Jehovah Tsidkenu:
The Lord Our Righteousness
by C. H. Spurgeon
“This is his name whereby he shall be called, The
Lord our Righteousness. (Jeremiah 23:6)
MAN BY THE FALL sustained an infinite loss in the
matter of righteousness. He suffered the loss of a righteous nature, and then a
two-fold loss of legal righteousness in the sight of God. Man sinned; he was
therefore no longer innocent of transgression. Man did not keep the command; he
therefore was guilty of the sin of omission. In that which he committed,
and in that which he omitted, his original character for uprightness was
completely wrecked. Jesus Christ came to undo the mischief of the fall for his
people. So far as their sin concerned their breach of the command, that he has
removed by his precious blood. His agony and bloody sweat have for ever taken
away the consequences of sin from believers, seeing Christ did by his one
sacrifice bear the penalty of that sin in his flesh. He, his own self, bare our
sins in his own body on the tree. Still it is not enough for a man to be
pardoned. He, of course, is then in the eye of God without sin. But it was
required of man that he should actually keep the command. It was not enough that
he did not break it, or that he is regarded through the blood as though he did
not break it. He must keep it, he must continue in all things that are written
in the book of the law to do them. How is this necessity supplied? Man must have
a righteousness, or God cannot accept him. Man must have a perfect obedience, or
else God cannot reward him. Should He give heaven to a soul that has not
perfectly kept the law; that were to give the reward where the service is not
done, and that before God would be an act which might impeach his justice.
Where, then, is the righteousness with which the pardoned man shall be
completely covered, so that God can regard him as having kept the law, and
reward him for so doing? Surely, my brethren, none of you are so besotted as to
think that this righteousness can be wrought out by yourselves. You must despair
of ever being able to keep the law perfectly. Each day you sin. Since you have
passed from death unto life, the old Adam still struggles for dominion within
you. And by the force of the lusts of the flesh you are brought into captivity
to the law of sin which is in your members. The good you would do, you do not,
and the evil you would not, that you too often do. Some have thought the works
of the Holy Spirit in us would give us a righteousness in which we might stand.
I am sure, my brethren, we would not say a word derogatory to the cork of the
Holy Spirit. It is divine. But we hold it to be a great cardinal point in
divinity that the work of the Spirit never meant to supplant the merits of the
Son. We could not depreciate the Lord Jesus Christ in order to exalt the office
of the Holy Spirit of God. We know that each particular branch of the divine
salvation which was espoused by the persons of the Trinity has been carried out
by each one to perfection. Now as we are accepted in the Beloved, it must be by
a something that the Beloved did; as we are justified in Christ it must be by a
something not that the Spirit has done, but which Christ has done. We must
believe, then,—for there is no other alternative—that the righteousness in which
we must be clothed, and through which we must be accepted, and by which we are
made meet to inherit eternal life, can be no other than the work of Jesus
Christ. We, therefore, assert, believing that Scripture fully warrants us, that
the life of Christ constitutes the righteousness in which his people are to be
clothed. His death washed away their sins, his life covered them from head to
foot; his death the sneaky to God, his life was the gift to man, by which man
satisfies the demands of the law. Herein the law is honored and the soul is
accepted. I find that many young Christians who are very clear about being saved
by the merits of Christ’s death, do not seem to understand the merits of his
life. Remember, young believers, that from the first moment when Christ did lie
in the cradle until the time when he ascended up on high, he was at work for his
people; and from the moment when he was seen in Mary’s arms, till the instant
when in the arms of death he “bowed his head and gave up the ghost,” he was at
work for your salvation and mine. He completed the work of obedience in his
life, and said to his Father, “I have finished the work which thou gavest me to
do.” Then he completed the work of atonement in his death, and knowing that all
things were accomplished, he cried, “It is finished.” He was through his life
spinning the web for making the royal garment, and in his death he dipped that
garment in his blood. In his life he was gathering together the precious gold,
in his death he hammered it out to make for us a garment which is of wrought
gold. You have as much to thank Christ for loving as for dying, and you should
be as reverently and devoutly grateful for his spotless life as for his terrible
and fearful death. The text speaking of Christ, the son of David, the branch out
of the root of Jesse, styles him THE LORD OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS.
