ONE JOHN
Parts 11 - 20
XI. THE GUILELESS SPIRIT
ABIDING IN THE LIGHT IN ITS THREEFOLD ASPECT OF CHILDHOOD,
FATHERHOOD, AND YOUTH.
I write unto you, little children, because your sins
are forgiven you for his name's sake. I write unto you, fathers, because ye
have known him that is from the beginning. I write unto you, young men, because
ye have overcome the wicked one. I write [have written] unto you, little
children, because ye have known the Father. I have written unto you, fathers,
because ye have known him that is from the beginning. I have written unto you,
young men, because ye are strong, and the word of God abideth in you, and ye
have overcome the wicked one. 1 John 2: 12-14.
These verses form,
I think, a break or interruption in the apostle's line of argument. There is,
as it were, a pause. John calls upon those to whom he writes to consider, not
only what he is writing to them, but what they themselves are to whom he is
writing what is their character and standing; what he is entitled to assume in
and about them as likely to ensure a favourable reception of his message. This
is a common apostolic method. It is a courteous and complimentary way of
insinuating advice; taking for granted the attainments to be enforced. But it
is far more than that; and it is so emphatically here. It is a trumpet-call,
summoning all the faithful to a recognition of their real and true position
before God; and that with a view to theft receiving aright what his servant is
now writing to themor, it may be, before this letter reaches them, has
written to themof the divine fellowship of light and love.
How
then does John address us here? As "little children," "fathers," "young men."
These triads or triplets come in twice. There are two sets of propositions or
state-merits, each of them three in number, and evidently corresponding and
parallel to one another. The one set of three is introduced by the verb in the
present tense, "I write;" the other set of three by the verb in the past tense,
"I have written." For the authority of manuscripts, critically weighed, as well
as the whole structure and symmetry of the passage, requires us so far to amend
our present text as to make the last clause of the thirteenth verse consistent
with the fourteenth, "I have written unto you, little children." Clearly there
are two parallel lines running thus :-
I. "I write unto you, little children, because your sins are
forgiven you for his name's sake."
"I write unto you, fathers, because ye
have known him that is from the beginning."
"I write unto you, young men,
because ye have overcome the wicked one."
"I have written unto you, little
children, because ye have known the Father." "I have written unto you, fathers,
because ye have known him that is from the beginning." "I have written unto
you, young men, because ye are strong, and the word of God abideth in you, and
ye have overcome the wicked one. "
In either series, in each of
the two, "little children" is the endearing term first employed. It is not
indeed the same word in the original in both instances; but the words are of
the same import, and can scarcely be rendered differently. They are the words
usually employed by John, and employed by him indiscriminately, when he is
tenderly and affectionately addressing believers. They are, both of them, his
common and customary words of love -" little children," or babes, "children,"
or boys. Children, little children, they all are; all alike to whom, as he
says, he writes or has written. As such, as little children, he first addresses
them all, and appeals to them all collectively. But then, secondly, he
separates them into two classes,-" fathers" and "young men" - old and
spiritually exercised Christians on the one hand, and on the other hand, those
who are in the fresh and vigorous prime of recent but yet manly Christian
experience. All alike are "little children;" but some are "fathers," ripe for
glory; others are "young men," strong for work. Such, as I apprehend, is the
real primary meaning of this threefold appeal of John.
But what of the
repetition of it?- and the repetition of it with a change of the tense from the
present to the past?
It is a very emphatic reiteration; having in it a
pathos that should be very affecting. The apostle first realises his own
position as he is writing now, "I write." Then he realises what may be the
position of those to whom he writes when they receive what he is writing now.
To you it may come as what "I have written;" the writer having himself been
taken home. I am now writing to you as "little children;" to all of you alike I
am writing thus lovingly. To some of you, however, I write as to "fathers ;" to
others of you I write as to "young men." Let all that be marked and felt when
you come to read what I am now writing. All the more because you may have to
read it as what I have written; as my parting words to you. The present tense
answers well enough now, when I am writing. But I am an old man; and the past
tense may .be the right one very soon, even before you can be reading what I am
now writing. In any view receive it as what I solemnly and deliberately write;
or, if I am gone, as what I have solemnly and deliberately written; my last
legacy, my dying charge. Receive it as my full and final testimony to I you, on
the subject of what you ought to know, and to be and to do, as "little
children," as "fathers," as "young men." It is all I have to write: and I write
it with all the earnestness of one who, before you read it, may have passed
away. I write it as my farewell word.
Thus viewed, the appeal in these
verses is surely very impressive and affecting. Let us look at it, first in
itself, and secondly in the connection in which it stands. I. Considered in
itself, the appeal recognises, on the one hand, a common character in all
believers, that of "little children," and on the other hand a distinction
between "fathers" and "young men."
1. In addressing us all as little children, John
makes a distinction between his first and his second appeal. In the first it is
"because your sins are forgiven you for his name's sake ;" in the second it is
"because ye have known the Father." In addressing us as separated into two
classes,-as fathers and youths respectively,--he merely repeats in the second
appeal almost literally what he had said in the first. But in addressing us all
as his beloved little ones, he varies the thought. The variation, however, is
slight. It is the same thought in reality, only put in somewhat different
lights. For the Father is truly known, only in the forgiveness of our sins for
his Son's name sake. It is when we suffer the Son to take us by the hand and
lead us home to the Father, and when we discover, in our experience, how the
Father deals with us when the Son presents us to him, saying, "Behold I and the
little ones whom thou hast given me," - it is then, and then only, that we
begin to know the Father. Up till that time we have not known him; we have
worshipped him perhaps, but it has been ignorantly; we have misunderstood him,
and done him great injustice in our esteem of him. We have had hard thoughts of
him; of his character and government and law; of his treatment of us and his
requirements from us; or his ways and his commandments; nay, even of his very
mercy itself. But we are moved to trust in the name of Jesus, and to make trial
of the power of that name with the Father. And what a gushing tide of
forgiveness and fatherly love does it cause to rush in upon our souls! How rich
and free is the measure and manner of the Father's pardoning grace! We do thus
really know the Father; for we know him through our sense and experience of his
fatherly love in the forgiveness of our sins for his Son's name's sake.
2. The appeal is next made to the
two classes or companies into which we may be divided; those who are fathers in
Israel; and those who are young men. Ye fathers in Israeli the argument with
you is, that "ye have known him that is from the beginning." You have reached a
higher, deeper, more satisfying knowledge of Christ, as "him that is from the
beginning," than that which is common to all the household of faith, all the
little ones given to him by the father. Your clear and calm insight into the
glorious person of him for whose name's sake your sins are forgiven, and who
thus introduces you to the knowledge of the Father; your mature acquaintance
with him, in his eternal relation to the Father and oneness with the Father
from the beginning ;--should move you to give the more earnest heed to this
writing or epistle of mine both now and when I am gone.
Ye youths, ye
young men, the flower of the army of the Lord of Hosts! I have a hold on you
also. You I summon, "for ye have overcome the wicked one" (ver. 13); "ye are
strong, and the word of God abideth in you, and ye have overcome the wicked
one" (ver. 14). As good soldiers of Christ, I would remind you of your high
vocation; of what is committed to you; of what is expected of you. Your sphere
is the field of battle. The quiet of contemplative study may best suit aged
saints, advanced disciples, "fathers ;" who may best serve the cause by
enlarging, under the ;Spirit's teaching, their own and the Church's knowledge
of the Eternal Word; elevating their own and the Church's · views of the
Son in the bosom of the Father. But the vigour of spiritual youth points to the
never-ending conflict between the seed of the woman and the seed of the
serpent, as your special department. For you are called to wage war with
the wicked one. And .you have every encouragement to do so. You have overcome
him already in Christ, for he has overcome him. You have but to follow up and
follow out the conquest. You are strong, and the word of God abideth in you.
And through that word which testifies of Christ's victory abiding in you, the
foe is already vanquished. You have overcome the wicked one.
To
believers of all ages, to Christians in every stage of advancement, the apostle
thus appeals. He first urges arguments and considerations applicable to all
alike as little children; and then such as are proper to fathers, and such as
are proper to young men. By these various and accumulated motives, he conjures
us to give heed to his teaching in this epistle. It is a very solemn, as well
as a very full and comprehensive appeal. And the place in which it stands in
the epistle renders it still more emphatic.
II. It stands between two opposite precepts; the one
positive; the other negative; "Love the brotherhood" (vers. 9-11); "Love not
the world, neither the things that are in the world" (ver. 15). To love the
Father, and the brethren as the Father's family ;--not to love the world lying
in the wicked one ;--these are the contrasted commands between which the
apostle's earnest and affectionate appeals occur. Doubtless these appeals cover
the whole epistle; all that John is writing; all that they to whom he writes
are to regard him as having written, when the writing reaches them, perhaps
after the writer is no more. But they bear immediately on loving the brethren,
and not loving the world.
The distinction is created by what John has
just been dwelling upon; the "thing which is true in Christ and in you, that
the darkness is passing, and the true light is now shining." For light is a
divider. It was so at the first creation (Gen. 1: 3, 4): "God said, Let there
be light: and there was light. And God saw the light that it was good: and God
divided the light from the darkness;" he divided between the light and the
darkness. It is so in the new creation. The entrance of the light into the
world: its entrance into the hearts of as many as are in Christ; necessarily
causes a division. It unites by a new bond of brotherhood the children of the
light among themselves. And it separates between them and the world. The
separation, or distinction, is not of their own making, but of God's. He is in
the light. He is himself the light. It is he who is the divider, and not they.
Nor is the distinction of such a sort as to feed or nurse vaingloriousness on
our part, or to be invidious as regards the world. Far otherwise. It is fitted
to humble us in the very dust, as often as we think,--and when do we not
think?--of what we are in ourselves, and but for sovereign mercy must ever have
been of what many, very many, around us are; less guilty, by many
degrees, than we; and more likely than we to win, not only earth's approval,
but, one would almost say, even heaven's favourable regard too. What am I? And
what are they?.
Ah! it is in no spirit of supercilious self-complacency,
or self-congratulation, that we associate together as brethren in the Lord, if
indeed the true light is shining in us as in Christ, so as to show us the
blackness of the darkness that is passing, and in its passing is hurrying to a
fatal shipwreck so much that is fair and generous and lovely. No! nor is it
with cool indifference that we look on and see its victims struggling in its
fierce tide, or sinking lethargic in its quieter and deadlier eddies - feeling,
as we do, that there is not one among them who deserves the horrid doom so much
as we; and knowing as we do that there is not one whom grace may not make, as
grace alone makes any one of us, a member of the brotherhood of light. The
division which the light occasions assuredly affords no ground of boasting or
of disdain. Nevertheless, it is to be recognised and realised; we must
apprehend and feel it. One great design of John, in this whole epistle, is to
bring us to a full apprehension and feeling of it; of what it is; and of all
that it implies. The line is sharp; the preference must be decided. We have to
choose whom we are to love and like, the brethren, or the world.
Now it
is for the enforcing of a firm choice and a decided preference on the right
side, that John makes his double, and doubly emphatic, appeal to us, as little
children, fathers, young men. It is not for our consolation merely, our
personal satisfaction and comfortable assurance, that he reminds us of the
exceeding great privileges which, as little children, as fathers, as young men,
we possess; as little children, having our sins forgiven for the Son's name's
sake, and in that way knowing the Father; as fathers, knowing him that is from
the beginning; as young men, having overcome the wicked one. These are all high
and blessed attainments, and the consciousness of our right to them in Christ
is doubtless a legitimate source of humble, holy, thankful joy. But it is not
merely in order that our joy may be full that John dwells so earnestly on these
elements of our oneness with Christ in the light. It is for a more practical
purpose; that we may be roused to some adequate sense of the duty of love which
we owe to every brother in whom, as in Christ and in us, the darkness is
passing and the true light is now shining; and of the attitude which it is best
for us to maintain towards the world; best with a view to our own consistency
and safety; best also in the view of what is true kindness and faithfulness to
the world itself.
