The Everlasting Righteousness
Index
The Holy Life of the Justified
Chapter 10
To him that worketh not, but believeth," says the apostle,
speaking of the way in which we are reckoned just before God.
Does he by
this speech make light of good works? Does he encourage an unholy walk? Does
he use a rash word, which had better been left unspoken?
No, truly.
He is laying the foundation of good works. He is removing the great obstacle
to a holy life, viz. the bondage of an unforgiven state. He is speaking, by
the power of the Holy Ghost, the words of truth and soberness. The
difference between working and believing is that which God would have us to
learn, lest we confound these two things, and so destroy them both. The
order and relation of these two things are here very explicitly laid down,
so as to anticipate the error of many who mix up working and believing
together, or who make believing the result of working, instead of working
the result of believing.
We
carefully distinguish, yet we as carefully connect the two. We do not put
asunder what God has joined together; yet we would not reverse the divine
order, nor disturb the divine relation, nor place that last which God has
set first.
It was not
to depreciate or discourage good works that the apostle spoke of "not
working, but believing"; or of a man being "justified by faith, without
the deeds of the law"; or of God "imputing righteousness without
works" (Rom 3:28; 4:6). It was to distinguish things that differ; it was
to show the true use of faith, in connecting us, for justification, with
what another has done; it was to stay us from doing anything in order
to be justified. In this view, then, faith is truly a ceasing from work, and
not a working; it is not the doing of anything in order to be justified, but
the simple reception of the justifying work of Him who "finished
transgression and made an end of sin": for THE ONE JUSTIFYING WORK was
completed eighteen hundred years ago, and any attempt on our part to repeat
or imitate this is vain. The one cross suffices.
Nor was it
to undervalue good works that our Lord gave, what many may deem such a
singular answer to the question of the Jews, "What shall we do, that we may
work the works of God?" "This is the work of God, that ye believe on
Him whom He hath sent" (John 6:29). They wanted to work their way into the
favor of God. The Lord tells them that they may have that favor without
waiting or working; by accepting at once His testimony to His only-begotten
Son. Till then, they were not in a condition for working. They were as trees
without a root; as stars whose motions, however regular, would be useless,
if they themselves were unlighted.
To say to
a groping, troubled spirit, You must first believe before you can work, is
no more to encourage ungodliness or laxity of walk, than to say to an
imprisoned soldier, You must first get out of your dungeon before you can
fight; or to a swimmer, You must throw off that millstone before you can
attempt to swim; or to a racer, You must get quit of these fetters before
you can run the race.
Yet these
expressions of the apostle have often been shrunk from; dreaded as
dangerous; quoted with a guarding clause, or rather cited as seldom as
possible, under the secret feeling that, unless greatly diluted or properly
qualified, they had better not be cited at all. But why are these bold
utterances there, if they are perilous, if they are not meant to be as
fearlessly proclaimed now as they were fearlessly written eighteen centuries
ago? What did the Holy Spirit mean by promulgation of such "unguarded"
statements, as some seem disposed to reckon them? It was not for nothing
that they were so boldly spoken. Timid words would not have served the
purpose. The glorious gospel needed statements such as these to disentangle
the great question of acceptance; to relieve troubled consciences, and purge
them from dead works, yet at the same time to give to works their proper
place.
Perhaps
some of Luther's statements are too unqualified; yet their very strength
shows how much he felt the necessity of so speaking of works, as absolutely
and peremptorily to exclude them from the office of justifying the sinner.
He saw and testified how the Papacy, by mixing the two things together, had
troubled and terrified men's consciences, and had truly become a
"slaughter-house of souls."
In
another's righteousness we stand; and by another's righteousness are we
justified. All accusations against us, founded upon our unrighteousness, we
answer by pointing to the perfection of the righteousness which covers us
from head to foot, and in virtue of which we are unassailable by law, as
well as shielded from wrath.
Protected
by this perfection, we have no fear of wrath, either now or hereafter. It is
a buckler to us, and we cry, "Behold, 0 God, our shield; look upon the face
of Thine Anointed"; as if to say, Look not on me, but on my Substitute; deal
not with me for sin, but with my Sin-bearer; challenge not me for my guilt,
but challenge Him; He will answer for me. Thus we are safe beneath
the shield of His righteousness. No arrow, either from the enemy or from
conscience, can reach us there.
Covered
by this perfection, we are at peace. The enemy cannot invade us; or if he
try to do so, we can triumphantly repel him. It is a refuge from the storm,
a covert from the tempest, a river of water in a dry place, the shadow of a
great rock in a weary land. The work of righteousness is peace; and in the
Lord we have righteousness and strength.
