The Completeness of the Substitution
Chapter 3
In person
and in work, in life and in death, Christ is the sinner's Substitute. His
vicariousness is co-extensive with the sins and wants of those whom He
represents, and covers all the different periods as well as the varied
circumstances of their lives.
He entered
our world as the Substitute. "There was no room for Him in the inn" (Luke
2:7),-the inn of Bethlehem, the city of David, His own city. "Though rich,
for our sakes He had become poor" (2 Cor 8:9). In poverty and banishment His
life began. He was not to be allowed either to be born or died, save as an
outcast man. "Without the gate" (Heb 13:12) was His position, as He entered
and as He left our earth. Man would not give even a roof to shelter or a
cradle to receive the helpless babe. It was as the Substitute that He was
the outcast from the first moment of His birth. His vicarious life began in
the manger. For what can this poverty mean, this rejection by man, this
outcast condition, but that His sin-bearing had begun?
The name,
too, that met Him as He came into our world intimated the same truth: "Thou
shalt call His name JESUS, for He shall save His people from their sins"
(Matt 1:21). His name proclaimed His mission and His work to be
salvation; "Jehovah the Savior" (Jesus) is that by which the infant is
called. As the Savior, He comes forth from the womb; as the Savior,
He lies in the manger; and if He is the Savior, He is the Substitute. The
name Jesus was not given to Him merely in reference to the cross, but
to His whole life below. Therefore did Mary say, "My soul doth magnify the
Lord, and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Savior (Luke 1:46,47).
Therefore also did the angel say to the shepherds, "Unto you is born this
day, in the city of David, a Savior, which is Christ the Lord" (Luke
2:11).
Scarcely
is He born when His blood is shed. Circumcision deals with Him as one
guilty, and needing the sign of cleansing.(2)
He knew no sin, yet He is circumcised. He was not born in sin, nor shapen in
iniquity, but was "the holy thing" (Luke 1:35); yet He is circumcised as
other children of Abraham, for "He took on Him the seed of Abraham" (Heb
2:16). Why was He circumcised if not as the Substitute? The rite proclaimed
His vicarious birth, as truly as did the cross His vicarious death. "He who
knew no sin was made sin for us, that we might be made the righteousness of
God in Him" (2 Cor 5:21). This was the beginning of that obedience in virtue
of which righteousness comes to us; as it is written, "As by one man's
disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many
be made righteous" (Rom 5:19). For He Himself testified concerning His
baptism, "Thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness" (Matt 3:15); and
what was true of His baptism was no less true of His circumcision. The pain
and the blood and the bruising of His tender body, connected with that
symbol of shame, are inexplicable save on the supposition that even in
infancy He was the vicarious one, not indeed bearing sin in the full sense
and manner in which He bore it on the cross (for without death,
sin-bearing could not have been consummated), but still bearing it in
measure, according to the condition of His years. Even then He was "the Lamb
of God."
His
banishment into Egypt is referred to once and again by the old divines as
part of that life of humiliation by which He was bearing our sins. As the
banished one, He bore our banishment that we might return to God. He passed
through earth as an outcast, because He was standing in the outcast's place;
-"hurried up and down," says an old writer, "and driven out of His own land
as a vagabond" (Flavel). In each part of His sin-bearing life there is
something to meet our case. By the first Adam we were made exiles from God
and paradise; by the last Adam we are brought back from our wanderings,
restored to the divine favor, and replaced in the paradise of God.
His
baptism is the same in import with His circumcision. He needed not the
symbol of death and cleansing; for He was wholly pure, not liable to death
on His own account. Why, then, should this sign of washing the unclean be
applied to Him, if He was not then standing in the room of the unclean? What
had water to do with the spotless One? What had "the figure of the putting
away of the filth of the flesh, and of the answer of a good conscience
toward God" (1 Pet 3:21), to do with Him who had no filth of the flesh to
put away, and on whose conscience not the very shadow of dispeace had ever
rested? But He was the Substitute; and into all the parts and circumstances
of our life He enters, fulfilling all righteousness in the name of those
whom He had come to save. The water was poured upon Him as standing in our
room, and fulfilling our obligations.(3)
In the
Psalms we find Him giving utterance to His feelings while bearing sins that
were not His own, but which were felt by Him as if they were His own. Again
and again He confesses sin.
But what
had the Holy One to do with confession, or with strong crying and tears?
