SIR ROBERT ANDERSON
Secret Service Theologian
REDEMPTION TRUTHS
CHAPTER 12
HOPE OF THE CHRISTIAN
"Blessed be the
God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to His great mercy begat
us again unto a living hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead."
1 Peter 1:3 RV
THE figment of "baptismal regeneration"
assumes that the new birth is peculiar to the Christian dispensation. But the
striking fact that the new birth is never mentioned in the writings of the
Apostle Paul, makes it plain that there is nothing distinctively Christian in
the doctrine. No one who has not experienced the new birth can ever see the
kingdom of God. This is a truth for all time, from the Eden Fall down to the
judgment of the Great Day. But in this Christian dispensation it is merged in
the higher truth of the baptism of the Holy Spirit, by which the sinner who
believes becomes one with Christ.
And this truth of the oneness of the
believer with Christ reminds us that the teaching of the types is in part by
contrast. The sin-offerings of the law could neither take away sin, nor effect
any change in the offerer. But "He was manifested to take away sins"; and the
truth that Christ died for us has, for the believer, another side, namely, that
"we died with Christ." (Romans 6:8, R. V.) And let no one suppose that this is
an experience to be attained by a life of special saintship. The chapter from
which the words are quoted was addressed to those who knew so little of grace
that they could raise the question, "Shall we continue in sin, that grace may
abound?" (Romans 6:1.) It is not an experience, but a truth to be made the
basis of all experience in a grace-taught life.
But there is yet another
contrast here. Synonyms are few in Scripture, and the Cross means more than the
death of Christ. Death was the Divine judgment upon the sin-bearer; but "the
Cross" speaks also of shame and the contempt of men, poured out without measure
upon Him who died. And this is the separating power of Calvary. The Israelite
returned from his sin-offering to his life in the camp. To, the Christian, the
exhortation comes, "Let us go forth therefore unto Him without the camp,
bearing his reproach." (Hebrews 13:13.)1 They who "mind earthly things" are
"the enemies of the Cross of Christ." (Philippians 3:18.)
But this is
forgotten to-day, and the words that follow those last quoted remind us of a
truth which is but little known. The pagan asceticism which corrupted the
Church of the Fathers was due in part to the Gnostic error of regarding the
body as an evil thing. And this error has so permeated the theology of
Christendom that our translators misread the Apostles words, "Who shall
change the body of our humiliation?" (Philippians 3:21.) "The body of our
humiliation" - this outward tabernacle of God begotten - is not "vile," but
holy, and should be "yielded to God as an acceptable sacrifice."
Scripture distinguishes between the sin of Eve and the sin of Adam. Words
that have been used unnumbered times in every age might be applied in a special
sense to the Eden Fall "The woman was weak, and the man was wicked." For, we
are expressly told, "Adam was not deceived" - he sinned with his eyes wide
open. But though the woman fell into transgression, she was "thoroughly
deceived." (1 Timothy 2:14.)2 The devil beguiled her into believing wrong was
right, as he still beguiles so many of her children. What interval elapsed
before Adam fell we know not. And it is idle to speculate what might have been
had he stood true to God. But this we know, that sin meant not only death and
judgment for man as a moral being under responsibility to God, but that it
meant also his ruin as Gods creature. And our bodies are involved in this
creature ruin. And though they are within the ransom already paid, their
redemption is still future. Our bodies belong to the Lord Who died for us, and
they are yet to be "fashioned like unto His glorious body."
Man may thus
be regarded either as a doomed sinner, or as a ruined creature. He is not only
Adams son, but Eves. And while death and judgment are past for the
believer in Christ, and the salvation of the soul is a present blessing, yet,
as a creature, the Christian still groans under the ruin. "Even we ourselves
groan within ourselves, waiting for our adoption, to wit, the redemption of our
body."
This is "salvation by hope." But the hope is far removed from
doubt. For God has promised, and the work is His. The redeemed sinner is
"foreordained to be conformed to the image of His Son." (Romans
8:20-29.)