Beautified
with this perfection, which is the perfection of God, we find favour in His
sight. His eye rests on the comeliness which He has put upon us; and as He
did at viewing the first creation, so now, in looking at us as clothed with
this divine excellency, He pronounces it "very good." He sees "no iniquity
in Jacob, and no transgression in Israel." "The iniquity of Jacob may be
sought for, and there shall be none; and the sins of Judah, and they shall
not be found" (Jer 50:20). This righteousness suffices to cover, to comfort,
and to beautify.(1)
But there
is more than this. We are justified that we may be holy. The
possession of this legal righteousness is the beginning of a holy life. We
do not live a holy life in order to be justified; but we are justified that
we may live a holy life. That which man calls holiness may be found
in almost any circumstances,--of dread, or darkness, or bondage, or
self-righteous toil and suffering; but that which God calls holiness can
only be developed under conditions of liberty and light, and pardon and
peace with God. Forgiveness is the mainspring of holiness. Love, as a
motive, is far stronger than law; far more influential than fear of wrath or
peril of hell. Terror may make a man crouch like a slave and obey a hard
master, lest a worse thing come upon him; but only a sense of forgiving love
can bring either heart or conscience into that state in which obedience is
either pleasant to the soul or acceptable to God.
False
ideas of holiness are common, not only among those who profess false
religions, but among those who profess the true. For holiness is a thing of
which man by nature has no more idea than a blind man has of the beauty of a
flower or the light of the sun. All false religions have had their "holy
men," whose holiness often consisted merely in the amount of pain they could
inflict upon their bodies, or of food which they could abstain from, or of
hard labor which they could undergo. But with God, a saint or holy man is a
very different being. It is in filial, full-hearted love to God that much of
true holiness consists. And this cannot even begin to be until the sinner
has found forgiveness and tasted liberty, and has confidence towards God.
The spirit of holiness is incompatible with the spirit of bondage. There
must be the spirit of liberty, the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba,
Father. When the fountain of holiness begins to well up in the human heart,
and to fill the whole being with its transforming, purifying power, "We have
known and believed the love that God has to us" (1 John 4:16) is the first
note of the holy song, which, commenced on earth, is to be perpetuated
through eternity.
We are
bought with a price, that we may be new creatures in Christ Jesus. We are
forgiven, that we may be like Him who forgives us. We are set at liberty and
brought out of prison, that we may be holy. The free, boundless love of God,
pouring itself into us, expands and elevates our whole being; and we serve
Him, not in order to win His favour, but because we have already won it in
simply believing His record concerning His Son. If the root is holy, so are
the branches. We have become connected with the holy root, and by the
necessity of this connection are made holy too.
Forgiveness
relaxes no law, nor interferes with the highest justice. Human pardons may
often do so: God's pardons never.
Forgiveness
doubles all our bonds to a holy life; only they are no longer bonds of iron,
but of gold. It takes off the heavy yoke, in order to give us the light and
easy.
The love
of God to us, and our love to God, work together for producing holiness in
us. Terror accomplishes no real obedience. Suspense brings forth no fruit
unto holiness. Only the certainty of love, forgiving love, can do this. It
is this certainty that melts the heart, dissolves our chains, disburdens our
shoulders, so that we stand erect, and makes us to run in the way of the
divine commandments.
Condemnation
is that which binds sin and us together. Forgiveness looses this fearful
tie, and separates us from sin. The power of condemnation which the law
possesses is that which makes it so strong and terrible. Cancel this power,
and the liberated spirit rises into the region of love, and in that region
finds both will and strength for the keeping of the law,--a law which is at
once old and new: old as to substance ("Thou shalt love the Lord with all
thy heart"); new as to mode and motive. "The law of the spirit of life in
Christ Jesus bath made me free from the law of sin and death" (Rom 8:2);
that is, The law of the life-giving spirit which we have in Christ Jesus has
severed the condemning connection of that law which leads only to sin and
death. "For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh
(i.e. unable to carry out its commandments in our old nature), God sending
His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in
the flesh; that the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in
us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the spirit" (Rom 8:3,4).
The
removal of condemnation is the dissolution of legal bondage, and of that
awful pressure upon the conscience which at once enslaved and irritated;
disenabling as well as disinclining us from all obedience; making holiness
both distasteful and dreadful, to be submitted to only through fear of
future woe.