Let us look then again at these appeals, in the light
in which John's practical design or object in introducing them may seem to
place them. In so looking at them, it is not necessary now to consider the
apostle as formally classifying us, according to our different stages of
advancement, either in the life natural, or in the life spiritual. We all are,
we all should be, little children, fathers, young men ;--all three together
;--little children, in respect of our having our sins forgiven for the Son's
name's sake, and so knowing the Father; fathers, in respect of our loving
insight into the mystery of the Son's being from the beginning; young men, in
respect of our overcoming the wicked one. By what we are, in all these three
aspects of our spiritual history and experience, John solicits our attention to
this letter of his and to its teaching; specially that we may love our brother,
and not love the world.
I. We are
little children, and it is the instinct of little children to cling to home,
and shrink from the strange world outside. What makes us little children? What
but our being moved and made willing to. accept the forgiveness of our sins for
the Son's name's sake, and our coming, in that way, to know the Father? The
Lord says, "Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye cannot
enter into the kingdom of heaven." Our conversion therefore makes us little
children. For in our conversion the Spirit takes out of us the proud, cold,
hard heart of manhood: and creates in us the meek heart of childhood, of "the
holy child Jesus." For manhood's heart in me, hackneyed in suspicion and
selfishness, recoils from subjection to God, and resents the idea of dependence
and indebtedness. I must needs justify myself; I will do something to put
myself right. Even when I arise to go to my father, it is with the purpose of
asking a hired servant's food in recompense of a hired servant's work. I aha
only thoroughly subdued when! suffer my Father to forgive me freely, and take
me more lovingly to his bosom than he would have done if I had never gone
astray.
Then I am indeed a little child. All the pride of manhood's
self-righteousness, all the stubbornness of manhood's self-will, is gone out of
me. I am vain, as when I was an infant at my mother's knee, to have my burdened
and broken heart relieved by a flood of penitential tears, as I confess all,
and am clasped in an embrace that assures me, oh how feelingly! that all is
pardoned. Then, at last, I know the Father,--what sort of Father he is,--when
thus, for his Son's name's sake, who has got me, ah with what difficulty! to
let him relieve me of my load of guilt and grief, and bring me home to his
Father and mine,--that Father pardons all my iniquities.
Is it so with
me?. Then where now will my heart be? A little child's heart is in the home of
loving parents, and brothers, and sisters; away from that home he is uneasy and
unsatisfied. Houses of rarest splendour, scenes of fairest beauty, will not
reconcile him to prolonged absence from home, and prolonged residence
elsewhere. He pines for his father's well-known smile, and for the
companionship of those who share that smile with him. As to all else on earth,
he is a stranger among strangers. You are little children - are you not i -
converted and become as little children; suffering Jesus to bring you to the
Father, to receive his forgiveness and to know his love. You are all of you
little children; for such treatment cannot but make you little children. And it
is as little children that you are exhorted to love your brother, and not to
love the world.
II You are fathers.
Babes in Christ, new-born babes at first, and in a sense always so, for you are
always renewing the experience in respect of which you are little
children,--yet, "as new-born babes, you desire the sincere milk of the word
that you may grow thereby." Continuing to be children always in respect of
malice, the malice of self-conceit and selfseeking, you yet in understanding
are men. Nay, you are fathers; you attain to the wisdom and insight proper to
those who are of full age, as you grow in grace and in the knowledge of your
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ..
What makes you fathers is your knowing
him that is from the beginning; knowing what we, his apostles, declare to you
of that eternal life which was with the Father, and was manifested to us (1:
1-3). It is your being taught and enabled, by the Spirit, to trace up what you
experience in time - when as little children you receive forgiveness of your
sins for the Son's name's sake and so know the Father,--to its source in the
eternal counsels of the Godhead; in what the Son is to the Father from
everlasting. For now you not merely look to Jesus as accomplishing for you a
great work, effecting on your behalf a great deliverance, and ministering to
you a great benefit. You delight to connect all this with his being from the
beginning; with the love with which the Father has from the beginning loved him
; and "the glory which the Father giveth him because he loved him before the
foundation of the world." You rise to a believing apprehension of the .ultimate
ground and reason of the whole vast economy of redemption in the deep,
unfathomable, unchangeable nature of Jehovah; in the purpose of the Father's
good pleasure to constitute the Son heir of all things; in the covenant
securing from of old to the Son, in requital of his humiliation and obedience
and death, a people in whom he is to see of the travail of his soul and be
satisfied, and for whom as his body he is to be head over all things. It is
such knowledge as that, of him who is from the beginning, that should make you
fathers in Israel. It is when you rise, by the Spirit's teaching, to views like
these of Christ and his salvation; contemplating the gospel plan, not as a mere
afterthought and expedient, to meet an emergency and serve a purpose in time,
but as the bright and blessed unfolding to all eternity of what from all
eternity the Son is to the Father; dwelling in his bosom; declaring his name;
glorifying the Father as the Father glorifies him: it is then, and in that way,
that your Christian character acquires a certain ripe and mellow fullness, and
your Christian standing comes to partake of the very stability of the Son's own
position, as being from the beginning. You enter into the very mind and heart
of God; Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. You are no more little children merely;
apt to be tossed about, and to be unstable. You are fathers.
The fresh
feelings of childhood, it is true, must ever continue; for its experiences are
ever freshly revived. But along with these there is now the staid fixedness
that should distinguish those who have a sort of fatherly place in the house,
and take a sort of fatherly view of its inmates and its affairs. And so
literally you do, when you know him who is from the beginning. You look at the
family, the whole family in heaven and earth named of him, not now merely from
a little child's standing-ground or point of view, but from a father's
standing-ground or point of view; even from the standing-ground or point of
view of the great Father himself. Yes! you come to see Christ the Son as the
Father sees him; not as it were from before only; from the front; from where
your foot is at this moment planted; but from behind, from where the Father
sits enthroned in his eternal majesty. Your fatherhood is thus, in a sense,
your participation, or at least your sympathy, with the Father in his. You are
fathers when, knowing him who is from the beginning, you contemplate the whole
of his mighty undertaking, with its results and issues, not merely in the
aspect presented to poor sinners on earth, but in the aspect presented to the
Eternal Father in heaven. As little children, you let the Son lead you up to
the Father, that you may receive forgiveness for his name's sake, and so may
know the Father. As fathers, able now to sympathise with the Father, you find
him giving you new knowledge of the Son, as being with him from the beginning.
For as "no man knoweth the Father but the Son and he to whom the Son will
reveal him," so "no man knoweth the Son but the Father." And you, when as
fathers you know him who is from the beginning, become truly sharers of the
Father's knowledge of the Son. This, I repeat, is your fatherhood. It is your
entering in a sense into the fatherhood of God.
Need I take any pains
to show how such a fatherhood as this may well be appealed to as a reason why
every one of the family should be to you a brother beloved, and you should not
love the world that knows not either the Father or the Son .? A father's
intelligent interest, as well as a child's loving instinct, must keep your
affections always at home.
III. You
are young men. As such, you are strong. The vigour of manly prime is yours. And
you need it all. For the home of brotherhood which you are to love, and the
world which you are not to love, are not far apart; at least not yet. They
shall be one day, when there shall be a great impassable gulf between them. But
they are near one another now. They meet; in my heart within, as well as
everywhere without and around me, they meet. Hence, for myself, I have a
constant battle to fight, to keep the world out of my heart. Ah! how may that
be? How but by the word of God abiding in me? Let that word dwell in me richly.
Let it so richly dwell in me that the world when it comes to solicit
admittance, or to challenge surrender, or to make a breach, or to spring a
mine, shall find no access, no open door, no weak defence, no treacherous
longings and lingering likings for some of its good things, ready to betray the
citadel, and capitulate to the foe.
But alas for me! The world is so
strong; so apt to draw me away from loving my brother and his fellowship; to
draw me into conformity to its own still too congenial ways! Shall I then faint
and grow weary and cease to resist? Nay, let me be strong, and quit me like a
strong young man the word of God abiding in me. For, let me remember, I have
overcome the wicked one. He is the prince of this world; it lies in his arms;
it is he who, by means of it, is strong to overcome me. But I have overcome
him.
So I am assured by that word of God which abideth in me. He has
nothing in me now, any more than he has in Christ. He cannot accuse me now; he
has no right to rule me now. I am not now at his mercy, fain to comply with his
terms; to win a delusive peace by some poor compromise with him; to be
dependent on his lies for a wretched respite from the stings of conscience. I
stand now in God's favour, and may bid defiance to the charges, and assaults of
the wicked one. And therefore I can afford and venture to break all terms of
truce or amity with the world which lieth in him, and to avow henceforth that I
love the Father and the Son and the brethren, in the Holy Spirit. By my youth
and manhood, I am summoned to maintain this attitude always. And that not for
myself only; that the home of my childhood and fatherhood may be kept from the
invasion of the world; but for the sake of other little children, who are still
such as I once was, and who are struggling in the dark flood, as I once did.
The wicked one would claim them as his own. Let me claim them for my Father.
And in stretching out to them a helping hand, let me hear John exhorting me, as
a young man, to do so resolutely, because, as he reminds me, "I am strong, and
the word of God abideth in me, and I have overcome the wicked one."
To
sum up all, I can imagine John, at the point at which he has arrived in the
composing of this letter - the point of enforcing the brotherhood of believers
and its antagonism to the world, - pausing to ask himself, Will these counsels
of mine be understood and obeyed?. Will those to whom they are addressed
receive them as they are given, in faithfulness and affection? He is moved to
make an earnest, and what may be a last appeal to them.
What I am
writing to you, I write in the fullness of my heart. I know that you believe in
Jesus; I give you all credit for being Christians indeed. I appeal to you, by
all the motives and considerations that should weigh with you as such. I appeal
to you in every view of your Christianity, as little children, fathers, young
men. And by all that is implied in your being little children, fathers, young
men, I beseech you to hear me. So "I write unto you" Take kindly what I write
unto you, as little children, fathers, young men.
But, it occurs to him
to think, I am old, John the aged. Before the ink I am now using is dry I may
have been summoned to my rest. Be it so. Then take it, O my beloved, as what "I
have written;" as my last legacy to you. Take it as what I wrote when I felt as
if I was bidding you adieu. Take it as my final parting testimony and
prayer.
As little children, knowing the Father by ever-fresh experience
of his rich and free love in forgiving you for his Son's name's sake; as
fathers, entering intelligently and sympathisingly into the Father's knowledge
of the Son as being from the beginning in his bosom; as young men, strong in
him who is the Lord your righteousness, and therefore the Lord your strength;
fortified by his word always abiding in you richly; bold and brave in asserting
the victory over the wicked one that is already yours as it is Christ's; by all
that is simple in your childhood, by all that is godlike in your fatherhood, by
all that is divinely strong in your manhood; be persuaded to give heed to what
I write or have written; to love the brotherhood; and not to love the
world.
XII. THE GUILELESS SPIRIT LOVING NOT
THE WORLD, WHICH IS DARKNESS, BUT GOD, WHO IS LIGHT.
"Love not
the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world,
the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of
the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the
Father, but is of the world." 1 John 2: 15, 16.
The love of the world
is here declared to be irreconcilable with the love of the Father. "If any man
love the world, the love of the Father is not in him" (ver 15). And the
declaration applies to "the things that are in the world," comprehending "all
that is in the world." These are represented under three categories or heads,
"the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life" (ver. 16).
They are afterwards reduced to one, "the lust of the world" (ver. 17); but in
the meantime we have to consider them as three. And, in that view, the
sixteenth verse is to be regarded, not as giving the reason for the commandment
the fifteenth, but rather as explanatory of its nature; bringing out the
contrast between the two incompatible objects of love, the Father on the one
hand, and on the other hand the world, whatever form its lust may take.