"What, then, shall we say to these things? If God be for us, who
can be against us? He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us
all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things? Who shall lay
anything to the charge of Gods elect? It is God that justifieth. Who is
He that condemneth? It is Christ that died, yea, rather, that is risen again,
Who is even at the right hand of God, Who also maketh intercession for us. Who
shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or
persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? As it is written, For
Thy sake we are killed all the day long; we are accounted as sheep for the
slaughter. Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him
that loved us. For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels,
nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor
height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from
the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord." (Romans
8:31-39.)
But this is by no means what men "say to these things." The
inspired Apostle goes on to speak of great dispensational problems, mysteries
of the Divine purposes for earth. He tells of the goodness and severity of God;
how Israel, the covenant people, has been set aside, and Gentiles, who have no
covenant, have been called to the highest place of privilege and blessing. But
Israel fell through unbelief, and the Gentile stands by faith. The Gentile,
therefore, shall be "cut off," and Israel grafted into the olive tree again.
The devil sometimes wins the skirmish; God always wins the battle. And
Gods purposes, that have seemingly been thwarted by sin, shall at last
appear as part of one great plan which includes the fulfillment of them all.
And the contemplation of this leads the Apostle to fall upon his knees in
adoring wonder, as he exclaims,
"O the depth of the riches both of the
wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways
past finding out!" (Romans 11:33.)
But there are pulpits without number
in this "Christian" land that know nothing of these great dispensational
truths. And even men who are Bible students, and spiritual withal, blindly
pervert them into a denial, or at least a weakening: of the great revelation of
grace of which they are a part. How different the Divine purpose with which
they have been given us, witness the words that follow:
"I beseech
you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living
sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your reasonable service." (Romans
12:1.)
Your bodies, mark, He would thus stamp out the pagan heresy of
the "vile body," which is so natural to us. For even "the body of our
humiliation" is holy, and will prove an acceptable sacrifice. And the
exhortation is not based upon terror or doubt, but upon "the mercies of God."
For while Law thunders forth, "Thou shalt not," and points to the great white
throne and the day of wrath, Grace speaks with the voice of entreaty, and
appeals to "the mercies of God."
And yet a warning is needed here.
Grace is not a display of Divine weakness; nor does it lead to levity in those
whom it blesses. It is the crowning revelation of Gods sovereignty, and
it trains men for a life of self-control and righteousness and godliness. And,
as we have seen, the record of each life is yet to be unfolded at the
judgment-seat of Christ. The practical exhortations which follow the entreaty
lead up to the solemn warning that "Each one of us shall give account of
himself to God." (Romans 14:12.) Our apprehension of the dignity and
blessedness of the Christian life must not make us forget its
solemnities.
But the redeemed are "fore-ordained to be conformed to the
image of His Son, in order that He might be the firstborn among many brethren."
(Romans 8:29.) The glory of Christ is the supreme purpose in our redemption.
While this fact brings confidence and joy to the Christian, unbelief resents
it. In all "humanity gospels" man is first, not God, and redemption is only a
fitting act of reparation upon Gods part for permitting sin to come into
the world, or at best a sublime scheme for the elevation of the race. Such is
the teaching which is popular today.
Unlike these false evangels, the
Calvinistic gospel is, on its positive side, both true and Scriptural. But
though Calvins apprehension of truth was far in advance of modern
"Calvinism," it was narrowed by the theology of the Latin fathers, and
especially of Augustine, by whom the great revelation of grace was never
grasped. Universal redemption is utterly false; but universal reconciliation is
a Divine truth. It is indeed an accomplished fact. And in virtue of it, the
(lower) creation shall yet be delivered from the bondage of the corruption (to
which mans sin has subjected it) into the liberty of the glory of the
children of God. But the deliverance of the creature is still future. For while
the sinner receives the reconciliation when he believes in Christ, "the earnest
expectation of the creation waiteth for the revealing of the sons of God."