Having introduced the doctrine of imputed
righteousness, I proofed to map out my subject. First, by way of affirmation;
we say of the text—it is so—Christ is the Lord or righteousness; secondly, I
shall exhort you to do him homage; let us call him so: for this is the
name whereby he shall be called; and thirdly, I shall appeal to your
gratitude; let us wonder at the reigning grace, which has caused us to
fulfill the promise, for have been sweetly compelled to call him the Lord our
righteousness.
First, then, He is so. Jesus Christ is the
Lord our righteousness. There are but three words, “JEHOVAH”—for so it is
in the original,—“OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS.’ He is Jehovah. Read that verse, and you
will clearly perceive that the Messias of the Jews, Jesus of Nazareth the
Saviour of the Gentiles, is certainly Jehovah. He hath the incommunicable title
of the Most High God. “Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that I will raise
unto David a righteous branch, and a king shall reign and prosper, and shall
execute judgment and justice in the earth. In his days Judah shall be saved, and
Israel shall dwell safely: and this is his name whereby he shall be called, THE
LORD OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS.” Oh, ye Arians and Socinians, who monstrously deny the
Lord who bought you and put him to open shame by denying his divinity, read you
that verse and let your blasphemous tongues be silent, and let your obdurate
hearts melt in penitence because ye have so foully sinned against him. He is
Jehovah, or, mark you, the whole of God’s word is false, and there is no noun
for a sinner’s hope. We know, and this day we testify in his name, that the very
Christ who did lie in the manger as an infant was infinite even then; that he
who cried, cried for very pain as a child, was nevertheless saluted at that very
moment as God by the songs of the creatures that his hands had made. He who
walked in pain over the flinty acres of Palestine, was at the same time
possessor of heaven and earth. He who had not where to lay his head, and was
despised and rejected of men, was at the same instant God over all, blessed for
evermore. He that sweat great drops of blood did bear the earth upon his
shoulders. He who was flagellated in Pilate’s hall was adored by spirits of the
just made perfect. He who did hang upon the tree had the oration hanging upon
him. He who died on the cross was the ever living, the everlasting One. As a man
he died, as God he lives. As Mary’s son he bled, as the son of the Eternal God
he had the sway and the dominion over all the world. In nature Christ proves
himself to be universal God. Without him was not anything made that was made. By
him all things consist. Who less than God could make the heavens and the earth?
Bow before him, bow before him, for he made you, and should not the creatures
acknowledge their Creator?
Providence attests his Godhead. He upholdeth all
things by the word of his power Creatures that are animate have their breath
from his nostrils; inanimate creatures that are strong and mighty stand only by
his strength. He can say concerning the earth, “I bear the pillars thereof.” In
the deep foundations of the sea his power is felt, and in the towering arches of
the starry heavens his might is recognized to the full. And as for Grace, we
claim for Christ that he is Jehovah in the great kingdom of his grace. Who less
than God could have carried your sins and mine and cast them all away? Who less
than God could have interposed to deliver us from the jaws of hell’s lions, and
bring us up from the pit, having found a ransom? On whom less than God could we
rely to keep us from the innumerable temptations that beset us? How can he be
less than God, when he says, “Lo, I am with you always, unto the end of the
world?” How could he be omnipresent if he were not God! How could he hear our
prayers, the prayers of millions, scattered through the leagues of earth, and
attend to them all, and give acceptance to all, if he were not infinite in
understanding and infinite in merit? How were this if he were less than God? Let
Atheists scoff, let Deists sneer, let the vain Socinian boast, let the Arian
lift up his puny voice, but we will glory in this fact, that he that bought us
with his blood is Jehovah—very God of very God. At his footstool we bow and pay
him the very homage that we pay to his Father and to the Spirit.
“Blessings more than we can give,
Be Lord for ever thine.”