Plainly the world is here represented as an order of things very thoroughly
complete in itself; self-contained and self-developing. "All that is in the
world" is "of the world." No foreign elements are suffered to intrude; or if
they do, the world speedily accommodates and assimilates them to itself. For
the world, - what is it? Fallen human nature acting itself out in the human
family; moulding and fashioning the framework of human society in accordance
with its own tendencies. It is fallen human nature making the ongoings of human
thought, feeling, and action its own. It is the reign or kingdom of "the carnal
mind," which is "enmity against God, and is not subject to the law of God,
neither indeed can be." Wherever that mind prevails, there is the
world.
"The things that are in the world" correspond in character to
the world itself. The love therefore of any of them is equivalent to the love
of the world.
I may seem to be, and may suppose that I am, separated
from the world. I may have renounced companionship with that visible
outstanding circle, in regard to which, as a whole, it may be too plainly seen
that it does not admit the true light to shine in it, but is still in the
darkness which that light chases away. For there is a circle which may be thus
collectively identified. There is a tolerably well-defined mode of life which a
spiritual man cannot but recognise as worldly; and there are a set of people
who so manifestly conform themselves to that mode of life, and that alone, as
to make it impossible for the most tolerant Christian charity to characterise
them otherwise than as worldly persons. Let that then be the world, broadly
considered. Now I have withdrawn myself from that world; I have no sympathy
with its general tone and spirit; I am attached to another order of things. So
far, I think I may say that I do not love the world. In its corporate capacity,
as it were, it has lost its hold over me. But "the things that are in the
world," viewed separately and in detail, may have attractions for me still. I
may love them, or some of them, or one of them. If so, it is the same thing to
me as if I loved the world itself in the mass. The love of what is in the
world, is really the love of the world. Hence the n the things that are in the
world. "necessity for breaking up the general notion of "the world" into its
contents.
The things that are in the world which may attract love, as
distinct objects of desire, even when the world as a whole seems to be
discarded, are too manifold to be enumerated. But they may be classified; if
not according to their own properties or qualities; at any rate, according to
the inward dispositions to which they appeal. The apostle thus classifies them
under three heads. "All that is in the world" is distributed into "the lust of
the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life." To these three harpies
of the soul the world ministers.
First, there is "the lust of the
flesh." The genitive or possessive here - " of the flesh" denotes, not the
object of the desire, but its nature. It is lust of desire of a carnal sort;
such as the flesh prompts or occasions. It is the appetite of sense out of
order, or in excess. It is not, of course, the appetite of sense itself; that
is of God, as the provision for its satisfaction is also of God. The appetite
for which food is God's appointed ordinance, and the appetite for which
marriage is God's appointed ordinance, - the general needs and cravings of the
body which the laws of nature and the gifts of providence so fully meet, - the
higher tastes which fair forms and sweet sounds delight, - the eye for beauty
and the ear or the soul for music ; - these are not, any of them, the lust of
the flesh. But they all, every one of them, may become the lust of the flesh.
And in the world they do become the lust of the flesh. It is the world's aim to
pervert them into the lust of the flesh, and to pander to them in that
character, either grossly or with refinement. All its arrangements, its giddy
sports and anxious toils, tend in that direction. Sensuality, or that
modification of it now spoken of as sensuousness, enters largely into the
world's fascinating cup. And it may be detached plausibly from what is avowedly
and confessedly the world; it may be covertly loved, while the world, as such,
is apparently hated. Gluttony, drunkenness, uncleanness; the rage for physical
or aesthetical excitement which the ball, the theatre, the gaming-table, if not
worse excesses, must appease ; - these forms or modifications of the lust of
the flesh may not be for us the most insidious It may creep into our affections
disguised almost as an angel of light. A certain fondness for the good things
of this life, an unwillingness to forego them, a pleasant feeling of fullness
in the enjoyment of them, a growing impatience of any interruption of that
enjoyment, - how soon may such a way of tasting even the lawful gratifications
of sense grow into selfishness and sin! And then how readily does the
imagination admit ideas and fancies the reverse of pure! Through how many
channels, the news of the day, the gems of literature, the choicest trophies of
the fine arts, poesy, sculpture, song, may unholy desire be kindled! I may be
out of the world; but this that is in the world, "the lust of the flesh," may
not be out of me.
There is, secondly, "the lust of the eyes."
This must be distinct from the lust of the flesh. It cannot therefore be that
"looking on a woman to lust after her," which the Lord holds to be the
commission of adultery in the heart; or that "looking upon the wine-cup when it
is red," against which Solomon warns us. The lust of the eyes is something
different. It is lust or desire having its proper seat in the region of
contemplation, or of onlooking. It is not merely that the flesh lusts through
the eyes, or that the eyes minister to the lust of the flesh. The eyes
themselves have their own lust. It is lust that can be satisfied with mere
sight; which the lust of the flesh never is, nor can be. It is a feeling of
such a sort that a bare look or gaze may please or may offend it. For example,
I cannot stand the sight of more good in my neighbour's possession than in my
own. I would be relieved if I saw him worse off than I am. That is to a great
extent the instinct of corrupt humanity; it is the way of the world. And it is
one of the world's ways that, even when I renounce the world, I am still apt to
follow, or that is apt to follow me. I may be one in whom the world's sensual
or sensuous delights no longer stimulate the lust of the flesh. But my eyes are
pained when I see the giddy crowd so happy and secure. My bosom swells and my
blood boils when I am forced to look on villany triumphant and vice caressed.
It may be all righteous zeal and virtuous wrath; a pure desire to witness wrong
redressed and justice done. But, alas! as I yield to it, I find it fast
assuming a worse character. I would not myself be partaker of the sinful
happiness I see the world enjoying; but I grudge the world's enjoyment of it.
"I was envious," says David (Ps. lxxiii.), "at the foolish, when I saw the
prosperity of the wicked." That was his temptation; it was his infirmity; it
formed the sad burden of more than one of his most plaintive Psalms. It was the
love of the world in one of its most stealthy and dangerous forms, winning its
way into his heart, and supplanting there, for a time, the love of
God.
Once more, thirdly, there is "the pride of life."
Self-indulgence, or "the lust of the flesh," and envious grudging, or "the lust
of the eyes," might seem to exhaust "all that is in the world." The whole
substance of "the world and the things of the world" is reducible to these two
heads, or may be regarded in these two lights: what I long to possess and enjoy
myself, and what I cannot calmly bear to see possessed and enjoyed by another.
These two views of it exhaust the whole of what is substantial in the world.
But the show, the shadow, the semblance, as well as the substance, is something
to the world's vanity, or to my vanity with reference to the world. Nay, it is
much; the world's manifold conventionalisms, for they are indeed manifold,
prove it to be much. What pains are taken in the world to save appearances and
keep up a seemly and goodly state! It is a business all but reduced to system.
Its means and appliances are ceremony and feigned civility. Life is to be
ostensibly, nay even ostentatiously, all right. All is to be in good taste and
in good style; correct, creditable, commendable. It is the world's pride to
have it so. What is otherwise must be somehow toned down or shaded off;
concealed or coloured. Falsehood may be necessary; a false code of honour;
false notions of duty, as between man and man, or between man and woman; false
liberality and spurious delicacy. Still the world does contrive, by means of
all that, to get up and keep up a proud life of its own; a life grand and
graceful; having its decencies and respectabilities; yes, and its charities,
courtesies, and chivalries too; all very imposing in themselves, and altogether
contributing to make the world's life very imposing as a whole. That I take to
be the "pride of life" in the world. In one aspect, it is undoubtedly mean
enough. It sets in motion a game of diplomacy and a race of emulation most
destructive of all the truer and finer instincts even of unrenewed humanity. It
debauches conscience, and is fatal to high aims. It puts the men and women of
the world on a poor struggle to outmanoeuvre and outshine one another, to outdo
one another, for the most part, in mere externals; while, with all manner of
politeness, they affect to give one another credit for what they all know to be
little better than shams. Nevertheless, the general effect, r repeat, is
imposing. , The world's "pride of life" is something to be proud of after
all.
Now of this "pride of life" it is by no means easy even for those
who do not love the world to keep themselves altogether clear. It is, as it
were, their last worldly weakness. The lust of the flesh may be mortified,
crucified, nailed to the cross of Christ ; the lust of the eyes may be overcome
by the mighty power of love, the love which "envieth not;" and yet the pride of
life may cleave to me. It is so difficult to have done with the world's
seemings, and to come out simply as .what I am.
Need I suggest how many
sad instances of religious inconsistency and worldly conformity spring from
this source? I may acquit you of sensuality or sensuousness, and of selfish
jealousy; you are free, as to both of these instruments of the world's power.
But what of its opinion? Have you learned to defy it, or to be independent of
it? Can you dispense with the world's approval and brave its frown? Do you not
sometimes find yourselves more afraid or ashamed of a breach of worldly
etiquette, - some apparent descent from the customary platform of worldly
respectability, - than of such a concession to the world's forms and fashions
as may compromise your integrity in the sight of God, and your right to acquit
yourselves of guile? The opinion of the world! What the world will think or
say! Ah! that pitiful consideration may often sway or embarrass you when you
have no selfish longing or envious grudge to gratify. To a large extent, it is
identical with that "fear of man which bringeth a snare." It puts you at the
mercy of the idle thoughts and idle words of any onlooker who may presume to
judge you. You cannot acquit yourselves altogether of the love of the world so
long as you have in your hearts that liking for the world's good report, or
that sensitiveness to the world's censure, which "the pride of life" implies.
And now, for practical use, let three remarks be made.
I. Of "all that is in the world" it is said that
"it is not of the Father, but of the world." This may be true of things good in
themselves, the best things even, when they come to be things "in the world."
They may be of the Father originally, in their true and proper nature; but the
world appropriates them and makes them its own; and so they cease to be of the
Father, and are now simply of the world. The choicest blessings of home, the
holiest ordinances of religion, the very gospel itself, may thus come, when
once "in the world," to be "of the world." Be not then deceived. Much that
meets your eye, as you look on the world and the world's ways, may seem fair
and excellent; graces most attractive, devotions most comely and fervent,
amenities most winning, philanthropies most admirable. But God is not really in
them all. They "are not of the Father." A pure and simple regard to his will
is; not their animating spirit. They are "of the world." There is nothing in
them that rises above the natural influences of self-love and social, as these
are blended "in the world."
Again, 2. "All that is in the world is of the world,"
wherever it may be found. The three world-powers or world principles are,
always and everywhere, "not of the Father but of the world." They may be in the
Father's house; they may be in the hearts of the Father's children; but they
are none the better for their being there. They are not themselves cleansed or
hallowed by what they come in contact with, however pure and however holy. But
all that they touch they smite with leprosy and wither into impotent paralysis.
Let us beware then of letting into the sanctuary and shrine of our soul, now
become the dwelling-place of God by his Spirit, anything that savours of the
world's sloth and self-indulgence, or of the world's jealousy and envy, or of
the world's vain pomp and pride. No matter though, as we think, we do not now
love the world, but are separated from its friendship, if still we love any of
the things of the world. For "all that is in the world is not of the Father,
but of the world." And "if any man love the world, the love of the Father is
not in him."
Finally, 3. Let us
remember that the world which we are not to love, because "all that is in it is
not of the Father but is of the world," is yet itself the object of a love on
the part of the Father, with which, as his children, having in us his love, we
are to sympathise. "God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son,
that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life."
