the fellowship of his
Son Jesus Christ (1 Cor. 1:9).
The apostle does not say, "You
are faithful." Alas! the faithfulness of man is a very unreliable affair; it is mere
vanity. He does not say, "You have faithful ministers to lead and guide you, and
therefore I trust you will be safe." Oh, no! if we are kept by men we shall be but
ill kept. He puts it, "God is faithful." If we are found faithful, it will be
because God is faithful. On the faithfulness of our covenant God the whole burden of our
salvation must rest. On this glorious attribute of God the matter hinges. We are variable
as the wind, frail as a spider's web, weak as water. No dependence can be placed upon our
natural qualities, or our spiritual attainments; but God abideth faithful. He is faithful
in His love; He knows no variableness, neither shadow of turning. He is faithful to His
purpose; He doth not begin a work and then leave it undone. He is faithful to His
relationships; as a Father He will not renounce His children, as a friend He will not deny
His people, as a Creator He will not forsake the work of His own hands. He is faithful to
His promises, and will never allow one of them to fail to a single believer. He is
faithful to His covenant, which He has made with us in Christ Jesus, and ratified with the
blood of His sacrifice. He is faithful to His Son, and will not allow His precious blood
to be spilled in vain. He is faithful to His people to whom He has promised eternal life,
and from whom He will not turn away.
This faithfulness of God is the
foundation and cornerstone of our hope of final perseverance. The saints shall persevere
in holiness, because God perseveres in grace. He perseveres to bless, and therefore
believers persevere in being blessed. He continues to keep His people, and therefore they
continue to keep His commandments. This is good solid ground to rest upon, and it is
delightfully consistent with the title of this little book, "all of grace." Thus
it is free favor and infinite mercy which ring in the dawn of salvation, and the same
sweet bells sound melodiously through the whole day of grace.
You see that the only reasons
for hoping that we shall be confirmed to the end, and be found blameless at the last, are
found in our God; but in Him these reasons are exceedingly abundant.
They lie first, in what God
has done. He has gone so far in blessing us that it is not possible for Him to run
back. Paul reminds us that He has "called us into the fellowship of his Son Jesus
Christ." Has he called us? Then the call cannot be reversed; for, "the gifts and
calling of God are without repentance." From the effectual call of His grace the Lord
never turns. "Whom he called them he also justified, and whom he justified them he
also glorified:" this is the invariable rule of the divine procedure. There is a
common call, of which it is said, " Many are called, but few are chosen," but
this of which we are now thinking is another kind of call, which betokens special love,
and necessitates the possession of that to which we are called. In such a case it is with
the called one even as with Abraham's seed, of whom the Lord said, "I have called
thee from the ends of the earth, and said unto thee, Thou art my servant; I have chosen
thee, and not cast thee away."
In what the Lord has done, we see
strong reasons for our preservation and future glory, because the Lord has called us into
the fellowship of His Son Jesus Christ. It means into partnership with Jesus Christ,
and I would have you carefully consider what this means. If you are indeed called by
divine grace, you have come into fellowship with the Lord Jesus Christ, so as to be
joint-owner with Him in all things. Henceforth you are one with Him in the sight of the
Most High. The Lord Jesus bare your sins in His own body on the tree, being made a curse
for you; and at the same time He has become your righteousness, so that you are justified
in Him. You are Christ's and Christ is yours. As Adam stood for his descendants, so does
Jesus stand for all who are in Him. As husband and wife are one, so is Jesus one with all
those who are united to Him by faith; one by a conjugal union which can never be broken.
More than this, believers are members of the Body of Christ, and so are one with Him by a
loving, living, lasting union. God has called us into this union, this fellowship, this
partnership, and by this very fact He has given us the token and pledge of our being
confirmed to the end. If we were considered apart from Christ we should be poor perishable
units, soon dissolved and borne away to destruction; but as one with Jesus we are made
partakers of His nature, and are endowed with His immortal life. Our destiny is linked
with that of our Lord, and until He can be destroyed it is not possible that we
should perish.
Dwell much upon this partnership
with the Son of God, unto which you have been called: for all your hope lies there. You
can never be poor while Jesus is rich, since you are in one firm with Him. Want can never
assail you, since you are joint-proprietor with Him who is Possessor of Heaven and earth.
You can never fail; for though one of the partners in the firm is as poor as a church
mouse, and in himself an utter bankrupt, who could not pay even a small amount of his
heavy debts, yet the other partner is inconceivably, inexhaustibly rich. In such
partnership you are raised above the depression of the times, the changes of the future,
and the shock of the end of all things. The Lord has called you into the fellowship of His
Son Jesus Christ, and by that act and deed He has put you into the place of infallible
safeguard.