But the text speaks about righteousness too—“Jehovah
our righteousness.” And he is so. Christ in his life was so righteous, that we
may say of the life, taken as a vehicle, that it is righteousness itself. Christ
is the law incarnate Understand me. He lived out the law of God to the very
full, and while you see God’s precepts written in fire on Sinai’s brow, you see
them written in flesh in the person of Christ.
“My dear Redeemer and my Lord,
I read my duty in thy word,
But in thy life the law appears
Drawn out in living characters.”
He never offended against the commands of the Just
One. From his eye there never flashed the fire of unhallowed anger. On his lip
there did never hang the unjust of licentious word. His heart was never stirred
by the breath of sin or the taint of iniquity. In the secret of his reins no
fault was hidden. In his understanding was no defect; in his judgment no error.
In his miracles there was no ostentation. In him there was indeed no guile. His
powers being ruled by his understanding, all of them acted and co-acted to
perfection’s very self, so that never was there any flaw of omission or stain of
commission. The law consists in this first, “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God
with all thy heart.” He did so. It was his meat and his drink to do the will of
him that sent him. Never man spent himself as he did. Hunger and thirst and
nakedness were nothing to him, nor death itself if he might so be baptised with
the baptism wherewith he must be baptized, and drink the cup which his Father
had set before him. The law consists also in this, “Thou shalt love thy neighbor
as thyself.” In all he did, and in all he suffered he more than fulfilled the
precept, for “he saved others himself he could not save.” He exhausted the
utmost resources of love in the deep devotion and self-sacrifice of loving. He
loved man better than his own life. He would sooner be spit upon than that man
should be cast into the flames of hell and sooner yield up the ghost in agonies
that cannot be described than that the souls his Father gave him should be cast
away. He carried out the law, then, I say to the very letter he spelt out its
mystic syllables, and verily he magnified it, and made it honorable. He loved
the Lord his God, with all his heart, and soul, and mind, and he loved his
neighbors as himself. Jesus Christ was righteousness impersonated. “Which of you
convinceth me of sin?” he might well say. One thousand eight hundred years have
passed since then, and blasphemy itself has not been able to charge him with a
fault. Strange as it may appear, the most perverted judges have nevertheless
acknowledged the awful dignity of his character. They have railed at his
miracles; they have denied his Godhead; but his righteous character I know not
that they have dared to impugn. They have hatched jokes about his generation;
they have made his poverty a jest, and his death has been the theme of ribald
song; but his life has staggered even the most unbelieving, and made the
careless wonder how such a character could have been conceived even if it be a
fiction, and much more, how it could have been executed if it be a fact. No one
that I know of has dared to charge Christ with unrighteousness to man, or with a
want of devotedness to God. See then, it is so. We do not stay to prove his
righteousness any more than we did to prove his Godhead. The day is coming when
men shall acknowledge him to be Jehovah, and when looking upon all his life
while he was incarnate here, they shall be compelled to say that his life was
righteousness itself. The pith, however, of the title, lies in the little word
“our,”—“Jehovah our righteousness.” This is the grappling iron with which
we get a hold on him—this is the anchor which dives into the bottom of this
great deep of his immaculate righteousness. This is the saved rivet by which our
souls are joined to him. This is the blessed hand with which our soul toucheth
him, and he becometh to us all in all, “Jehovah our Righteousness”
You will now observe that there is a most precious
doctrine unfolded in this title of our Lord and Saviour. I think we may
take it thus: When we believe in Christ, by faith we receive our justification.