This is said of the very world which we are commanded not to love; and of that
world viewed in the very aspect on account of which we are commanded not to
love it; as having nothing in it that is really "of the Father." "God so loved
this world," this very world, thus viewed, having nothing in it or about it
that he can recognise as his own, as what he made and meant it originally to
be, "that he gave his only begotten Son" on its behalf. And he calls upon us so
to love it too; with the same sort of love, and with love moving us to the same
sort of effort and the same sort of sacrifice. And it is our so loving the
world as the Father has loved it, that will be our best security against loving
it as the Father forbids us to love it. Let the world be to us what it is to
the Father. Let us look at it as the Father looks at it; as a deep dark mass of
guilt, ungodliness, and woe. Let us plunge in to the rescue. Let us lay hold of
that young man, whom, as we behold him, like Jesus, we cannot help loving. Let
us snatch him, for he is not safe, as a brand out of the burning. If we love
the world as God loves it, we will have no heart for loving it in any other
way. Its attractions, its fascinations, its amiabilities, its sentimentalisms,
will have no charm for us. We see in them only snares to catch and ruin souls
that we, - that God , - would have to be saved. We cannot love, with any love
of complacency, the world which we love in sympathy with him who "sent not his
Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might
be saved."
XIII. THE GUILELESS SPIRIT, AMID
THE DARK WORLD'S FLOW, ESTABLISHED IN THE LIGHT OF
GODLINESS.
"And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof: but he that
doeth the will of God abideth for ever." - 1 John 2: 17.
The expression here
used concerning the world and its lust, is the same as that used in the eighth
verse concerning the darkness: it is "passing away." The world, with its lust,
is in this respect identical with the darkness. They partake at least of a
common quality or property; they pass, or are passing.
There is more
meant here than merely that "the things which are seen are temporal." The
fleeting nature of this whole earthly scene is doubtless a useful topic of
reflection; but it is not exactly what is suggested in this verse. The idea of
the darkness being a vanishing element is still the leading thought. The prince
of darkness, though he may keep up appearances for a while, is like a beaten
foe, drawing off from the disputed territory. Through the shining of the true
light, the darkness is passing; and in the same sense "the world passeth away,
and the lust thereof." "But he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever,"
for he is one in whom, as in Christ, "the darkness is passing, and the true
light now shineth."
I. The
characteristic of the world is that it does not "do the will of God ;" it is
the sphere or region in which the will of God is not done. The lust of the
world is not doing the will of God. Take it in any of its forms. Let it be the
lust of the flesh; as "lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God," you are
doing your own will and not God's. Let it be the lust of the eyes, envying
others who prosper more than you; then it is the thwarting of their will, not
the doing of God's will, that your mind is bent on. Let it be the pride of
life, hanging on opinion's idle breath; you have no freedom to do the will of
God, for you are at the mercy of the will of your fellow-men.
As not
doing the will of God, the world and its lust must pass away; for it is
identical with the darkness which is passing. Passing! Whence? and whither?
Whence, but from off the stage of this redeemed earth, the final blessed
meeting-ground of all the Lord's children? And whither? I cannot tell. This
only I know, it must be to where it shall do no harm any more for ever. I read
of everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels. Is that the final
restingplace of the darkness? - of the world and its lust? There it is to be no
longer passing, but permanent, abiding. "The worm dieth not, and the fire is
not quenched."
O ye lovers of the world, or of what is in the world,
have you considered what the end is to be? It may well move you to be told that
the whole of that economy with which you are mixed up is fleeting, transitory,
evanescent. "What shadows you are and what shadows you pursue!" It is a deep
knell that is rung over the grave of all merely temporal prosperity, all
earthly hope and joy; "the world passeth away, and the lust thereof." But it is
a knell that, ringing out life's present and precarious dreams, rings in a
terrible reality. The world, with its lust, is passing here; passing and
changing always. But it is passing to where pass no more, but stay; fixed
unchangeably for It is not annihilated; it does not cease to be; it only be
passing. you ever thought how much of the world's endurableness; I say not its
attractiveness but its endurableness; depends on its being a world that passes,
and therefore changes? Is it not, after all, its being changeable that makes it
tolerable even to you who like it best? Can you lay your hand, your memory's
hand, on any one feeling you have ever had of intense worldly gratification,
and say that you could be content, with that feeling alone, to spend eternity?
Is there any sensation, any delight, any rapture of worldly joy, however
engrossing, that you could bear to have prolonged, indefinitely, for ever,
unaltered, unalterable? But I put the case too favourably. I speak of your
finding the world with its lust, not passing but abiding, in the place whither
you yourselves pass, when you pass hence. True, you find it there. But you find
it not as you have it here. There are means and appliances here for quenching
by gratification, or mitigating by variety, its impetuous fires. But there you
find it where these fires burn, unslaked, unsolaced; the world being all
within, and the world's lust; and nothing outside but the Holy One.
Again I ask - Have you ever thought how much of the world's endurableness
depends on the fact that, with its lust, it has its seat for a while here in
the midst of a transition process, as it were, which is going on, "the darkness
passing and the true light shining?" What keeps this earth from being, at this
moment, hell, or a part of hell? What but its being a place of preparation for
heaven; destined ere long to become to myriads of the saved heaven itself? When
in that heaven where the angels dwell, sudden it will ever. ceases to Have
darkness sought to dim the light, and wilful creatures would not do the will of
God, not au instant was lost. Swiftly, summarily, the world is cast out, and
its lust. There is no room for it there, no, not for an hour. The lovers of it,
and of its lust; the doers of another will than God's; their own, or their
leader's; are no more found there; but somewhere else in the universe of God,
where they are "reserved in everlasting chains, under darkness, unto the
judgement of the great day." That holy heaven is full of light alone, and in it
is no darkness at all. The will of God is always done there.
We are
taught to pray that his will may be done on earth as in heaven; and we believe
that it shall be so. But the time is not yet. The darkness is only passing, not
past; "the world is passing away, and the lust thereof." For it has pleased God
not to deal with this earth where we dwell, as he dealt with that heaven where
the angels dwell. If he had, he must have left it empty. The darkness must
needs be tolerated; the world, with its lusts, not doing the will of God, must
be allowed to continue; till the race for whom the earth was made, the family
of man meant to fill it, is complete. But all is not to be darkness; a world
lusting its own lust and not doing the will of God. There is to be light; there
are to be children of the light. For the light and its children, as well as for
the darkness and its world, the earth is to be adapted. Its order and. laws;
its arrangements and accommodations; must be such as suit its present mixed
occupancy. And such also must be God's general providence over it. Hence you
who love the world and its lust, and do not the will of God, find yourselves in
a position here, under these conditions, which does not give the world and its
lust full swing; or, as it were, "ample scope and verge enough."
Not to
speak of the direct shining of the light, in gospel means and ordinances, which
tells upon you in spite of yourselves, in some vague way, for your partial
respite from the pangs of conscience; I point to the elements of good that
there are in the institutions which God has sanctioned, and which he blesses,
for alleviating pain and giving happiness on this earth on which he suffers you
to dwell for a season with the righteous; healthy labour, alternating with such
sleep as God gives his beloved; family relationships; social ties; domestic
endearments; spheres also of public activity and usefullness and generous
ambition; outlets for native energy and amiability, and lofty thought and fine
feeling, and the stirrings of kind pity, and the flights of genius. Do not
imagine that these form part of the world or its lust, which you are to carry
with you when it and you together pass hence. This earth is not furnished with
these conveniences for your sakes, but for their sakes who find in them the
choicest apparatus and machinery for doing the will of God. You have the use,
you have the benefit of them, for a brief space. Your world, with its triple
lust, is permitted for a little to have to do with these contrivances of God
for making earth a school for heaven, Alas! what harm does it often work among
them; blighting what is pure, blasting what is peaceful, desolating hearths and
homes and hearts. Still your loved world, and you who love it, are the better
and the happier for your contact with what on earth is even now allied to
heaven.
But have you ever thought what it will be to pass hence and go
where nothing of all that can follow you? No holy beauty; no virgin innocency;
no guiltless, guileless love of parents, spouse, child, brother, friend; no
virtue; no decency even; none of the decorum which at least serves to make vice
less hideous; no soothing balm of pure hand laid on the fevered brow; no
faintly-whispered hope or wish of pure lips blessing you in your despair;
nothing of the sort of comely veil which, down to the last breath of the dying
sinner's godless career, may hide the real truth from his view.
Let
that real truth burst upon you. Place yourself, with your loved world and its
cherished lust, where you and it and God are alone together, with nothing of
God's providing that you can use or abuse for your relief. Your creature
comforts are not there with you. nothing of this earth, which is the Lord's, is
there; nothing of its beauty or its bounty; its grace or loveliness or warm
affection; nothing of that very bustle and distraction and change which
dissipates reflection and drowns remorse; nothing but your worldly lust, your
conscience, and your God. That is hell; the hell to which the world is passing,
and its lust; and whence it never passes more; a dreary monotony of banishment
from all that God has made to be chosen and enjoyed. It is yourselves, ye
lovers of the world, filled with the lust of the world, its vulture appetites
and stormy passions; shut up for ever in the darkness, as it were, of empty
space, the desolate unfurnished prison-house of eternal
justice.
II. But now let us turn to
a brighter picture. "He that doeth the will of God abideth for ever." Suppose
that the world has passed away and the lust thereof. Does it follow that the
earth is dissolved or perishes? Nay, it remains. And whatever in it or about it
is of God remains. There may be a temporary baptism of fire, to purge away the
pollution contracted while the world has been tolerated in it and the world's
lust; to regenerate it and transform it into the "new heavens and new earth
wherein dwelleth :righteousness." But the earth thus cleansed and renovated
does not pass away. It surely must continue, under the condition of the
petition, at last fully answered; "Thy will be done in earth as in heaven." For
surely that is a petition which is yet to be fully answered; and not in time
only, but for eternity. This abode of men is to be assimilated thoroughly to
yonder abode of angels, in respect of the will of God being alike done in both.
That at all events is the heavenly state, let its localities be adjusted as
they may; that is its eternal crown and joy; angels and men together doing the
will of God; they in their heaven, we in our earth. That is the blessed
consummation to which the apostle would have us to look forward when he urges
this encouragement and motive: "he that doeth the will of God abideth for
ever.
But the precise point of his statement is not adequately brought
out unless we connect and identify the future and the present. It is not merely
said that he who doeth the will of God may hope to be hereafter in a place or
in a state in which he shall abide for ever. It is plainly implied that he is
in it now. The world, with its lust, is passing; but he is in possession. The
world, as it were, has forfeited its title, and is tolerated on sufferance
merely, for a time and for a temporary purpose; he is a proprietor, having a
good and valid right to remain for ever. The world must go, he stays; it has
notice to quit, he abides. Doing the will of God, therefore, you are already in
your abiding state; in the state in which you are to abide for ever. No
essential change is before you. There may be stages of advancement and
varieties of experience; a temporary break, perhaps, in the outer continuity of
your thread of life, between the soul's quitting the body to be with Christ
where now he is and its receiving the body anew at his coming hither again. But
substantially you are now as you are to be always. For there is this difference
between you in whom the love of the Father is, and those in whom there is only
the love of the world. The world which they love, with its lust, is a foreign
element in this earth, considered as the creation of God, and an element,
therefore, which must be cast out, as the land of Canaan is said to have
"vomited out" its inhabitants when their "iniquity was full." There is really
nothing of hell in this earth viewed as the creation of God, or in its
arrangements viewed as God's ordinances; however much there may be of hell in
the world with its lust, which is not God's creation or God's ordinance, but
fallen man's, or his tempter's. From all that is of God's making or of God's
ordaining in the earth, they who love the world must pass, with the world and
its lust; carrying no good of it hence; quitting it all, and going to be with
devils in eternal, unquenchable fire. .But in this earth as God's creation, and
in its arrangements as God's ordinances, what may there not be of heaven? And
whatever of heaven is in it, and in them, is yours, if you are doing the will
of God. Neither does it pass from you nor you from it. You and it together
abide for ever. Here, therefore, is the great alternative between "loving the
world and its lust" and "doing the will of God." Here is the solution of what
we are sometimes apt to regard as a hard problem in Christian morals. What is
that separation from the world which I must keep up, if I would prove myself to
be one who does not love the world, but who does love the Father? A hundred
minute points of detail may come into discussion here. Is it lawful? is it
expedient might be asked to weariness, of this or that pursuit, this or that
pleasure, this or that party, or company, or occupation. I meet these and all
similar inquiries with the broad appeal to consciousness and conscience: Are
you doing the will of God? It is no, - Are you doing what, as to the matter of
it, may be consistent, or not altogether inconsistent, with the will of God?