(Romans 19:21.) And in contrast with the unintelligent groan of the creation,
the groan of those "who have the first-fruits of the Spirit" is instinct with
hope. And both the blind expectation of the creature and the intelligent
yearning of spiritual men shall be satisfied in the day of "the manifestation
of the sons of God." "Beloved, now are we the sons of God," a further word
declares, "And it doth not yet appear what we shall be; but we know that when
He shall appear, we shall be like Him; for we shall see Him as He is." (1 John
3:2)
"When He shall appear." Here the ways divide, and what passes for
"the Christian religion" definitely parts company with Christian truth. That
"He shall come to judge the quick and the dead" is, no doubt, an article in the
creed of Christendom. But with most men even this is unreal. And how, moreover,
can it be described as a hope? The Christian has been "begotten to a living
hope." And this hope is no mere dogma, no vague forecast, no "cunningly devised
fable." It molds character and controls conduct." He that hath this hope set on
Him purifies himself, even as He is pure." (1 John 3:3.) The grace of God that
brings salvation teaches those whom it saves, and its teaching leads them to
live "soberly, righteously, and godly in this present world; looking for the
blessed hope and appearing of the glory of our great God and Saviour Jesus
Christ." (Titus 2:11-13)
"I will come again and receive you to Myself"
was His parting promise on the night of the betrayal. Does this point to the
great day of wrath? The suggestion is absurd. But, we are told, it means the
death of the believer. Here we may sadly admit that such a belief is not more
false and foolish than many another that is popularly held. Death is not His
coming again to us, but our going to Him. And while, for the Christian, death
has no terrors - for sin is gone, and therefore it has lost its sting - it is
none the less an outrage, bringing home to us the fact of our still unrepaired
ruin as fallen creatures.
And while the "intermediate state" is one of
rest and blessedness, consciously enjoyed with Christ, we must guard against
the sentiment which connects it with thoughts of glory and "the activities of
higher service above." The condition of the dead in Christ is as definitely one
of expectancy as is that of the living Christian here. There can be no glory
and no service until the realization of the hope to which they were begotten by
His resurrection from the dead.
For the dead in Christ, resurrection is
the crown and climax of redemption. The Lord Jesus Christ has triumphed over
death. But more than this, He "gives the victory to us." Death therefore has no
longer any claim upon His people. It is one of the "mysteries" of the faith
that, at the coming of the Lord, His people then living on earth shall pass at
once to glory, "with death untasted and the grave unknown." The corruptible
shall put on incorruption, the mortal immortality. And "then shall be brought
to pass the saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory." (1
Corinthians 15:51-57; 1 Thessalonians 4:15-17.)
Such, then, is the
distinctive hope of Christianity, not pardon, not peace, most certainly not
death, but the appearing in glory of Him Whom the world last saw as "the
Crucified Jew," whom His people worship as enthroned at the right hand of God.
For what constitutes a Christian is not accepting the Christians creed,
but accepting Christ as Saviour and Lord. It is a question of personal loyalty
and love. When the Apostle Paul took up the pen to sign the Epistle to the
Corinthians, he added the solemn postscript, "If any man love not the Lord
Jesus Christ let him be accursed. The Lord is coming." And to those, "who have
loved His appearing" will be given "the crown of righteousness" in that
day.
Although this is in the very warp and woof of the Christian
revelation, it has, I repeat, no place in the creed of Christendom, and it is
generally ignored in the teaching of the pulpit. For while the pulpit is much
concerned with the Christian life and the ordinances of religion, it is
strangely economical of truth that is the power of the Christian life, and to
which ordinances owe their significance and value.
Even the Lords
Supper, designed to link the coming with the Cross, is reduced to the level of
the cult of the crucifix. With the majority of Christians it is nothing but a
memorial of a dead Christ. It is most truly a showing forth the Lords
death, but it is a showing forth His death till He comes. It is not with a dead
Christ that we have to do. Our Lord and Saviour is the Christ who died, but who
rose again, and who is alive for evermore. "Do this in remembrance of ME" is
His word to all who mourn His absence and long for His return. "Surely I come
quickly" are the last words that have reached earth from heaven; and "Even so,
come Lord Jesus," is the response He looks for from His people. (Revelation
22:20.)
Go To Chapter Thirteen
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