Sin, when
unforgiven, oppresses the conscience and tyrannizes over the sinner. Sin
forgiven in an unrighteous way, would be but a slight and uncertain as well
as imperfect relief. Sin righteously and judicially forgiven, loses its
dominion. The conscience rises up from its long oppression, and expands into
joyous liberty. Our whole being becomes bright and buoyant under the benign
influence of this forgiving love of God. "The winter is past, the rain is
over and gone, the flowers appear on the earth, the time of the singing of
birds is come" (Song 2:11,12).
Condemnation
is the dark cloud that obscures our heavens. Forgiveness is the sunshine
dissolving the cloud, and by its brilliance making all good things to grow
and ripen in us.
Condemnation
makes sin strike its roots deeper and deeper. No amount of terror can
extirpate evil. No fear of wrath can make us holy. No gloomy uncertainty as
to God's favour can subdue one lust, or correct our crookedness of will. But
the free pardon of the cross uproots sin, and withers all its branches. The
"no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus" is the only effectual
remedy for the deadly disease of an alienated heart and stubborn will.
The want
of forgiveness, or uncertainty as to it, are barriers in the way of the
removal of the heart's deep enmity to a righteous God. For enmity will only
give way to love; and no suspense, however terrible, will overcome the
stout-hearted rebelliousness of man. Threats do not conquer hearts; nor does
austerity win either confidence or affection. They who would trust to law to
awaken trust, know nothing either of law or love; nor do they understand how
the suspicions of the human heart are to be removed, and its confidence won.
The knowledge of God simply as Judge or Lawgiver will be of no power to
attract, of no avail to remove distrust and dread.
But the
message, "God is love," is like the sun bursting through the clouds of a
long tempest. The good news, "Through this man is preached unto you the
forgiveness of sins," is like the opening of the prisoner's dungeon-gate.
Bondage departs, and liberty comes. Suspicion is gone, and the heart is won.
"Perfect love has cast out fear." We hasten to the embrace of Him who loved
us; we hate that which has estranged us; we put away all that caused the
distance between us and Him; we long to be like one so perfect, and to
partake of His holiness. To be "partakers of the divine nature" (2 Peter
1:4), once so distasteful, is henceforth most grateful and pleasant; and
nothing seems now so desirable as to escape the corruptions that are in the
world through lust.
We undergo
many false changes, which look like holiness, but which are not really so.
The poison-tree drops its leaves, yet remains the same. The sea of Sodom
glistens in the sunshine with surpassing splendor, yet remains salt and
bitter as before. Time changes us, yet does not make us holy. The decays of
age change us, but do not break the power of evil. One lust expels another;
frailty succeeds to frailty; error drives out error; one vanity pails,
another comes freshly in its room; one evil habit is exchanged for a second,
but our old man remains the same. The cross has not touched us with its
regenerating power; the Holy Spirit has not purified the inner sources of
our being and life.(2)
Fashion
changes us; the example of friends changes us; society changes us;
excitement changes us; business changes us; affection changes us; sorrow
changes us; dread of coming evil changes us; yet the heart is just what it
was. Of the numerous changes in our character or deportment, how many are
deceitful, how few are real and deep! Only that which can go down into the
very depths of our spiritual being can produce any change that is worthy of
the name.
The one
spell that can really transform us is THE CROSS. The one potent
watchword is, "I, if I be lifted up, will draw all men unto me" (John
12:32). The one physician for all our maladies is He who died for us, and
the one remedy which He applies is the blood that cleanseth from all sin.
The one arm of power that can draw us out of the horrible pit and the miry
clay, is "the Spirit of holiness."
"For their
sakes I sanctify myself, that they also might be sanctified through the
truth" (John 17:19). Christ presents Himself as the Holy One, Consecrated
One, to God, that His people may partake of His sanctification, and be like
Himself, saints, consecrated ones, men set apart for God by the sprinkling
of the blood. Through the truth they are sanctified, by the power of the
Holy Ghost.
"By one
offering He hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified" (Heb 10:14);
50 that the perfection of His saints, both as to the conscience and as to
personal holiness, is connected with the one offering, and springs out of
the one work finished upon Calvary. "By the which will we are sanctified,
through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all" (Heb 10:10).
Here again the sanctification is connected with the offering of the body of
Christ. Whatever place "the power of His resurrection" may hold in our
spiritual history, it is the cross that is the source of all that varied
fullness by which we are justified and purified. The secret of a believer's
holy walk is his continual recurrence to the blood of the Surety, and his
daily intercourse with a crucified and risen Lord.