But are you, in doing it, doing the will of God? You may be where the will of
God would appoint or allow you to be. Are you there because it is the will of
God that you should be there? Are you there on set purpose, there and then to
do the will of God? This test will carry you through all entanglements, and
raise you above all compromises. Only be sure that you apply it fairly. For, in
this matter, the prince of this world is very wily. If possible, he will have
you to substitute something of God's instead of what is his, as being what you
are not to love. He will allow and encourage you to abstain from meats and from
marriage; to withdraw from your fellows and retire into the desert; to abandon
the affairs of active life; to assume an ascetic severity, frowning on the
ordinary ongoings of society. He is pleased when he sees you counting that to
be coming out from the world. For he knows that all the while it is really
God's creation and God's ordinance, and not his world with its lust, that you
are putting away. Ah! it is a great thing to draw the line clear and sharp
between what here and now is "of God," and what is "of the world and its lust."
And if the line is to be drawn clear and sharp, it must be drawn, not from
without, but from within. It must be drawn, not by external routine or
regulation, but by a living spirit in the inner man; the spirit of love and
loyalty to the Father; the spirit that moved Jesus to say, "I came not to do my
own will, but the will of him that sent me." He had no perplexities, no
misgivings, in going in and out among his fellowmen. He moved freely where the
Pharisees were censorious and straitlaced. For everywhere and always, wherever
he was, in the house, on the road, at the hospitable table, beside the open
grave; with whomsoever he met, publicans, sinners, harlots, as well as Scribes,
and Sadducees, and Herodians; he was doing the will of God; he was about his
Father's business; doing his will. It was not with him - -Where shall I go?
whom shall I meet? so much as, - Go where I may, meet whom I may, what business
would my Father have me to be about? Something surely bearing on the great work
for which I came into the world; some. thing to glorify my Father; something
for the saving of lost sinners; something for the comfort of weary souls. Ah!
let this same mind that was in him be in you. Let it become a delight with you,
as well as a business, to be everywhere and always doing the will of God. That,
and that alone, is "not loving the world, nor the things of the world."
For the world which, with its lust, is passing away, is just the darkness whose
passing you are to apprehend as a thing true in you as in Christ. And the doing
of the will of God, which is your abiding for ever, is just the true light now
shining; which shining of the true light, as well as the passing of the
darkness, you are also to apprehend as true in you as in Christ. There is a
twofold movement going on in the earth; the moving off of the darkness, or of
the world and its lust, and the moving in of the true light and its gracious,
glorious kingdom. Christ, and all of you in whom, as in Christ, "that thing is
true, that the darkness is passing and the true light is now shining," are
engaged in the advancing movement and identified with it. It is the movement
that is regaining, reconquering, recovering the earth for God. Into that
movement you are to throw yourselves. With all who are in it you are to have a
common brotherhood, and to make common cause. That is the will of God which you
are to do. With the other movement, the moving off from the stage of the
darkness and the prince of darkness, with his trappings and troops, you have
nothing to do, save only to rescue, in the Father's name, all whom you can
reach, ere that movement carries them away. For yourselves you have no concern
with it. You love not the darkness, nor anything in it or about it. Your whole
soul is bent on doing the will of God, and so falling in with the advancing
march and movement which is to issue ere long in the universal shining of the
true light over all the earth.
Surely that is a noble course for you,
and one that must ensure your abiding for ever. It may seem indeed that you
have no abiding place here. You may be called hence quickly at any time, while
the darkness may seem to be passing very slowly; and the world with its lust
may be still holding its ground stoutly, and showing an imposing front. But you
lose not the fruit of your doing the will of God. "Blessed are the dead who die
in the Lord; they rest from their labours, and their works do follow them." You
have cast in your lot with a cause which does not pass away, but abideth for
ever; and a leader who does not pass away, but abideth for ever, - " the same
yesterday, and today, and for ever." It is but a little while. Lo, he comes
quickly, and you who have departed to be with him come in his train. He comes,
and you come, to triumph over the complete and final passing away of the
darkness, of the world and its lust, of all doing of any will but the will of
God; and to abide for ever in the earth, in which thenceforth for ever the will
of God is to be done, even as it is in heaven.
XIV. THE GUILELESS SPIRIT, AMID ANTI-CHRISTIAN DEFECTIONS,
ESTABLISHED BY A MESSIANIC UNCTION AND ILLUMINATION.
"Little children, it is
the last time: and as ye have heard that anti-Christ shall come, even now are
there many anti-Christs; whereby we know that it is the last time. They went
out from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they would no
doubt have continued with us: but they went out, that they might be made
manifest that they were not all of us. But ye have an unction from the Holy
One, and ye know all things." - 1 John 2: 18-20. "Ye have an unction from the
Holy One, and ye know all things." This is represented as our security against
such apostasy or desertion as John has occasion to lament. We live, he says, in
perilous circumstances. What has been foretold as characteristic of the last
time may be seen virtually realised in our own day. The warning against
anti-Christ need not be put off to a distant date. Already, in too many
instances, the spirit of anti-Christ is discovering itself. To all practical
intents and purposes, it is even now the last time to us. It is proved to be so
by the prevalence of the very sort of opposition to Christ which in some
gigantic shape is to signalise that era. We need not be setting up the phantom
or ideal of a coming anti-Christ that is to torment and try the church of the
future. We have enough of anti-Christs around and beside us now. And they are
very near and close ; - almost of kin with us. But yesterday they were among
us; one with ourselves in privilege, profession, and outward character. The
keenest eye could not discriminate between us and them. True, their having gone
out from us is a presumption, and indeed a proof, that they were not really of
us. That very fact, however, making it plain that they who are still among us
are not all of us, may not unnaturally cause uneasiness as to our own standing.
But it need not. For there is a difference; "Ye have an unction from the Holy
One," which they have not," and ye know all things."
I do not at this
stage inquire either into the nature and character of the coming anti-Christ,
or into the common feature identifying all anti-Christs. I wish rather to dwell
upon the ground of confidence here indicated, with special reference to trying
times ; and in that view I notice these four particulars:
I. The anointing
or unction;
II. The knowledge connected with it;
III. The nature of the
connection; and IV. The security afforded by the unction and the knowledge
against heresy and apostasy.
I. I begin with the anointing: "Ye
have an unction," or the unction, or generally, unction. The term may literally
denote anointing oil; so that having unction may mean being anointed with oil.
This anointing, or being anointed with oil, you have "from the Holy One;" from
Christ Jesus our Lord. For it is he who is meant. The title indeed of "the Holy
One" may with all propriety be applied to God absolutely ;rote the undivided
Godhead, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. And if the persons are distinguished, it
may be applied to the Father and the Holy Spirit as well as to the Son. But the
sense of the passage, as well as the general usage of Scripture, points to the
Son. In his humiliation, the devils acknowledged him as the Holy One (Mark 1:
24). In his exaltation Peter preaches him as such (Acts 3: 14). And indeed,
before his incarnation, the people worshipped him in his divinity, and the
prophets foretold him in his humanity, as the Holy One; the Holy One of God;
the Holy One of Israel (Psalm 16: 10, etc.) The same application of the term
best suits the present text. The Holy One is Christ; the unction or anointing
is from Christ, who is himself, as Christ, the anointed One. There is great
significance in the unction thus viewed as coming from this Holy One.
Anti-Christs are spoken of. These are antagonists to Christ; to the anointed
One; to him who is anointed to be the Holy One. You, on the other hand, have
anointing from him. The unction which he himself receives, he communicates to
you; consecrating you to be holy ones, as he is the Holy One. Thus you are
joint-Christs with him, while they are anti-Christs. They are against the
anointed Holy One: you share with him in his anointing as the Holy One. They
set at nought the unction which he has as the Holy One: you have this very
unction from him. Such really is the antithesis. They are anti-Christs, you are
joint-Christs; for you have an unction from him as the Holy One, making you
"holy as he is holy."
The holiness here meant is consecration. It is
what the Lord indicates in his farewell prayer: "Sanctify them through thy
truth: thy word is truth. As thou hast sent me into the world, even so have I
also sent them into the world; and for their sakes I sanctify myself, that they
also might be sanctified through the truth." This is the unction which you have
from the Holy One ; from him whom "the Father hath sanctified and sent into the
world."
The anointing is with the Holy Spirit. He is the anointing oil;
the oil of gladness with which God has anointed Christ above his fellows; the
precious ointment poured out upon him, as the head, that runs down over all his
body, even to the skirts of his garments. The unction therefore which "you have
from the Holy One" is his own unction; it is identically the same with what was
his. He sheds forth upon you and in you the very same presence, power, and
influence of the Holy Spirit that was shed forth upon and in himself, when he
was about the business for which, as the Holy One, he was consecrated.
In his case that unction was real, sensible, manifest. If we have it from him,
it must be so in ours also. It was in him and to him the seal of his
acceptance, and the witness of his Sonship; for when the voice from heaven
proclaimed him to be the Father's beloved Son in whom he is well pleased, "the
Spirit descended on him like a dove." We have acceptance in him, and the
adoption of sons. And the unction which we have from him is our being sealed,
as justified ones, by "the Holy Spirit shedding abroad in our hearts the love
of God;" and our receiving, as sons, "not the spirit of bondage again to fear,
but the Spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father, - the Spirit
witnessing with our spirits that we are the children of God." In Jesus this
unction was, on the one hand, his having always the Holy Spirit helping,
comforting, and strengthening him; imparting to him, amid all his toils and
tears, such fresh communications out of his Father's heart, such assurances of
his Father's love and his Father's nearness to him, as never failed to nerve
his soul for its utmost trial; to keep him trusting still in God; and to turn
every prayer of nature's prompting: "Father, if it be possible, let the cup
pass," into the resignation of filial obedience: "Nevertheless, Father, not my
will but thine be done." The unction which we have from him as the Holy One, is
our being in the same way upheld by the Holy Spirit in all our goings; our
being enabled therefore to show "the meekness and gentleness of Christ ;" our
making it thus manifest that "the same mind is in us that was also in
him."
Again, on the other hand, in Jesus the Holy One, this unction was
his constant and abiding apprehension or realisation of the Spirit moving him
to the work for which he was sent into the world. That work was to do the will
of him that sent him; to preach glad tidings to the meek; to bind up the
broken-hearted; to fulfil all righteousness; to suffer, the just for the
unjust; to give his life a ransom for many. The unction which we have from him,
that we may be consecrated to be holy ones as he is the Holy One, is our
feeling and owning the inward call of the Holy Spirit, moving us in our sphere
to give ourselves to the same lifework that always occupied him; to carry out
the great design of his coming into the world; to be his wholly and
unreservedly, as he was always and altogether the Father's.
Thus, in
all that it can be held to imply of consciously apprehended and sensibly
enjoyed favour and fellowship with God, as well as of sacred destination and
devotion to God, we share with Christ his own very unction. Whatever is implied
in his being anointed with the Holy Spirit we are to realise in ourselves, as
having "an unction from the Holy One." Thus we are Christs, as he is the
Christ; anointed ones, as he is the Anointed One;the Lord's anointed, the
Lord's Christs, in somewhat of the same sense in which he is so. For we share
his anointing; we "have unction from the Holy One."