What connection had He with the horrible pit and the miry clay, with the
overwhelming floods and waves, with the deep waters, and the dust and
darkness, and the lowest pit? Why shrank He from the assembly of the wicked
that enclosed Him, from the "bulls that compassed Him, the strong bulls of
Bashan that beset Him round," from the power of the dogs, from the sword,
from the lion's mouth, from the horns of the unicorns? Why, during those
days of His flesh, was He subjected to all this? and why were the powers of
earth and hell let loose against Him? Because He was the Substitute, who had
taken our place and assumed our responsibilities, and undertaken to do
battle with our enemies. In these Psalms we find the seed of the woman at
war with the seed of the serpent, and undergoing the varied anguish of the
bruised heel.
He speaks
not merely of the anguish of the cross when the full flood of wrath
descended on Him, but of His lifetime's daily griefs: "I am afflicted and
ready to die from my youth up: while I suffer Thy terrors, Jam
distracted" (Psa 88:15). "My soul is full of troubles, and my life draweth
nigh unto the grave," He said in the Psalms; just as afterwards He cried
out, "My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death." "Mine eye mourneth
by reason of affliction... Thy fierce wrath goeth over me, Thy terrors have
cut me off... Lover and friend hast Thou put far from me, and mine
acquaintance into darkness." Thus was He "despised and rejected of men"
(i.e. the despised and rejected of men), "a man of sorrows and
acquainted with grief' (Isa 53:3). And of the meaning of
all this we can have no doubt, when we remember that He was always the
sinless One bearing our sins, carrying them up to the cross as well
as bearing them upon the cross (1 Pet 2:24, anênegken ); also
that it is written of Him, "Surely He hath borne our griefs and carried our
sorrows" (Isa 53:4); and yet again, that it is written expressly with
reference to His daily life, "He healed all that were sick, that it might be
fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the prophet, saying, HIMSELF TOOK OUR
INFIRMITIES, AND BARE OUR SICKNESSES" (Matt 8:17).
Vicariousness, or substitution, attached itself to each part of His life as
truly as to His death.
Our burden He assumed when He entered the manger, and laid it aside only at
the cross. The utterance, "It is finished,' pointed back to a whole life's
sin-bearing work.
The
confessions of our sins which we find in the Psalms (where, as "in a
bottle," God has deposited the tears of the Son of man, Psa 56:8) are the
distinctest proofs of His work as the Substitute. Let one example suffice:
"0 LORD, rebuke me not in Thy wrath, neither chasten me in Thy hot
displeasure; for Thine arrows stick fast in me, and Thy hand presseth me
sore. There is no soundness in my flesh because of Thine anger, neither is
there any rest in my bones because of my sin. For mine iniquities are gone
over mine head; as an heavy burden, they are too heavy for me" (Psa 38:1-4).
These
confessions must be either those of the sinner or the sin-bearer. They suit
the former; and they show what views of sin we should entertain, and what
our confessions should be. But they suit the latter no less; and as they
occur in those Psalms which are quoted in the New Testament as specially
referring to Christ, we must take them as the confessions of the sin-bearer,
and meant to tell us what He thought of sin when it was laid upon Him
simply as a substitute for others. The view thus given us of the
completeness of the substitution is as striking as it is satisfying. We see
here our Noah building His wondrous ark for the salvation of His household.
We see its beginning, middle, and end. We see its different parts, external
and internal; each plank as it is laid, each nail as it is driven in. Its
form is perfect; its structure in all details is complete; its strength and
stability are altogether divine. Yet with what labour and amid what mockings
is this ark constructed! Amid what strong crying and tears, what blood and
agony, is it completed! Thus, however, we are assured of its perfection and
security. Through the deep waters of this evil world it floats in peace. No
storm can overset it, no billow break it, nor so much as loosen one of its
planks. They who have fled to it as a hiding-place from the wind, and a
covert from the tempest, are everlastingly safe.
When the
Lord said, "Now is my soul troubled" (John 12:27); and when, again, He said,
"My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death" (Matt 26:38), He spoke as
the sin-bearer. For what construction can we possibly put upon that trouble
and sorrow, but that they were for us?
Men, false to the great truth of a sin-bearing Christ, may say that in the
utterance of this anguish He was merely giving us an example of patient
endurance and self-sacrifice; but they who own the doctrine of Christ
"suffering for sin, the just for the unjust," will listen to these bitter
cries as to the very voice of the Substitute, and learn from them the
completeness of that work of satisfaction, for the accomplishment of which
He took our flesh, and lived our life, and died our death upon the tree.