As the merit of his blood takes away our sin, so the merit of his obedience is
imputed to us for righteousness. We are considered, as soon as we believe, as
though the works of Christ here our works. God looks upon us as though that
perfect obedience, of which I have just now spoken, had been performed by
ourselves,—as though our hands had been bony at the loom, an though the fabric
and the stuff which have been worked up into the fine linen, which is the
righteousness of the saints, had been grown in our own fields. God considers us
as though we were Christ—looks upon us as though his life had been our
life—and accepts, blesses, and rewards us as though all that he did had been
done by us, his believing people. Accordingly, if you will turn to the
thirty-third chapter of this same prophet Jeremiah, and look at the sixteenth
verse, you will see it written, “This is the name wherewith she shall be
called, the Lord our righteousness.” I know that Socinus in his day used to call
this an execrable, detectable, and licentious doctrine: probably it was, because
he was an execrable, detectable, and licentious man. Many men use their own
names when they are applying names to other persons; they are so well acquainted
with their own characters, and so suspicious of themselves, that they think it
best, before another can express the suspicion, to attach the very same
accusation to someone else. Now we hold, you know, that this doctrine is not
execrable, but most delightful, that it is not abominable, but Godlike, that it
is not licentious, but holy: and let others say what they will of it, we will
repeat the praise which we have been singing,—
“Jesus, thy perfect righteousness
My beauty is, my glorious dress;”
and we will day when all things shall be tried by
fire, for we feel confident that—
“Bold shall we stand in that great day,
For who aught to our charge shall lay,”
when we are clothed with the righteousness divine?
Imputation, so far from being an exceptional case
with regard to the righteousness of Christ, lies at the very bottom of the
entire teaching of Scripture. How did we fall, my brethren? We fell by the
imputation of Adam’s sin to us. Adam was our federal head; he represented us;
and when he sinned, we sinned representatively in him, and what he did was
imputed to us. You say that you never agreed to the imputation. Nay, but I would
not have you say thus, for as by representation we fell, it is by the
representative system that we rise. The angels fell personally and individually,
and they never rise, but we fell in another, and we have therefore the power
given by divine grace to rise in another. The root of the fall is found in the
federal relationship of Adam to his seed; thus we fell by imputation. Is it any
wonder that we should rise by imputation? Deny this doctrine, and I ask you—How
are men pardoned at all? Are they not pardoned because satisfaction has been
offered for sin by Christ? Very well then, but that satisfaction must be imputed
to them, or else how is God just in giving to them the results of the death of
another, unless that death of the other be fire? of all imputed to them? When we
say that the righteousness of Christ is imputed to an believing souls, we do not
hold forth an exceptional theory, but we expound a grand truth, which is so
consistent with the theory of the fall and the plan of pardon, that it must be
maintained in order to make the gospel clear. I think it was this doctrine which
Martin Luther called the article of standing or falling of the Church. I find a
passage in his works which seems to me to refer to this doctrine rather than to
justification by faith. He ought certainly to have said, “Justification by faith
is the doctrine of standing or falling of the Church.” But in Luther’s
mind, imputed righteousness we, so interwoven with justification by faith, that
he could not see any distinction between the two. And I must confess, in trying
to observe a difference, I do not see much. I must give up justification by
faith if I give up imputed righteousness. True justification by faith is the
surface soil, but then imputed righteousness is the granite rock which lies
underneath it; and if you dig down through the great truth of a sinners being
justified by faith in Christ, you must, as I believe, inevitably come to the
doctrine of the imputed righteousness of Christ as the basis and foundation on
which that simple doctrine rests.
And now let us stop a moment and think over this
whole title—“The Lord our righteousness.” Brethren, the Law-giver has himself
obeyed the law Do you not think that his obedience will be sufficient? Jehovah
has himself become man that so he may do man’s work: think you that he has done
it imperfectly? Jehovah—he who girds the angels that excel in strength—has taken
upon him the form of a servant that he may become obedient: think you that his
service will be incomplete? Let the fact that the Saviour is Jehovah strengthen
your confidence. Be ye bold. Be ye very courageous. Face heaven, and earth, and
hell with the challenge of the apostle. “Who shall say anything to the charge of
God’s elect? “Look back upon your past sins, look upon your present infirmities,
and all your future errors, and while you weep the tears of repentance, let no
fear of damnation blanch your cheek. You stand before God to-day robed in your
Saviour’s garments, “with his spotless vestments on, holy as the Holy One.” Not
Adam when he walked in Eden’s bowers was more accepted than you are,—not more
pleasing to the eye of the all-judging, the sin-hating God than you are if
clothed in Jesus’ righteousness and sprinkled with his blood. You have a better
righteousness than Adam had. He had a human righteousness; your garments are
divine. He had a robe complete, it is true, but the earth had woven it. You have
a garment as complete, but heaven has made it for you to wear. Go up and
down in the strength of this great truth and boast exceedingly, and glory in
your God; and let this be on the top and summit of your heart and soul:
“Jehovah, the Lord our righteousness.”