II. As thus
anointed, we "know all things." This is not of course omniscience; but full and
complete knowledge of the matter in hand, as opposed to knowledge that is
fragmentary and partial. The question is between Christ and anti-Christ;
between the truth of Christ and the lie of anti-Christ. That lie is a denial of
Jesus as the Christ; and therefore a denial of him as the Son, involving
necessarily a denial of the Father also (ver. 22, 23). But we know the
truth; we "know all things" about it. The whole truth concerning Jesus as the
Christ, the Son of the Father, in all its relations to the divine character and
counsels as well as to human experience and hope, we know. We have mastered it,
not piecemeal, but entire; or it has thus mastered us. Not a corner of the
field, but the field itself, is ours. We know Jesus as the Christ, the Son of
God, in all the rich and ample significance of these titles or designations. So
we know all things ; all things concerning the truth that Jesus is "the Christ,
the Son of the living God." This, in one view, may not be knowing much; but it
is knowing what we do know well and thoroughly. And much depends on our
knowledge being of that sort; not universal in its range; but, be its range
ever so limited, universal in its kind, so far as it goes; universal -
fullorbed, as it were, and all round, - as opposed to what is one-sided. The
anointing of Jesus, his being the Christ, - what it is, and what it means; his
consecration as the Holy One; his oneness as the Son with the Father; all that
we know. And we know it, not by catching at some one aspect of the mighty plan,
- the great "mystery of godliness, God manifest in the flesh," - that may
happen to suit our convenience, or to strike our fancy, but by a calm, clear,
and comprehensive insight into all that it unfolds of the highest glory of God,
and all that it contemplates of highest good to man. We look at this great
theme, or rather this great fact, in all its bearings; as it vindicates the
righteous sovereignty of the Lord of all, while it secures full and free
salvation to the worst and guiltiest of his creatures, if they will but own
that sovereignty and submit to it.
Hence it is a knowledge having eyes,
as it were, on all sides, all round; open to what touches the prerogatives and
rights of heaven, no less than to what concerns the interests of earth; full of
thoughtfullness about God and what is due to God, as well as about sinful man
and what sinful man requires; well balanced, therefore, and guarded against
both extremes, the extreme of mere arbitrary rule, or a sort of fatalism,
ascribed to God, on the one hand, and that of accommodation and compromise,
assumed to meet man's case, on the other. We know all things; all the
principles of God's government, all the attributes of his nature, all the
features of his character: as well as all the miseries and necessities of man's
lost and guilty state; so as to take them all into account in forming our
conception of the plan of mercy, the reign of grace, the method of redemption
and salvation. Hence our conception of that economy of righteous love, however
far from being perfect, is yet, to the extent to which it carries us,
consistent, and, from its consistency, sure and satisfying. We know indeed only
in part after all. All the things that we know, we know only dimly and faintly.
We know none of them fully, or as we hope to know them one day, when we shall
know even as you are known. But still we know them all. For, as Paul testifies
(I Cor. 2. 9-12), although "eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have
entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that
love him," yet "God hath revealed them to us by his Spirit; for the
Spirit searcheth all things, even the deep things of God." And "we have
received, not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit which is of God, that we
might know the things that are freely given to us of God." We thus know them
all, the deep things of God, the things freely given to us of God, in virtue of
the unction which we have from the Holy One.
III. For the
unction which we have from the Holy One, and our knowing all things, are
intimately connected. One might imagine perhaps, that the knowledge which I
have been describing as so comprehensive and complete, must be the fruit of
leisurely and learned study; of academic training and scholarly research. But
it is really not so. If it were, it would be but little trustworthy, especially
in any advent or development of the last time, in which anti-Christ may be
coming, or there may be already many anti-Christs. All experience proves, that
of our own day as well as of older ecclesiastical history, that the knowledge
of the schools, even when it seems almost to be, humanly speaking, omniscience,
is no security for those who have it continuing with us, as John puts it, in
our genuine apostolic fellowship. Much study may be a weariness of the flesh,
without being either strength or stedfastness to the spirit. The knowledge
which alone can be relied on, must be not only the knowledge of all things; but
such a knowledge of all things as only unction from the Holy One can
give.
In fact, we cannot have true knowledge of any of these things
unless we have it by unction from the Holy One. For "the natural man receiveth
not the things of the Spirit of God; for they are foolishness to him; neither
can he know them; because they are spiritually discerned" (I Cor. 2. 13). It is
only "he who is spiritual" who "judgeth all things," who can know them so as to
judge them. For he alone is in a position and has the capacity to form a fair
estimate or judgment of the relations among the things of God. And it is by
their mutual relations that things are really known and judged.
This is
a maxim true in all sciences; and not least manifestly so in the science of
divinity. If, in the science of astronomy, we would know all its things, all
its truths, to any satisfactory end, theoretical or practical; we must get, not
the eye of a clown or vulgar stargazer, nor that of Chaldean sage or poetic
dreamer, nor that of one to whom the clear calm midnight sky is a confused
galaxy of bright gems, a brilliant shower of diamonds shed in rich disorder on
the dark brow of nature's sleeping beauty, but the eye of Newton's scholar and
Laplace's, who has learned of them to calculate planetary magnitudes and
distances and forces, and to bring the whole splendid chaos under the sway of
the one simple law that reigns supreme throughout all space. So, in the region
of what is spiritual and divine, the faculty of seeing things in their true
relations is not ,elsewhere or otherwise to be acquired, than in the school and
under the teaching of the Holy Spirit. It is his anointing of the eye with
eye-salve that gives spiritual discernment, not only to understand separately,
as distinct objects of contemplation and thought, many of the truths proclaimed
and the objects exhibited in revelation, but to perceive how, under the leading
and guiding principle of the free, full, and sovereign grace of the glorious
gospel, they all assume their fitting places and proportions, and form together
one consistent whole. Mere human study might master all that has been ever said
or written about God and his works and ways. But still knowledge thus!got
always runs the risk of being prejudiced and partial. .All the articles of all
the creeds may be thoroughly sifted, in all their doctrinal, controversial, and
historical bearings. The all-knowing theologian may be able to discuss them
all, and all about them. But left to himself, and without "unction from the
Holy One," how apt is he to let some peculiar leaning, some personal bias or
idiosyncrasy of his own, prevail; exaggerating some one portion, or aspect, or
feature of the divine plan, and raising many a cloud of lettered dust, such as
may cause endless perplexity and doubt, and sadly mar "the simplicity which is
in Christ." It is not, therefore, any such knowledge of all things that is here
commended. Rather, it is that of which our Lord himself speaks when he says: "I
thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these
things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes. Even so,
Father: for so it seemed good in thy sight" (Matt. 11: 25, 26).
For how
does that Holy One, the Son, reveal to these babes the Father, and "all things
delivered unto him of his Father?" How but by imparting to them that anointing
which he has himself? It is as the Holy One, the Christ, the Anointed, that the
Son has all things delivered unto him of his Father, and knows the Father so as
to reveal him to us. And it is by making us partakers with himself in his own
anointing; by making us Christs, the Lord's anointed, as he himself is the
Christ, the Lord's anointed; by causing us to have the same unction with
himself ; - that he reveals to us the Father.
How wonderfully, in this
view of it, does this unction which we have from the Holy One unite and
identify us with the Holy One himself, in respect of our knowing all things! It
is indeed a marvellous way of grace and condescension in which the great
Teacher teaches us. He does not stand on an elevated platform apart handing
down to us the lessons we have to learn, and reporting, as it were, the
observations and discoveries he makes. He lifts us up to be beside himself. He
puts his own glass into our hand: he puts his own eye into our head: he puts
his own intensity of loving gaze into our heart; and bids us look for
ourselves; and see the Father as he sees him, and know all things as he knows
them; "all things delivered to him of his Father." Well might Paul say of the
spiritual man, thus - by such a spiritual discernment as this - judging all
things; himself judged of none: "Who hath known the mind of the Lord that he
may instruct him? But we have the mind of Christ." For the unction of the
Spirit which we thus share with him, - or rather he with us, - -gives us the
same knowledge of the Father - of all things - that Christ the Son had when he
himself received the unction of the Spirit; the same, I mean, in kind, not in
degree ; - not yet the same in measure, though gradually coming more and more
nearly to be so; meanwhile, the same in manner.
What was his manner of
knowing the Father and all things about the Father's will and purpose, when he
was here, as the Holy One anointed by the Spirit? Ah! how practical it was! how
experimental! how thoroughly a learning of it all by obedience; by suffering;
by unreserved submission and acquiescence; by patience; by waiting; by faith,
and love, and hope! Therefore, it was in his case a knowledge thoroughly
simple, and in its simplicity thoroughly complete. "Little children," let it be
so in our ease too. Let us remember his own saying: "If any man will do his
will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God." It was as a doer of
God's will that he, in his human experience, having the Spirit's unction, knew
all things. Let it be as doers of God's will that we learn to know them
too.
And let us remember, "This is the work of God, that ye believe in
him whom he has sent." Believing in Jesus we attain to his clear knowledge of
the Father and of all things. Clouds of guilt and wrath, of misconception and
suspicion, of doubt and fear, are driven away before the :rising of the Sun of
Righteousness with healing in his wings. We walk no more benighted and
befooled; stumbling in the dark, amid unseen stones and pitfalls, and dire
visionary phantoms. We walk safely and at liberty, knowing all things, seeing
all things in the light of God; in the light of his reconciled countenance; in
the light of that love wherewith he "loveth us even as he loveth Christ." It is
by the love with which the Father loves him that the Son knows the Father, and
all things which the Father has, and which also are his. It is by the love with
which the Father loves us as he loves him, that we, having unction from him who
is the Holy One, know all things ; "the love with which the Father hath loved
him being in us, and he in us" (John 17: 17-25).
IV. The security which our "having an unction from
the Holy One and knowing all things" affords, in trying times, must now surely
be seen to be very ample and firm. Others may "go out from us;" it being thus
"made manifest that they were not of us;" and may become anti-Christs, or the
prey of anti-Christ. But "will ye also go away?" - ye who share the very
unction and the very knowledge which the Holy One himself has?. Is not this
your preservative against all error and apostasy? Is it not a sufficient
preservative? "To whom will ye go? He has the words of eternal life; and you
believe and are sure that he is the Christ, the Son of the living God." And you
are joint-Christs with him; and joint-sons with him; and joint-heirs with him.
What have you to do any more with idols?. - or with the husks of the
swine-trough, to which citizens of the far country may be for sending you? - or
with seducing lies and doctrines of devils to which you may be tempted to give
heed? - -or, in a word, with any of the modifications of the way of grace and
salvation, - any of the readjustments of the terms of acceptance, - -any of the
devices for pacifying conscience, - -any of the new lights, mystical or
rationalistic, sacramental or sentimental, - by which men would fain seek to be
wiser than God, and even holier than God, and better than God? Ye who have
found Christ, or whom Christ has found; ye who have the same anointing that
Christ had ; ye who taste and see how good his Father and yours is, - -loving
you even as he loveth him, - -" will ye also go away?"
And be sure that
this is the only preservative; the one specific. Much learning, great
enlightenment, the intelligence of an age of progress in all that relates to
high mental culture and social improvement; intense earnestness, profound
study, patient inquiry; anxious searching of the heart and of all that has been
proposed for meeting the heart's wants; devotional feeling; self-renouncing and
self-sacrificing humility ; - -these, and other equally promising means and
tokens of good, are found to be no effectual safeguards. Nay, at any season
when men's minds are stirred, their consciences moved, and their souls melted;
when the deadness of an age of formalism is giving place to a time of inquiry,
of awakening, of thought and sensibility, of speculation and discourse, on
things spiritual and divine; the very shaking of the dry bones caused by the
wind of heaven may only make you more susceptible of influences, and more open
to suggestions, carrying you away from the old paths and the footsteps of the
flock, into wanderings in search of rest or of revival, roof peace or of
perfection, - that may issue in your being fain at last to believe any prophet
and follow any guide, even if he lead you into the arms of an infallible
church, or down the steep bank that ends in the dreary void of scepticism and
unbelief.