But the
completeness of the substitution comes out more fully at the cross. There
the whole burden pressed upon Him, and the wrath of God took hold of Him,
and the sword of Jehovah smote Him; He poured out His soul unto death, and
He was cut off out of the land of the living.
Then the
work was done. "It is finished." The blood of the burnt-offering was shed.
The propitiation was made; the transgression finished; and the everlasting
righteousness brought in.
All that
follows is the fruit or result of the work finished on the cross. The
grave is the awful pledge or testimony to His death as a true and real
death; but it forms no part of the substitution or expiation.
Ere our surety reached the tomb, atonement had been completed. The
resurrection is the blessed announcement of the Father that the work had
been accepted and the surety set free; but it was no part either of the
atonement or the righteousness. The ascension and the appearing in the
presence of God for us with His own blood, are the carrying out of the
atonement made upon Calvary; but they are no part of the expiation by means
of which sin is forgiven and we are justified. All was finished, once and
for ever, when the surety said, "Father, into Thy hands I commend my
spirit."
There are
some who would separate propitiation from the cross, who maintain that the
three days' entombment was part of the sin-bearing. But the cry from the
cross, "It is finished," silences all such theories. The altar is the only
place of expiation; and it is death that is the wages of sin. Burial
was but the visible proof of the reality of the death. The surety's death
once given instead of ours, the work is done. The fire consumed the
sacrifice; and the ashes which remain are not the prolongation of that
sacrifice, but the palpable proof that the fire has exhausted itself, that
wrath is spent, and that nothing can now be added to or taken from the
perfection of that sacrifice, through which pardon and righteousness are
henceforth to flow to the condemned and the ungodly.
"Justified
by His blood" is the apostolic declaration; and as a result of this,
"saved from wrath through Him" (Rom 5:9). Here we rest; sitting down beneath
the shadow of the cross to receive the benefit of that justifying, saving,
protecting sacrifice.
It is at
and by the cross that God justifies the ungodly. "By His stripes
we are healed" (Isa 53:5); and the symbol of the brazen serpent visibly
declares this truth. It was the serpent when uplifted that healed the deadly
bite, not the serpent after it was taken down and deposited in the
tabernacle. As from that serpent,-the figure of Him who was "made a curse
for us,"-so from the cross health and life flow in. Not resurrection, but
crucifixion, is the finishing of transgression and the making of an end of
sin.
"Reconciled
to God by the death of His Son" (Rom 5:10) is another of the many
testimonies to the value and efficacy of the cross. Reconciliation is not
connected with resurrection. The "peace was made by the blood of His
cross" (Col 1:20). The fruits and results of the peace-offering may be
many and various, but they are not the basis of reconciliation. That basis
is the sacrificial blood-shedding. What can be more explicit than these
three passages, which announce justification by the blood, reconciliation by
the death, and peace by "the blood of the cross"?
In the
cross we see the Priest and priesthood; in the resurrection, the King and
royal power. To the Priest belong the absolution and the cleansing and the
justifying; to the King, the impartation of blessing to the absolved, the
cleansed and the justified.
To the
cross, therefore, do we look and cleave; knowing that out of its death
cometh life to us, and out of its condemnation pardon and righteousness.
With Christ were we crucified; and in this crucifixion we have "redemption
through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His
grace."
Three
times over in one chapter (Lev 1:9,13,17) we read these words, "It is a
burnt sacrifice, an offering made by fire of a sweet savour unto the LORD";
and the apostle, referring to these words, says, "Christ hath loved us, and
hath given Himself for us, an offering and a sacrifice to God for a
sweet-smelling savour" (Eph 5:2). This sweet savour came from the brazen
altar, or altar of burnt-offering. It was the sweet odour of that sacrifice
that ascended to God, and that encompassed the worshipper, so that he was
covered all over with this sacrificial fragrance, presenting him perfect
before God, and making his own conscience feel that he was accepted as such,
and treated as such. Thus, by that burnt-offering there is proclaimed to us
justification in a crucified Christ The manifold blessings flowing from
resurrection and ascension are not to be over-looked; but nowhere does
Scripture teach justification by these. The one passage sometimes
quoted to prove this, declares the opposite (Rom 4:25); for the words truly
translated run thus: "He was delivered because we had sinned, and
raised again because of our justification." It was because the
justifying work was finished that resurrection was possible. Had it
not been so, He must have remained under the power of the grave. But the
cross had completed the justification of His church. He was raised from the
dead. Death could no longer have dominion over Him. The work was finished,
the debt paid, and the surety went free: He rose, not in order to justify
us, but because we were justified. In raising Him from the dead, God the
Father cleared Him from the imputed guilt which had nailed Him to the cross
and borne Him down to the tomb. "He was justified in the Spirit" (1 Tim
3:16). His resurrection was not His justification, but the
declaration that He was "justified"; so that resurrection, in which we are
one with Him, does not justify us, but proclaims that we are
justified,-justified by His blood and death.