You will remember that in Scripture, Christ’s
righteousness is compared to fair white linen; then I am, if I wear it, without
spot. It is compared to wrought gold; then I am, if I wear it, dignified and
beautiful, and worthy to sit at the wedding feast of the King of kings. It is
compared, in the parable of the prodigal son, to the best robe; then I wear a
better robe than angels have, full they have not the best; but I, poor prodigal,
once clothed in rage, companion to the nobility of the stye,—I, fresh from the
husks that swine do eat, am nevertheless clothed in the best robe, and am so
accepted in the Beloved.
Moreover, it is also everlasting righteousness. Oh!
this is, perhaps, the fairest point of it—that the robe be shall never be worn
out; no thread of it shall ever give way. It shall never hang in tatters upon
the sinner’s back. He shall live, and even though it were a Methusaleh’s life,
the robe shall be as if it were woven yesterday. He shall pass through the
stream of death, and the black stream shall not foul it. He shall climb the
hills of heaven, and the angels shall wonder what this whiteness is which the
sinner wears, and think that some new star is coming up from earth to thine in
heaven. He shall wear it among principalities and powers, and find himself no
whit inferior to them all. Cherubic garments and seraphic mantles shall not be
so lordly so priestly, so divine, as this robe of righteousness this everlasting
perfection which Christ has wrought out, and brought in and given to all his
people. Glory unto thee, O Jesus, glory unto thee! Unto thee be hallels for
ever; Hallelu—jah! Thou art you—“Jehovah, the Lord our righteousness.”
II. Having thus expounded and vindicated this title
of our Saviour, I would now APPEAL TO YOUR FAITH.
Let us call him so. “This is the name whereby he
shall be called, the Lord our righteousness.” Let us call him by this
great name, which the mouth of the Lord of Hosts hath named. Let us call
him—poor sinners!—even we, who are today smitten down with grief on account of
sin. I want this text to be fulfilled in your ears and in your case to-day. You
are guilty. Your own conscience acknowledges that the law condemns you, and you
dread the penalty. Soul! he that trusteth Christ Jesus is saved, and he that
believeth on him is not condemned. To every trustful spirit Christ is “the Lord
our righteousness.” Call him so, I pray thee. “I have no good thing of my own,”
sayest thou? Here is every good thing in him. “I have broken the law,” sayest
thou? There is his blood for thee. Believe in him, he will wash thee. “But then
I have not kept the law. “There is his keeping of the law for thee. Take it,
sinner, take it. Believe on him. “Oh, but I dare not,” saith one. Do him the
honor to dare it. “Oh, but it seems impossible.” Honour him by believing the
impossibility then. “Oh, but how can he save such a wretch as I am?” Soul!
Christ is glorified in saving wretches. As I told you the other day, Christ
cures incurable sinners; so I say now he accepts unacceptable sinners. He
receives sinners that think they are not fit to be received. Only do thou trust
him and say, “He shall be my righteousness to-day.” “But suppose I should
do it and be presumptuous? It is impossible. He bids you, he commands you. Let
that be your warrant. “This is the commandment, that ye believe on Jesus
Christ whom he hath sent.” If you cannot say it with a loud voice, yet with the
trembling silence of your soul let heaven hear it. Yes, Jesus, “All unholy and
unclean, I am nothing else but sin, yet I dare with fervent venture of these
quivering lips to call thee, and to call upon thee now, as the Lord my
righteousness.”