Nowhere
does Scripture, either in its statements or doctrines or lives of the
saints, teach us that here we get beyond our need of the blood, or may
safely cast off the divine raiment that covers our deformity. Even should we
say at any time, "I am free from sin," this would be no proof of our being
really holy: for the heart is deceitful above all things, and there may be
ten thousand sins lurking in us; seen by God, though unseen by ourselves. "I
know nothing of myself' says the apostle; i.e. I am not conscious of
any failure; "but," he adds, "I am not hereby justified"; i.e. this my own
consciousness is no proof of my sinlessness: for "He that judgeth me is the
Lord"; and the Lord may condemn me in many things in which I do not condemn
myself.
Let me say
to one who thinks he has reached sinlessness, "My friend, are you sure
that you are perfectly holy? For nothing but absolute certainty
should lead you to make so bold an affirmation regarding your freedom from
all sin. Are you sure that you love the Lord your God with all your
heart and soul? For unless you are absolutely sure of this, you have
no right to say, I am perfectly holy; and it will be a perilous thing for
you to affirm, I have no longer any need of the blood, and I refuse to go to
the fountain for cleansing, seeing my going thither would be mockery. For
the cross, the blood, the fountain, are for the imperfect, not for the
perfect; for the unrighteous, not for the righteous; and if your
self-consciousness is correct, you are no longer among the imperfect or the
unrighteous. My friend, do you never sin, in thought, or in word, or in
desire, or in deed? Have you never a wandering thought? Is your heart as
warm and are your affections as heavenly as you could possibly desire them
to be? What! not one stray thought from morn to night, from night to morn?
Not one wrong word, nor look, nor tone? What! no coldness, no want of
fervor, no flagging of zeal, no momentary indulgence of self and sloth?
What! no error (for error is sin), no false judgment, no failure of
temper, no improper step, no imperfect plan; nothing to regret, nothing to
wish unsaid or undone in the midst of a world like ours, with all its
provocations, its crosses, it worries, its oppositions, its heated
atmosphere of infectious evil? And art thou sure, quite sure, that
all this is the case; and that thy conscience is so perfectly alive, so
divinely sensitive, that the faintest expressions of evil in the remotest
corner of thy heart would be detected? If so, thou art an extraordinary man,
far above him who was less than the least of all saints; above him who said,
'The good that I would, that I do not; and the evil that I would not, that I
do'; and one whose history will require to be written by some immortal pen,
as that of the man who, after a few years believing, ceased to require any
application to the cross, or to be indebted to the blood for cleansing, who
could look at altar, and laver, and mercy-seat as one who had no longer any
interest in their provisions; nay, as one to whom a crucified Christ was a
thing of the past, of whom he had now no need as a Sin-bearer; or High
Priest, or Advocate, or Intercessor, but only as a companion and friend."
God's
processes are not always rapid. His greatest works rise slowly. Swiftness of
growth has been one of man's tests of greatness; not so is it with God. His
trees grow slowly; the stateliest are the slowest. His flowers grow slowly;
the brightest are the slowest. His creatures grow slowly, year by year; man,
the noblest, grows the most slowly of all. God can afford to take His time.
Man cannot. He is hasty and impatient. He will have everything to be like
Jonah's gourd, or like one of those fabled oriental palaces, which magicians
are said to call up by a word or a stamp, out of the sand. He forgets how
slowly the palm tree and the cedar grow. They neither spring up in a night
nor perish in a night. He forgets the history of the temple: "Forty and six
years was this temple in building." He insists that, because it is God's
purpose that His saints should be holy, therefore they ought to be holy at
once.
It is true
that our standard is, and must be, perfection. For our model is the Perfect
One. But the question is, Has God in Scripture anywhere led us to expect the
rapidity of growth, the quick development of perfection in which some glory,
and because of the confessed lack of which in others they look down on these
others as babes or loiterers?
Is there
in Scripture any instance of a perfect man, excepting Him who was
always and absolutely without sin? If Christians were perfect, where is the
warfare, and the adversary, and the sword, and the shield? Are angels
exposed to this warfare when they visit earth? Or is it not our imperfection
that in great measure produces this? And are we anywhere in Scripture led to
believe that we are delivered from "the body of this death," from the battle
of flesh and spirit, from the wrestling with principalities and powers, till
death sets us free, or our Lord shall come?
Yet we are
called with a holy calling (2 Tim 1:9); and as so called, are bound to take
the highest standard for our model of life. The slowness or swiftness of the
progress does not alter the standard, nor affect our aiming at conformity to
it.