At such an era - when "it is now the last time, of which ye
have heard that anti-Christ shall come; when even now already there are many
anti-Christs; whereby ye may know that it is the last time;" when, on all
hands, too many who seemed to be of us - as serious and as safe as ourselves -
are going out from us; "Little children," see that ye have indeed "unction from
the Holy One and know all things." Be very sure that no ignorance, no
emptiness, no vacancy; no unhealed sore and unanointed eye; no halting or
hesitating belief; no "vague and all doubtsome faith ;" will stand in the midst
of such peril. Nothing will stand but what is real, positive, satisfying, in
your personal acquaintance with God, and your saving knowledge of the things of
God; nothing but your having yourselves found the Messiah, the Christ, and your
bringing others to find him: that they and you may really become partakers with
him in all that he is to the Father as his Holy One, and all that as his
beloved Son he knows of the things of the Father delivered to him for
us.
XV. THE GUILELESS SPIRIT, AMID
ANTI-CHRISTIAN DENIAL OF THE SON, ACKNOWLEDGINGTHE SON SO AS TO HAVE
THE FATHER ALSO.
"I have not written unto you because ye know not the
truth, but because ye know it, and that no lie is of the truth. Who is a liar
but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ? He is anti- Christ, that denieth
the Father and the Son. Whosoever denieth the Son, the same hath not the Father
but he that acknowledgeth the ,Son hath the Father also." 1 John 2: 21, 22, 23.
The last part of the 23d verse, although considered doubtful by our
translators, and therefore put by them in italics and within brackets, is now
admitted to be genuine. It completes the sense of the passage. To deny the Son
is not to have the Father; to acknowledge the Son is to have the Father. And
this is the ultimate difference between an anti-Christ and a joint-Christ;
between those who are against the Anointed One, and you who share his
anointing; "having unction from the Holy One and knowing all things." By that
unction or anointing, which passes to you from the anointed Holy One, you know
all things; all the truth; the truth in all its bearings; and therefore you can
discriminate between the truth and every lie. If it were not so, it would be
needless for me to write to you (ver. 2 ). I cannot expect you to detect a liar
unless you know the truth yourselves. For the test by which you detect a liar,
or the liar, is the truth which you know. He contradicts the truth; he denies
that Jesus is the Christ; and that denial is enough to mark the liar. It marks
him also as an anti- Christ, or, in spirit, the anti-Christ. For it amounts to
what is the criterion or characteristic of anti-Christ, a denial of the Father
and the Son (ver. 22). The denial, indeed, so far at least as the Father is
concerned, is not express and avowed, but virtual rather and by implication.
The lie touches immediately the Son alone; and reaches the Father only through
the Son. It is not, however, on that account, less really a denial of the
Father as well as of the Son. For the Father and the Son are one; and
therefore, he that "denieth the Son, the same hath not the Father," while "he
that acknowledgeth the Son hath the Father also.
Two questions naturally
occur here.
I. How is a denial that
Jesus is the Christ equivalent to a denial of the Son? And
II. How is a denial of the Son a denial of the
Father, so that to deny the Son is not to have the Father; and how, on the
other hand, does the acknowledgment of the Son secure our having the
Father?
I. Plainly, in John's view,
to deny that Jesus is the Christ is to deny the Son ; the two denials are
declared to be one and the same. And yet there is a difference. The object of
the one denial is a proposition ; the object of the other is a person. Nor is
the difference accidental or unimportant; on the contrary, it is very
significant.
One thing, at least, is very clear. If the denial of a
proposition concerning any person is to be viewed as identical with the denial
of the person himself, the proposition must be one that vitally affects his
nature and character. Take any illustrious personage who may be supposed to
occupy my thoughts; the heir-apparent to the throne, for instance. If I choose
to deny that he is what you believe, or even know him to be, as to his height,
or complexion, or turn of mind, or habit of body, you may charge me with
falsehood, or even say that I lie. But you would scarcely allege that in
denying any affirmation of that sort about him, I deny the prince. It must be
something far more deeply touching his birth, or his birthright, or his
worthiness of either, that I deny, before you can construe my denial of it,
into a disloyal and traitorous denial of himself. So here, if to deny the
proposition that "Jesus is the Christ" is to deny the Son ; the proposition
itself must :mean more than at first appears.
It cannot mean simply that
he is the person foretold in the Old Testament under the name of the Messiah ;
there :is more in it than a mere identification of the individual. The official
designation, Christ, or Messiah, or Anointed, :marks not only a certain
relation to the Jewish Scriptures, but also and still more a certain relation
to God, whose Christ he is, In the dreamy and misty theosophy of the Gnostic
anti-Christs, any Christ whom they would acknowledge at all could be nothing
else than a sort of efflux or emanation of Deity, a detached portion of the
divine nature, or a mysterious outgoing of the divine power, or wisdom, or love
altogether visionary and unsubstantial; but withal very sublime. The idea of
such a transcendental Christ being identical with the historical man, the man
of "flesh and bones," Jesus, was an outrage on their philosophy. They might
admit an occasional and temporary illipse. Now and then, or perhaps generally,
all through his life and ministry, Jesus might be in a certain spiritual
relation to this Christ. There might be upon him, and in him, moving and
inspiring him, what of God they thought proper to call the Christ. But that he
was truly and personally himself the Christ, - in his manhood and in his
manhood's history and experience - especially in his birth and in his death,
their subtle notions of spirit and matter compelled them strenuously to deny.
This denial necessarily reduced Jesus to the level of a mere man; a
representative man perhaps, the ground and type and head of restored or
perfected humanity; a divine man too, in some vague use of the phrase; but
still really not more than a man; his birth no real incarnation; his death no
real propitiation. It is this which stamps value on the confession that "Jesus
is the Christ ;" that from his being born of the Virgin to his expiring on
Calvary, he is the Christ. And it is this which makes the denial of the
proposition so serious. It is the denial of his vicarious character and
position; his being in any fair sense, or to any substantial effect, the
substitute of men; of men viewed as guilty, condemned, and lost.
I have
said that he might be owned, after a fashion, as a representative man, or the
representative man. Humanity in its best state, whether of development or of
recovery, - perfect humanity, if you will, - might have its culminating grace
and glory in him. And as the model man, or something more, as the man in whom
human nature and the human race, as such, are elevated, he might be so visited
by the overshadowing of a divine energy as to be in some sense partaker of the
divine nature. But as to what he is himself personally, he differs in no
material or essential respect from other men. Born like them, like them he
dies. Not only has he all in common with them; but he has nothing in him or
about him but what is in common. He is not "separate from sinners."
So
Jesus is described in the Epistle to the Hebrews: "For such an High Priest
became us, who is holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners, and made
higher than the heavens" (7: 26). Here the three epithets, "holy, harmless,
undefiled," exhaust the account of his pure and perfect moral character. The
phrases that follow, "separate from sinners," and "made higher than the
heavens," must refer, I think, the former to the manner of his birth, the
latter to his exaltation after his death.
Great controversy lies, in our
own day, as well as in that of John. Jesus must be acknowledged as not only one
with us, but "separate from us." Not otherwise can he save us by being our
substitute; redeem us by being our ransom! reconcile us to God by the sacrifice
of himself in our stead. He must be "separate from us" in his birth; exempt, by
special miracle, from all participation in the sin of humanity, whose guilt he
is to expiate. He must be "separate from us" in his death; his death being what
no other death ever was, or ever can be, a real satisfaction to offended
justice; a valid atonement for the offence; an actual enduring and exhausting
of what the penal severity of law requires; a true and literal "suffering, the
just for the unjust, that he might bring us to God."
The denial of the
proposition that "Jesus is the Christ," according to the notions then current,
precluded all such views of the way in which he saves sinners. Under a
different form, a similar mysticism precludes them now.
There has always
indeed been a school in the church tending in that direction; willing to exalt
Jesus as high as any one would wish, in one aspect of his mediatorship, his
being one with us, and so qualified to represent us; but ever stopping short of
that other aspect of it, his being "separate from us," and so qualified to
atone for us. Of Jesus personally much appears to be made. Not too much
certainly; for that is impossible. Jesus, personally, the real, living Jesus,
cannot be too much thought of. His very name is as ointment poured forth. He is
the chiefest among ten thousand and altogether lovely. The church, the spouse,
- every soul that as a chaste virgin is espoused to Jesus, - is ravished with
the beauty of his person and the endearments of his fellowship. But it is a
snare to forget, it is a sin to deny, that he is the Christ; or, in other
words, to overlook or set aside that real and actual work of substitution and
satisfaction, of vicarious suffering and obedience, in respect of which he is
the Christ. Ah! will not every true lover of Jesus feel that, apart from his
being thus the Christ, he has in fact no Jesus at all to love? "Dear, dying
Lamb!" is his adoring and grateful invocation; "Worthy the Lamb, for he was
slain for us," is his song; "Thou hast redeemed us with thy blood," is his
worship. He, therefore, is at no loss to see how the denial of the proposition
that "Jesus is the Christ," thus viewed in its bearing on his work, is
substantially and most sadly a denial of the person.
2. This will appear still more clearly when we
consider that the person is the Son. As the Son he stands in a distinct and
definite relation to the Father. He must be owned in that relation if he is to
be owned at all; otherwise he is to all intents and purposes denied. The
Gnostic dreamers fancied that they could get a notion of a Son of God from a
mere contemplation of the divine nature in the abstract. By a sort of effort of
imagination they personified a divine attribute or emanation, of the Son;
sometimes distinguishing that idea from the idea of the Christ, sometimes
identifying them. Nor did they hesitate to allow the title Son of God to Jesus,
considered as the representative man, or type of perfect humanity, who, as
such, enjoyed the presence of somewhat of the Divinity with him and in him.
Between these two conceptions of a Son of God they may be said to have
oscillated; the one high, but indistinct; the other, more distinct perhaps, and
intelligible, but comparatively low. They are the two conceptions, on this
great theme of the Sonship, between which, as opposite extremes, I am apt to be
tossed to and fro.
I fix my thoughts on the everlasting God considered
abstractly as he is in himself. I try to body forth in my imagination the idea
of there being in the essence of the Divine nature, from all eternity, a Son of
the Father; "God of God; light of light; very God of very God; begotten, not
made; of one substance with the Father;" his only begotten. Abstracting my mind
from earth and time, I gaze on the Eternal Three in One; Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit. I would pierce the mystery of high heaven; how "the Son is of the
Father;" and "the Holy Spirit is of the Father and the Son." Alas! it is
impenetrable. The distinction of persons in the Godhead I may believe, though I
cannot comprehend. The second person I may be taught to call the Word, or the
Son. But the name tells me nothing. I am lost in the dark sublimity of the
infinite unknown. Coming down from heaven to earth and time, I see Jesus, "a
man approved of God, who went about doing good ;" and I can understand why, as
a good and holy man, the perfect model of human goodness, the restorer and
perfecter of all humanity's excellence, after the divine ideal, - he should be
specially and above all others honoured with the title of Son of God. Such a
view of sonship, however, scarcely rises above what is matter of mere figure or
sentiment. Thus, on the one hand, considering the nature of God apart, in the
deep, dark wonder of the eternal generation, the Son being eternally begotten
of the Father; or, on the other hand, considering the nature of man apart, in
the clear light of the history of Jesus, and his being found pre-eminently and
exclusively worthy to be called God's Son; I am either soaring up to what is
too high for me, or I am apt to acquiesce in what is too low for him. But let
me fully realise the fact that Jesus is the Christ. And let me fully enter into
the great transaction between the Father and the Son, of which that fact is the
expression. Then a new and blessed sight of this divine sonship breaks upon my
soul. For now, as I am carried back, in rapt musing, to the remotest point of
possible retrospection, along the vista of the ages of a past eternity, before
all worlds, the Father and the Son are seen, not in repose, but in counsel at
least, if not in action. A momentous consultation is going on. A great covenant
is negotiated. The Father and the Son, with the Spirit, are, if one may dare to
say so, in solemn conference together. From the bosom of the Father, in which
he is dwelling evermore, the Son receives a commission to come forth. He is
appointed heir of all things. Creation is assigned to him as his proper work.