And you who have passed from a state of trembling
hope into that of lively faith, I beseech you call him so. Let your faith say,
as you see him suffering, bleeding, dying, “Thus my sins were washed away.” But
let not your faith stay there. As you see him sweating, toiling, living a
self-denying laborious life, say, “Thus the law was kept for me.” Come up to the
foot of Sinai now, and if you see its lightnings flash, and hear its thunders
roar, be brave, and say like Moses, “I will ascend above those thunders, I will
stand enwrapped within the storm-cloud, and I will talk with God, for I have no
cause for fear, there are no thunderbolts for me; for me no lightning flash can
spend its arrow, I am perfectly, completely justified in the sight of God,
through the righteousness of Jesus Christ.” Say that, child of God! Does
yesterday’s sin make thee stammer? In the teeth of all thy sins believe that he
is thy righteousness still. Thy good works do not improve his righteousness; thy
bad works do not sully it. This is a robe which thy best deeds cannot mend and
thy worst deeds cannot mar. Thou standest in him, not in thyself. Whatever,
then, thy doubts and fears may have been, do now, poor troubled, distressed,
distracted believer, say again, “Yes, he is the Lord my righteousness.”
And some of us can say it yet better than that: for
we can say it not merely by faith, but by fruition. We remember well the day
when we first called him “the Lord our righteousness.” Oh, the peace it brought,
the joy, the gladness, the transport! Since then we have proved it to he true,
for we have had privileges we could not have had if he had not been our
righteousness. We have had the privilege of reconciliation with God; and He
could not be reconciled to one that had not a perfect righteousness, we have had
access with boldness to God himself, and He would never have suffered us to have
access if we had not worn our brother’s garments. We have had adoption into the
family, and the Spirit of adoption, and God could not have adopted into his
family any but righteous ones. How should the righteous Father be God of an
unrighteous family? Our prayers have been heard, and we have had gracious
answers, and that could not have been—for he could not heal the prayer of the
wicked; he could not have heard us—if it had not been that he seemed to hear
Christ crying through us, and to have seen Christ’s merits in us. And therefore
granted the desire of our hearts. We have had in daily rich and sweet experience
such manifestations of fellowship with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ,
that to us it is a matter of fact as well as a matter of faith, a matter of
praise as well as a matter of profession, that Jesus Christ is “the Lord our
righteousness.”
Brethren, your divinity must be experimental or it
will not profit you. I would not give a straw for your theology if you learned
it merely out of a pollee, or out of a system of man’s teaching. No, no, we must
prove these things to be true in our lives. I can say it, and I must say it—the
testimony is not egotistical—I know there is a comfort in the faith of
Christ’s imputed righteousness which no other doctrine can yield. There is
something that a man can sleep on and wake on, can live on and die on, in the
firm conviction that he is received by God as though the deeds of Christ were
his deeds, and the righteousness of Christ his righteousness. Take away his
filthy garments from him, set a fair mitre on his head, array him in fine linen.
O, Joshua, priest of the Most High, thou man greatly beloved, come thou forth
now in thy garments and offer acceptable sacrifice, seeing, thou wearest the
garments of Jesus, our great High Priest.” Let us, then, call upon his
name and extol him in our worship as “the Lord our righteousness.”
And now let the whole universal Church of Christ, in
one glad song, call Jesus Christ the Lord their righteousness. Wake up, ye isles
of the sea; shout, thou wilderness that Kedar doth inhabit; ye people of God,
scattered and peeled, banished among the heathen, vexed with the filthy
conversation of the idolaters, from your huts, from the destitute places that ye
inhabit, sing, “The Lord our righteousness!” Let no heir of heaven be silent at
this hour; let every soul be stirred. Though tempest-tossed and half a wreck,
yet, mariner in Christ, say, “Thou art the Lord my righteousness.” Though cast
down into the deep dungeon, thou despairing soul, yet say, “The Lord my
righteousness.” Let no one of the entire believing family keel; back his song
but together let us sing, “The Lord our righteousness.” And you, ye spirits that
walk in white, ye glorious ones that “day without night circle his throne
rejoicing,” ye saints that ere his day beheld him, and died, not having received
the promise, but having beheld it afar off,—Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and
Moses, and Samuel, and Jephthah, and David, and Solomon, and all the mighty
host, sing ye, sing ye, sing ye unto him to-day; and let this be the summit of
your song, “The Lord our righteousness.” Our spirit bows before him now. Sweet
fellowship beyond the stream! Me clasp our hands with those that went before;
and while the cherubim can only say, “Holy, holy, holy; he is righteous,” we
lift up a higher note, and say, “yes, thrice holy, but the Lord our
righteousness is he.” Let none, then, of all his saints in heaven and in earth,
refuse to call him “the Lord our righteousness”
III. I now conclude, in the third place, by
appealing to your GRATITUDE. Let us admire that wonderful and reigning grace
which has led you and me to call him, “The Lord our righteousness.”