This
progress, rapid or gradual, springs from the forgiveness we have received,
and the new life imparted by the Holy Spirit. Our life is to be
fruit-bearing; and the fruitfulness comes from our ascertained acceptance,
our being "rooted and grounded in love." We taste and see that the Lord is
good; that in His favour is life; that the joy of the Lord is our strength;
and so we move on and up, rising from one level to another. "We know and
believe the love that God hath to us"; and we find in this the source of
goodness, no less than of gladness and liberty.
The life
of the justified should be a peaceful one. Being justified by faith, we have
peace with God,--the God of peace, and the God of all grace. The world's
storms have not been stilled, nor our way smoothed, nor our skies
brightened, nor our enemies swept away; but the peace of God has come in and
taken possession of the soul. We are cheered and comforted. God is for us,
and who can be against us? The name of the Lord is our strong tower; we run
into it, and are safe. No evil can happen to us; no weapon that is formed
against us can prosper.
The life
of the justified should be a holy one, all the more because of the extent of
previous unholiness. "And such were some of you: but ye are washed, but ye
are sanctified, but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by
the Spirit of our God" (1 Cor 6:11). All that these marvelous and mysterious
words "holy" and "holiness" imply, is to be found in the life of one who has
been "much forgiven." There is no spring of holiness so powerful as that
which our Lord assumes: "Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no more"
(John 8:11). Free and warm reception into the divine favour is the strongest
of all motives in leading a man to seek conformity to Him who has thus
freely forgiven him all trespasses. A cold admission into the paternal house
by the father might have repelled the prodigal, and sent him back to his
lusts; but the fervent kiss, the dear embrace, the best robe, the ring, the
shoes, the fatted calf, the festal song,--all without one moment's suspense
or delay, as well as without one upbraiding word, could not but awaken shame
for the past, and true-hearted resolution to walk worthy of such a father,
and of such a generous pardon. "Revellings, banquetings, and abominable
idolatries," come to the abhorrence of him round whom the holy arms of
renewed fatherhood have been so lovingly thrown. Sensuality, luxury, and the
gaieties of the flesh have lost their relish to one who has tasted the fruit
of the tree of life.
The life
of the justified should be a loving one. It is love that has made him what
he is, and shall he not love in return? Shall he not love Him that begat,
and him also that is begotten of Him? The deep true spring of love is thus
revealed to us by the Lord Himself: "A certain creditor had two debtors; the
one owed five hundred pence, the other fifty. And when they had nothing to
pay, HE FRANKLY FORGAVE THEM BOTH. Tell me therefore, which of them will
LOVE him most?" (Luke 7:41,42). Thus love produces love. The life of one on
whom the fullness of the free love of God is ever shining must be a life of
love. Suspense, doubt, terror, darkness, must straiten and freeze; but the
certainty of free and immediate love dissolves the ice, and kindles the
coldest spirit into the warmth of love. "We love Him because He first loved
us." Love to God, love to the brethren, love to the world, spring up within
us as the heavenly love flows in. Malevolence, anger, envy, jealously,
receive their death-blow. The nails of the cross have gone through all
these, and their deadly wound cannot be healed. They that are Christ's have
crucified the flesh, with its affections and lusts. Sternness, coldness,
distance, depart; and are succeeded by gentleness, mildness, guilelessness,
meekness, ardor, long-suffering. The tempers of the old man quit us, we know
not how; and in their place comes the "charity which suffereth long, and is
kind, which envieth not, which vaunteth not itself, which is not puffed up,
which doth not behave itself unseemly, which seeketh not her own, which is
not easily provoked, which thinketh no evil, which rejoiceth not in
iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth, which beareth all things, which
believeth all things, which never faileth" (1 Cor 13:4-8). Gentle and loving
and simple should be the life of the justified; meek and lowly should they
be, who have been loved with such a love.
The life
of the justified should be an earnest one. For everything connected with his
acceptance has been earnest on the part of God; and the free forgiveness on
which he has entered, in believing, nerves, and cheers, and animates. It is
a spring of courage, and hardihood, and perseverance. It makes the coward
brave; it says to the weak, Be strong; to the indolent, Arise; making the
forgiving man ready to face danger, and toil, and loss; arming him with a
new-found energy, and crowning him with sure success. "Ready to spend and be
spent" is his motto now. "I am debtor" is his watch-word , debtor first of
all to Him who forgave me; after that, to the church of God, redeemed with
the same blood, and filled with the same Spirit; and then after that to the
world around, still sunk in sin and struggling with a thousand sorrows,
under which it has no comforter, and of whose termination it has no hope.
How thoroughly in earnest should be the life of one thus pardoned,--pardoned
so freely, yet at such a cost to Him who "gave His life a ransom for many!"