If you are indeed a believer you
are one with Jesus, and therefore you are secure. Do you not see that it must be so? You
must be confirmed to the end until the day of His appearing, if you have indeed been made
one with Jesus by the irrevocable act of God. Christ and the believing sinner are in the
same boat: unless Jesus sinks, the believer will never drown. Jesus has taken His redeemed
into such connection with himself, that He must first be smitten, overcome, and
dishonored, ere the least of His purchased ones can be injured. His name is at the head of
the firm, and until it can be dishonored we are secure against all dread of failure.
So, then, with the utmost confidence let us
go forward into the unknown future, linked eternally with Jesus. If the men of the world
should cry, "Who is this that cometh up from the wilderness, leaning upon her
Beloved?" we will joyfully confess that we do lean on Jesus, and that we mean to lean
on Him more and more. Our faithful God is an everflowing well of delight, and our
fellowship with the Son of God is a full river of joy. Knowing these glorious things we
cannot be discouraged: nay, rather we cry with the apostle, "Who shall separate us
from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord?"
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IF MY READER has not followed me step by
step as he has read my pages, I am truly sorry. Book-reading is of small value unless the
truths which pass before the mind are grasped, appropriated, and carried out to their
practical issues. It is as if one saw plenty of food in a shop and yet remained hungry,
for want of personally eating some. It is all in vain, dear reader, that you and I have
met, unless you have actually laid hold upon Christ Jesus, my Lord. On my part there was a
distinct desire to benefit you, and I have done my best to that end. It pains me that I
have not been able to do you good, for I have longed to win that privilege. I was thinking
of you when I wrote this page, and I laid down my pen and solemnly bowed my knee in prayer
for everyone who should read it. It is my firm conviction that great numbers of readers
will get a blessing, even though you refuse to be of the number. But why should you
refuse? If you do not desire the choice blessing which I would have brought to you, at
least do me the justice to admit that the blame of your final doom will not lie at my
door. When we two meet before the great white throne you will not be able to charge me
with having idly used the attention which you were pleased to give me while you were
reading my little book. God knoweth I wrote each line for your eternal good. I now in
spirit take you by the hand. I give you a firm grip. Do you feel my brotherly grasp? The
tears are in my eyes as I look at you and say, Why will you die? Will you not give
your soul a thought? Will you perish through sheer carelessness? Oh, do not so; but weigh
these solemn matters, and make sure work for eternity! Do not refuse Jesus, His love, His
blood, His salvation. Why should you do so? Can you do it?
I beseech you,
Do not turn away from your Redeemer!
If, on the other hand, my prayers are
heard, and you, my reader, have been led to trust the Lord Jesus and receive from Him
salvation by grace, then keep you ever to this doctrine, and this way of living. Let Jesus
be your all in all, and let free grace be the one line in which you live and move. There
is no life like that of one who lives in the favor of God. To receive all as a free gift
preserves the mind from self-righteous pride, and from self-accusing despair. It makes the
heart grow warm with grateful love, and thus it creates a feeling in the soul which is
infinitely more acceptable to God than anything that can possibly come of slavish fear.
Those who hope to be saved by trying to do their best know nothing of that glowing fervor,
that hallowed warmth, that devout joy in God, which come with salvation freely given
according to the grace of God. The slavish spirit of self-salvation is no match for the
joyous spirit of adoption. There is more real virtue in the least emotion of faith than in
all the tuggings of legal bond-slaves, or all the weary machinery of devotees who would
climb to Heaven by rounds of ceremonies. Faith is spiritual, and God who is a spirit
delights in it for that reason. Years of prayer-saying, and church-going, or chapel-going,
and ceremonies, and performances, may only be an abomination in the sight of Jehovah; but
a glance from the eye of true faith is spiritual and it is therefore dear to Him.
"The Father seeketh such to worship him." Look you first to the inner man, and
to the spiritual, and the rest will then follow in due course.
If you are saved yourself, be
on the watch for the souls of others. Your own heart will not prosper unless it is
filled with intense concern to bless your fellow men. The life of your soul lies in faith;
its health lies in love. He who does not pine to lead others to Jesus has never been under
the spell of love himself. Get to the work of the Lordthe work of love. Begin at
home. Visit next your neighbors. Enlighten the village or the street in which you live.
Scatter the word of the Lord wherever your hand can reach.
Reader, meet me in heaven! Do not go down
to hell. There is no coming back again from that abode of misery. Why do you wish to
enter the way of death when Heaven's gate is open before you? Do not refuse the free
pardon, the full salvation which Jesus grants to all who trust Him. Do not hesitate and
delay. You have had enough of resolving, come to action. Believe in Jesus now, with full
and immediate decision. Take with you words and come unto your Lord this day, even this
day. Remember, O soul, it may be now or never with you. Let it be now; it would be
horrible that it should be never.
Again I charge you, meet me in heaven.
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