When I look back some ten or twelve years upon a
foolish boy, who cared little for the things of God, who was burdened with an
awful sense of sin, and thought that he never could be pardoned—clad so often
driven to the borders of despair that he was fain to make away with his own
life, because he thought there was no happiness on earth for him—I can only say
for my own self. O the riches of the grace of God in Christ, that ever I
should stand not only conscious that he is the Lord my righteousness, but to
preach him to you! O God, thou hast done wonderful things! Thou saidst by the
mouth of Jeremy, “This is the name whereby he shall be called.” I call him so
this day from my inmost soul. Jesus of Nazareth! suffering man! glorious God!
thou art the Lord my righteousness! If I were to pass this question round these
galleries, and down below oh, what hundreds of responses would there be from
such as joyously obey the summons of gratitude! And among those about to be
added to the Church (I am sure they would permit me to tell, for the honor of
the glorious grace of God), there are very many who are special instances of
that grace which has sweetly constrained them to call Christ their
righteousness. Some of them, according to their own concession before us at the
Church meeting, were not only revelling in drunkenness, one until he had well
nigh drank away his reason by thirty years of habitual intoxication; but others
of them were unclean and unchaste, till they had rioted in debauchery, and gone
to the utmost lengths of crime. There be many in this place to-day, who would
not, though they would blush for the past, refuse to tell, to the honor of
redeeming grace, that once they had committed every crime in the catalogue
except murder; and if they have not committed that, it was nothing but the
sovereign grace of God that restrained them. Some members of this Church have
sinned in every part of the world—have sinned in every quarter of the globe—have
committed every form of lust and vice—and if you had asked them ten years ago
whether they should ever be in a place of worship, they would have repelled with
an oath what they would have thought an insult, and would have cursed you for
supposing that they should so degrade themselves as to profess the faith of
Christ. Brothers and sisters, I should not be surprised if you were to stand up
now and say, “Yes, still Jehovah Jesus is the Lord our righteousness.” Oh!—
“Wonders of grace to God belong;
Repeat his mercies in your song.”
Who would have thought that the lip of the
blasphemer should fulfill that very prophecy—that the tongue that could scarce
move without an oath should, nevertheless, glorify Christ,—that the heart that
was black with accumulated lust,—the mouth which must have become a very
sepulcher, breathing forth deadly miasma, has now become a place for song, and
the heart a house for music, while heart and tongue say, “Yes, he is the Lord my
righteousness this very day!”
It would be a wonder if God should vow that the
devils should yet sing his praise; but I do not think it would be a greater
wonder than when he makes some of us sing his glorious praise. Brethren, you and
I know that there is nothing in freewill doctrine; for in our case, at any rate,
it was not true. Left to ourselves, where should we have been? What could
Arminianism have done for us? Oh, no! it was irresistible grace that brought us
to call him “the Lord our righteousness.” It was that divine shall that
broke in pieces our will. It was that strong arm that broke the iron
sinew of our proud neck, and made us bow, even us, who would not have this man
to reign over as. It was his finger that opened the blind eye; for once we could
see now beauty in him. It was his breath that thawed our icy heart; for once we
felt no love to him;—
“But now, subdued by sovereign grace,
Our spirit longs for his embrace;
Our beauty this our glorious dress,
Jesus the Lord our righteousness.”
And this shall be our glory here, and our song
forever—“The Lord our righteousness.”
Delivered on Sunday Morning, June 2nd, 1861 by the
Rev. C. H. SPURGEON,
At the Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington
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