The life
of the justified should be a generous one. All connected with his
justification has been boundless generosity on the part of God. He spared
not His own Son, and will He not with Him also freely give us all things?
The love of God has been of the largest, freest kind; and shall this not
make us generous? The gifts of God have been all of them on the most
unlimited scale; and shall not this boundless liberality make us liberal in
the highest and truest sense? Can a justified man be covetous, or slow to
part with his gold? God has given His Son; He has given His Spirit; He has
given us eternal life; He has given us an everlasting kingdom. And shall
these gifts not tell upon us? shall they not expand and elevate us? or shall
they leave us narrow and shriveled as before? Surely we are called to a
noble life; a life far above the common walk of humanity; a life far above
that of those who, disbelieving the liberality of God, are trying to merit
His favour, or to purchase His kingdom by moral goodnesses or ceremonial
performances of their own. Not unselfish merely, but self-denying men, we
are called to be; not self-pleasers, nor man-pleasers, nor flesh-pleasers,
nor world-pleasers; but pleasers of God, like Enoch (Heb 11:5), or like a
greater than Enoch, as it is written, "Even Christ pleased not Himself" (Rom
15:3). "We then that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak,
and NOT TO PLEASE OURSELVES; let every one of us please his neighbor for his
good to edification," i.e. to the edification or building up of the body of
Christ (Rom 15:2). Selfishness, self-love, self-seeking, have been in all
ages the scandal of the church of God. "All seek their own, not the things
that are Jesus Christ's" (Phil 2:21), was the sad testimony of the apostle
to the Philippian church, even in early days: so little had God's marvelous
love told even upon those who believed it; so obstinate was the contraction
of the human heart, and so unwilling to yield to the enlarging pressure of
an influence which men in common things deem irresistible. To love warmly,
to give largely, to sympathize sincerely, to help unselfishly; these are
some of the noble fruits to be expected from the belief of a love that
passeth knowledge. Self-sacrifice ought not to seem much to those for whom
Christ has died, and whom He now represents upon the throne. Generous deeds
and gifts and words ought to be as natural as they are becoming in those who
have been so freely loved, so abundantly pardoned, and so eternally blest.
Narrow hearts are the fruits of a narrow pardon, and of an uncertain favour;
poor gifts are the produce of stinted and grudging giving; but
large-heartedness and open-handedness may surely be looked for from those
whom the boundless liberality of God has made partakers of the unsearchable
riches of Christ, and heirs of the kingdom which can not be moved.
The life
of the justified should be a lofty one. Littleness, and meanness, and
earthliness, do not become the pardoned. They must mount up on wings as
eagles, setting their affection on things above. Having died with Christ and
risen with Him, they sit with Him in heavenly places (Eph 2:6). In the
world, and yet not of it, they rise above it; possessed of a heavenly
citizenship (Phil 3:20), and expecting an unearthly recompense at the return
of Him who has gone to prepare a place for them. High thoughts, high aims,
high longings, become them of whom Christ was not merely the substitute upon
the cross, but the representative upon the throne,--the forerunner, who has
entered within the veil, and ever liveth to intercede for us. Shall he who
has been freely justified grovel in the dust, or creep along the polluted
soil of earth? Shall such a justification as he has received not be the
source of superhuman elevation of character, making him unworldly in his
hopes, in his tastes, in his works, in the discharge of his daily calling?
Shall not such a justification act upon his whole being, and pervade his
life; making him a thoroughly consistent man in all things; each part of his
course becoming his name and prospects; and his whole man symmetrical, his
whole Christianity harmonious?
The life
of the justified is a decided one. It does not oscillate between goodness
and evil, between Christ and the world. The justifying cross has come
between him and all evil things; and that which released him from the burden
of guilt has, in so doing, broken the bondage of sin. Even if at any time he
feels as if he could return to that country from which he set out, the cross
stands in front, and arrests his backward step. Between him and Egypt rolls
the Red Sea, now flowing in its strength, so that he cannot pass. At the
door of the theatre, or the ballroom, or the revel-hall, stands the cross,
and forbids his entrance. The world is crucified to him, and he unto the
world, by the saving cross. His first look to the cross committed him. He
began, and he cannot go back. It would be mean as well as perilous to do so.
There is henceforth to be no mistake about him. His heart is no longer
divided, and his eye no longer roams. He has taken up the cross, and he is
following the Lamb. He has gone in at the strait gate, and is walking along
the narrow way; and at the entrance thereof stands the cross barring his
return. Over his entrance there was joy in heaven; and shall he at any time
turn that joy into sorrow by even seeming to go back?