In so far,
then, as substitution is concerned, we have to do with the cross
alone. It was, indeed, the place of death; but on that very account
it was also to us a place of life and the pledge of resurrection.
The words
of the apostle (Rom 6:6,7) are very explicit on this point: "Knowing this,
that our old man has been crucified with Him, that the body of sin might be
destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin." Here we have three
things connected directly with the cross: (1) The death of the old man; (2)
the destruction of the body of sin; (3) deliverance from the life-bondage of
sin. Then he adds, "For he who dieth is freed from sin." The word "freed" is
literally "justified," (dedikaiôtai, has been judicially released,
legally set free, having paid the full penalty) teaching us that death
is the exhaustion of the penalty and the justification of the sinner; so
that justification in a crucified Christ is the teaching of the Spirit here.
The words of another apostle are no less clear (1 Pet 4:1): "Christ suffered
for us in the flesh;...he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from
sin." Here Christ on the cross is set before us, suffering the just for the
unjust; and having thus suffered, He has exhausted the
penalty which He was bearing; and having exhausted it, His connection with
sin has ceased: he is now in the state described elsewhere, "without sin"
(Heb 9:28). The word "ceased" means more properly "has rest."
The life
of our surety was one of sorrow and unrest, for our penalty lay upon Him;
but when this penalty was paid by His death, He "rested." The labor and the
burden were gone; and as one who knew what entering into rest was (Heb
4:10), He could say to us, "I will give you rest." He carried His
life-long burden to the cross, and there laid it down, "resting from His
labors." Or rather, it was there that the law severed the connection between
Him and the burden; loosing it from His shoulders, that it might be buried
in His grave. From that same cross springs the sinner's rest, the sinner's
disburdening, the sinner's absolution and justification.
Not for a
moment are we to lose sight of the blessings flowing from the resurrection,
or to overlook and undervalue the new position into which we are brought by
it. The "power of the resurrection" (Phil 3:10) must be fully recognized and
acted on for its own results. We are crucified with Christ. With Him we
died, were buried, and rose again. "Risen with Him through the faith of the
operation of God, who hath raised Him from the dead" (Col 2:12). "He hath
quickened us together with Christ... and hath raised us up together, and
made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus" (Eph 2:5,6). Such
are the terms in which the apostle describes the benefits of Christ's
resurrection, and in which he reveals to us the oneness with Him who died
and rose. But nowhere does he separate our justification from the cross;
nowhere does he speak of Christ meeting our legal responsibilities by His
resurrection; nowhere does he ascribe to His resurrection that preciousness
in whose excellency we stand complete. Acceptance, and completeness in our
standing before God, are attributed to the cross and blood and death of the
Divine Substitute.
Poor as my
faith in this Substitute may be, it places me at once in the position of one
to whom "God imputeth righteousness without works." God is willing to
receive me on the footing of His perfection; and if I am willing to be thus
received, in the perfection of another with whom God is well pleased, the
whole transaction is completed. I AM JUSTIFIED BY HIS BLOOD. "As He is, so
am I (even) in this world,"-even now, with all my
imperfections and evils.
To be
entitled to use another's name, when my own name is worthless; to be allowed
to wear another's raiment, because my own is torn and filthy; to appear
before God in another's person,-the person of the Beloved Son ,-this is the
summit of all blessing. The sin-bearer and I have exchanged names, robes,
and persons! I am now represented by Him, my own personality having
disappeared; He now appears in the presence of God for me (Heb 9:24). All
that makes Him precious and dear to the Father has been transferred to me.
His excellency and glory are seen as if they were mine; and I receive the
love, and the fellowship, and the glory, as if I had earned them all. So
entirely one am I with the sin-bearer, that God treats me not merely as if I
had not done the evil that I have done; but as if I had done all the good
which I have not done, but which my Substitute has done. In one sense I am
still the poor sinner, once under wrath; in another I am altogether
righteous, and shall be so for ever, because of the Perfect One, in whose
perfection I appear before God. Nor is this a false pretense or a hollow
fiction, which carries no results or blessings with it. It is an exchange
which has been provided by the Judge, and sanctioned by law; an exchange of
which any sinner upon earth may avail himself and be blest.
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