The life
of the justified is a useful one. He has become a witness for Him who has
thrown over him the shadow of His cross. He can tell what the bitterness of
sin is, and what is the burden of guilt. He can speak of the rolling away of
the stone from the sepulchre of his once dead soul, and of the angel sitting
on that stone clothed in light. He can make known the righteousness which he
has found, and in finding which he has been brought into liberty and
gladness. Out of the abundance of his heart, and in the fullness of his
liberated spirit, his mouth speaketh. He cannot but speak of the things
which he now possesses, that he may induce others to come and share the
fullness. He is bent on doing good. He has no hours to throw away. He knows
that the time is short, and he resolves to redeem it. He will not waste a
life that has been redeemed at such a cost. It is not his own, and he must
keep in mind the daily responsibilities of a life thus bought for another.
As one of the world's lights, in the absence of the true light, he must be
always shining, to lessen in some degree the darkness of earth, and to
kindle heavenly light in souls who are now excluding it. As one of the
sowers of the heavenly seed, he must never be idle, but watching
opportunities,--making opportunities for sowing it as he goes out and in; it
may be in weakness, it may be in tears.
The life
of the justified is the life of wisdom and truth. He has become "wise in
Christ"; nay, "Christ has been made unto him wisdom" as well as
righteousness. It is thus that he has become "wise unto salvation," and he
feels that he must hold fast the truth that saves. To trifle with that
truth, to tamper with error, would be to deny the cross. He by whom he is
justified is Himself THE TRUTH, and every man who receives that truth
becomes a witness for it. By THE TRUTH he is saved; by THE TRUTH he is made
free; by THE TRUTH he is made clean; by THE TRUTH he is sanctified; and
therefore it is precious to him, every jot and tittle. Each fragment broken
off is so much lost to his spiritual well-being; and each new discovery made
in the rich field of truth is so much eternal gain. He has bought the truth,
and he will not sell it. It is his life; it is his heritage; it is his
kingdom. He counts all truth precious, and all error hateful. He dreads the
unbelief that is undermining the foundations of truth, and turning its
spacious palaces into the chaos of human speculations. He calls no truth
obsolete or out of date; for he knows that the truths on which he rests for
eternity are the oldest of old, and yet the surest of sure. To introduce
doubt as to the one sacrifice on which he builds, is to shake the cross of
Calvary. To lay another foundation than that already laid, is to destroy his
one hope. To take the sacrificial element out of the blood, is to make peace
with God impossible, because unrighteous. To substitute the church for
Christ, or the priest for the herald of pardon, or the rite for the precious
blood, or the sacrament for the living Christ upon the throne, or the
teachings of the church for the enlightenment of the Holy Ghost,--this is to
turn light into darkness, and then to call that darkness light. Thus taught
by that Spirit who has led him to the cross, the justified man knows how to
discern truth from error. He has the unction from the Holy One, and knows
all things (1 John 2:20); he has the anointing which is truth, and is no lie
(1 John 2:27); and he can try the spirits, whether they are of God (1 John
4.1).
Want of
sensitiveness to the difference between truth and error is one of the evil
features of modern Protestantism. Sounding words, well-executed pictures,
pretentious logic, carry away multitudes. The distinction between Gospel and
no Gospel is very decided and very momentous; yet many will come away from a
sermon in which the free gospel has been overlaid, not sensible of the want,
and praising the preacher. The conversions of recent years have not the
depth of other days. Consciences are half-awakened and half-pacified; the
wound is slightly laid open, and slightly healed. Hence the want of
spiritual discernment as to truth and error. The conscience is not
sensitive, else it would at once refuse and resent any statement, however
well argued or painted, which encroached in the slightest degree upon the
free gospel of God's love in Christ; which interposed any obstacle between
the sinner and the cross; or which merely declaimed about the cross, without
telling us especially how it saves and how it purifies. We need sensitive
but not morbid consciences to keep us steadfast in the faith, to
preserve our spiritual eyesight unimpaired, remembering the apostle's words,
"He that lacketh these things is blind, and cannot see afar off and
bath forgotten that he was purged from his old sins" (2 Pet 1:9).
Censoriousness is one thing, and spiritual discernment is quite another. To
avoid the first we do not need to give up the second: though the
"liberality" of modern times would recommend us to be charitable to error,
and not very tenacious of any Bible truth, seeing that nothing in an age of
culture can be received but that which has been pronounced credible by
philosophy or science, and which the "verifying faculty" has adjudged to be
true!
The life
of the justified must be one of praise and prayer. His justification has
drawn him near to God. It has opened his lips and enlarged his heart. He
cannot but praise; he cannot but pray. He has ten thousand things to ask
for; he has ten thousand things for which to give thanks. He knows what it
is to speak in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in
his heart to the Lord (Col 3:16).
The life
of the justified is one of watchfulness. Forgiveness has altered all his
circumstances and hopes. It has brought him into a new world, from which are
shut out things he was formerly familiar with, and into which are introduced
things which he knew not. He sees and hears what he never saw nor heard
before; and he ceases to see and hear what but lately he delighted in. He
expects changes, and wishes that they were come. The present has become less
to him, the future more; and in that future the one absorbing object is the
reappearing of Him, whom not having seen he loves. That the future should be
a mere repetition of the present,--with a few scientific and political
improvements,--is quite enough for the worldly man. But the man who, by his
new connection with the cross, has been transported into a new region, is
not content that it should be so. He wants a better future, and a more
congenial world; he desires a state of things in which the new object of his
love shall be all. And learning from Scripture that such a new condition of
things is to be expected, and that of that new state Christ is Himself to be
the first and last, he looks eagerly out for the fulfillment of these hopes.
Learning, moreover, that the arrival of this King and of His kingdom is to
be sudden, he is led to wait and watch; all the more because everything
here, in the world's daily history of change, and noise and revelry, is
fitted to throw him off his guard. His justification does not lull him
asleep. His faith does not make him heedless of the future. It is the
substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. It says, Let
us not sleep, as do others; but let us watch and be sober: watch, for ye
know neither the day nor the hour when the Son of man cometh. Many a trial
of her watchfulness has the church had, many a disappointment has her faith
sustained; but she does not despond nor give way, remembering the promise,
"He that shall come will come, and will not tarry." Her faith keeps up her
vigilance, and her vigilance invigorates her faith. In the darkest hour
faith says, "I am my Beloved's, and my Beloved is mine"; and hope adds,
"Make haste, my beloved, and be thou like to a roe or a young hart upon the
mountains of spices."
The church
watches because of present evil, and coming good; that she may be kept
undefiled from the one, and may attain unto the other. Danger from enemies,
and the prospect of speedy victory over them, keep her awake. Fear of losing
sight of the cross, and so again walking in darkness; suspicion both of the
good and the evil things of earth,--its flatteries and its menaces, it
toils, its cares, its amusements, its pleasures; anxiety about keeping her
garments unspotted and her conscience clean; the sight of the sleeping
millions around, and the knowledge that it is upon a sleeping world that the
Lord is to come;--these things act powerfully as stimulants, and bid her be
watchful. To be among the foolish virgins, without oil and with a dying
lamp, when the midnight cry goes forth; to be near the door, and yet shut
out; to hear the announcement, "The marriage of the Lamb is come, and His
wife hath made herself ready," and yet not be ready; to be summoned to the
festival, and yet to be without the bridal and festal dress; to love, and
then to fall from love; to draw the sword, and then in faint-heartedness to
sheath it; to run well for a while, and then to slacken speed; to war
against Satan as the prince of darkness, and yield to him as an angel of
light; to set out with condemning the world, and then to mingle with it; to
cleave like Demas to the saints, and then to forsake them; to be among the
twelve for a season, then to be a traitor at the last; to be lifted up, like
Capernaum, to heaven, and then to be thrust down to hell; to be among the
sons of light, and then to fall from heaven like Lucifer, son of the
morning; to sit down in the upper chamber with the Lord, and then to betray
the Son of man with a kiss; to put on a goodly garment of fair profession,
and then to walk naked in shame;--these are the solemn thoughts that crowd
in upon the justified man, and keep him watchful.
They who
know not what it is to be "accepted in the Beloved," and to "rejoice in hope
of the glory of God," may fall asleep. He dare not; he knows what he is
risking, and what one hour of slumber may cost him; and he must be wakeful.
He does not make election his opiate, and say, I am safe; but this only
makes me doubly vigilant, that I may not dishonor Him who has saved me; and
even though I may not finally fall away, I know not how much I may lose by
one day's slothfulness, or how much I may gain by maintaining that watchful
attitude to which, as the expectant of an absent Lord, I am called, "Blessed
is he that watcheth"; and even though I could not see the reason for this, I
will act upon it, that I may realize the promised blessedness. He who has
called me to vigilance can make me a partaker of its joy. He can make my
watch-tower, lonely and dark as it may seem, none other than the house of
God, and the very gate of heaven.
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