All providence is to be his care; and above all the providence of this spot of
earth. Here, on this earth, from among a fallen race, he is to purchase for
himself, and for his Father, at a great price, a seed given him by the Father,
to share with him in the blessedness of his being the Son. So it is arranged
between the Father and the Son from everlasting; the Holy Spirit being a party
to the arrangement, as he is to have a large share in carrying it out. And so,
accordingly, in the fullness of time, the Son appears among men. He appears as
the Son; on his Father's behalf; entrusted with his Father's commission; to be
about his Father's business. Thus Jesus is seen as the Son. And it is in the
character of the Christ that he is seen to be the Son. He is the Son, not
merely in respect of his being the holy Jesus, receiving proofs and tokens of
God's fatherly presence and approval, as any holy being might. He is the Son
also, and chiefly, in respect of the work or office with a view to which he is
the Christ. He is the Son consenting to be the Father's servant, and as such
anointed of the Father for the accomplishment of the Father's purpose. Only,
therefore, in so far as you acknowledge Jesus as the Christ do you really
receive him as the Son. Any denial, whether practical' or doctrinal, of the
proposition that Jesus is the Christ, is tantamount to a disowning of him
personally as the Son. It is only when you recognise him as anointed to do his
Father's will in the sacrifice of himself that you really own him, in any
distinct sense, as the Son.
Such, then, is the import and significance
of the proposition that Jesus is the Christ, considered in itself; and such its
bearing on the owning of him personally as the Saviour and as the Son. It is a
proposition which so vitally affects the essential character of him to whom it
relates, that the denial of it is virtually a denial of himself. For the
completeness of this illustrious personage depends on a full and adequate
recognition of his double relation; to us sinners, as our Jesus, and to God the
Father, as his Son. And neither of these relations can be fully and adequately
recognised, unless his being the Christ is recognised, with all that his being
the Christ must be held fairly to imply. Neither what he is to us as our Jesus,
nor what he is to God as his Son, can be otherwise known than by what he is
anointed to do, and actually does, as the Christ. Set aside his being the
Christ; the anointed sacrificer and anointed sacrifice; the anointed priest and
anointed victim; set aside his actual work for which he is anointed, the work
of redeeming us by his obedience, and the shedding of his blood, or the giving
of his life, in our stead; and we have neither any Jesus fit to be our saviour,
nor any Son of God worth the owning. The stress must always, for practical
purposes, be laid upon his office and ministry as the Christ?
Hence he
that denieth that Jesus is the Christ is not only a liar; he is anti-Christ.
And being anti-Christ, setting himself against the Christ, thrusting him aside
from his blessed office and ministry of real and effectual reconciliation for
which he is anointed - he as anti-Christ, denies the Father and the
Son.
II. This raises the second
question: How is it that to deny the Son is to deny the Father, so that
"whosoever denieth the Son the same hath not the Father; but he that
acknowledgeth the Son hath the Father also?"
i. "Whosoever denieth the Son, the same hath not," and cannot have,
"the Father." This may be regarded in one view as matter of positive
appointment. In the exercise of his absolute sovereignty, God is entitled to
say upon what terms and in what way any of his creatures shall have him ; -
have him, that is, as theirs; have him so as to have an interest in him, a hold
upon him, and a bond of union with him. He may set forth any one he pleases,
and say, If you deny him you cannot have me. In this case however he sets forth
his Son, and therefore the appointment must be allowed to be in the highest
degree reasonable and fair. One would say even, it is natural that this law
should be in force - you cannot have the Father otherwise than through your
owning the Son. The disowning or denial of the Son cannot but be an offence to
the Father; deeply wounding and grieving his heart. It will be so all the more
if the Son is disowned or denied, not merely in a personal, but, if one may so
say, in an official capacity; not merely in respect of something connected with
his own manner of being with the Father, but in respect of his exercising a
great ministry, as bearing the Father's commission and executing the Father's
purpose.
If the Son remained at home with the Father, in the inscrutable
privacy of inaccessible light, which to us is impenetrable darkness, - so that
beyond the fact of the Father having a Son of his own nature, dwelling in his
bosom for ever, nothing of what they are to one another was ever to be known, -
then to deny, or not to acknowledge the Son, might not be so culpable in us, or
so justly displeasing to the Father. In that case we might possibly have the
Father irrespectively of our knowing and owning the Son. It is otherwise when
the Father "bringeth in the first-begotten into the world," with the
proclamation, "Let all the angels of God worship him." It is otherwise still
when to you, perishing in your sins, the Father sends the Son on a mission of
richest grace. Now it must be very palpable that if you deny the Son you cannot
have the Father; especially if your denial of the Son take the form of a denial
that Jesus is the Christ. For that is a denial of the Son in the very character
in which he comes to you from the Father, sent, sealed, and anointed, to save
you from your sins, by his being "separate from sinners;" separate in the
manner of his holy birth, in the merit of his vicarious obedience, and in the
efficacy of his atoning death and justifying resurrection.
Here it
becomes especially important to observe that the object of your denial is not a
proposition merely, but a person. It is not with a statement about Jesus that
you deal; but with himself personally. And he with whom you deal is the Son.
And he is the Son in the very act of coming, as he says, "to do the Father's
will;" which will is "your being sanctified or cleansed by the offering of
himself, once for all, a sacrifice to take away your sins" (Heb. x.
10).
Yes! it is a living person who is now before you; showing himself
to you; addressing you. You see him as he was when Pilate brought him out, his
head all bleeding from the crown of thorns, and exclaimed, Behold the man! or
when John saw his side pierced, and blood and water coming forth;or when the
Roman soldier gazed on his :meek pale face of agony, and murmured, "Truly this
was the Son of God;" or when the dying thief prayed, "Lord, remember me when
thou comest into thy kingdom." The same now as then, he draws near to you;
bleeding still; his freshly-pierced side still giving forth fresh blood and
water; his face as woeful as when he cried, My God, My God, why hast thou
forsaken me? his voice as calm as when he bowed his head and gave up the ghost,
and said, It is finished. He draws near, "wounded for our transgressions,
bruised for our iniquities." And you deny him. He tells you he is the Son in
all this, doing the Father's will, carrying out the Father's purpose of
infinite compassion and benignity toward you a miserable sinner. And you deny
him; you deny the Son. He stands still beside you, knocking at the door of your
conscience, of your heart; assuring you that he is the Son; that at the
Father's bidding he takes your place, and bears your sin; that for the Father's
love to you he is with you to take you home with him to the Father; now;
immediately; this very instant; as you are; altogether vile and polluted, and
helpless in your guilty state. He pledges himself to you that you have nothing
now to fear; that a full pardon is freely yours; and a perfect peace; and a new
heart; and a right spirit. And you deny him; you deny the Son. How can you have
the Father? Is it not in the very nature of things an impossibility? It is no
abstract truth that you deny; but the true and living Son; and that too in the
very execution of his commission from the Father on your behalf. It cannot be
that so denying the Son you can have, or ever hope to have, the
Father.
2. "But he that
acknowledgeth the Son hath the Father also." He hath the Father; how surely,
how fully, may partly appear, if we consider, not only what Jesus is to us, as
our anointed Saviour, but also what he is to the Father as his beloved Son. For
whatever is implied in his being the Son, in so far as it is compatible with
human nature and a human condition, - whatever of grace, whatever of glory
there is in the relation in which he who is the Christ stands as the Son to the
Father, - he shares with you who acknowledge him. The Father makes you
partakers of it all with the Son. You therefore have the Father as he has the
Father; after the same manner, and largely after the same measure
too.
How would you say that Jesus, as the Son, when he was as you are
now, had the Father? All through his humiliation, how has he the Father? On
what footing is he with the Father? What is his habit of intercourse with the
Father? The Father's love he has; his love of boundless complacency, approval,
delight. Pie is sure of it. The assurance of it is never lost or interrupted;
not even when he is made to taste the bitterness of the cup of wrath, and know
the doom of a God-forsaken soul. He has the Father's gracious presence with him
always. He has the Father's consolation and support, in the ministry of angels
sent to comfort him, and in the constant abiding of the Spirit with him. He has
the Father; having right of access and appeal to him always; and using that
right always. "Abba Father" is on his lips always, and in his heart always. It
is "Abba Father when there is work to do; when there is contradiction of
sinners against himself to bear; when there is resisting unto death in the
strife against sin; when the voice is heard, Awake, O sword, against my
Shepherd; it is "Abba Father" still always. It is "Abba Father" when he for
once rejoices in spirit, - "I thank thee, O Father." It is "Abba Father" when
he soothes the sisters and gives them back their brother - "Father! I thank
thee." It is "Abba Father" when he takes leave of his sorrowing followers, and
commends them to the Father. It is "Abba Father" when hanging on the cross he
prays for his torturers - "Father, forgive them," - and for himself, "Father,
into thy hands I commend my spirit."
So he, as the Son, had the Father,
when he was as you are. So he would have you, acknowledging him, to have the
Father also. You own him as Jesus, the Christ of God, the Son of the Father;
the Christ of God, washing you in his blood, clothing you with his
righteousness, and presenting you with acceptance to God whose Christ he is;
the Son of the Father ; your own elder brother; come out to seek you in the far
country, and to bring you home to his Father and yours. Nor will he be
satisfied unless you have the Father even as he has the Father. He shows you
what it is to have the Father in the state in which you now are; amid the
trials of earth, the enmity of the world, the very pains of hell. He shows you
how even here you can have the Father as, in a work and warfare infinitely
harder than yours, he had the Father ; how you, in all your toil and
tribulation, can rest in the consciousness of the Father's favour; and rejoice
in the doing of the Father's will ; and resign yourself contentedly to the
Father's disposal ; and quietly wait the Father's pleasure to call you hence
when the time comes.
And what shall I say of your having the Father
then? Not as the Son on earth had, but as the Son in heaven now has, the
Father? Even now he says, "If a man love me, he will keep my words, and my
Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make our abode with him."
So you have the Father now. But more, far more, is yours. "Father, I will that
they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am; that they may behold
my glory, which thou hast given me: for thou lovedst me before the foundation
of the world." He comes to receive you to himself; to take you to be with him
where he is, that you may have the Father as he has the Father.
O
glorious day! O blessed consummation! Is this indeed the end of your not
denying but acknowledging that Jesus is the Christ, and so not denying but
acknowledging the Son Low he stoops, - how low none but a holy God and lost
souls can tell, - as Jesus who is the Christ. Down into the depths of sin's
guilt and doom he goes. Over the head of the anointed righteous One, the
obedient servant, the billows of wrath roll. And you deny him not, but
acknowledge him, as thus redeeming you. You confess that "Jesus is the Christ."
You are not ashamed of his cross. It is your glory. And well it may be. For
what fruit is yours through your not denying, but acknowledging, the Son, in
his coming forth from the Father as his Christ to such humiliation for you? Is
it that you escape punishment merely, and are saved from hell? That would be no
mean boon. But what privilege is yours now, - what hope hereafter? It is the
Son whom you acknowledge. He has the Father. He has the Father's kingdom; the
Father's riches; the Father's joys. He has the Father's heart. He has the
Father himself And nothing will content him but that you, who acknowledge him,
shall have the Father as he has the Father. Surely of the future, as well as of
the present fruit of your acknowledging the Son, it may be said: "Eye hath not
seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things
which God hath prepared for them that love him." And surely, beyond question,
the whole plan and system of saving mercy is surpassingly gracious and
glorious, - -according to which, "when the fullness of the time was come, God
sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem them that
were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons."
XVI. THE GUILELESS SPIRIT ABIDING THROUGH THE WORD IN
THE SON
AND IN THE FATHER, SO AS TO RECEIVE THE PROMISE OF
ETERNAL LIFE.
"Let that therefore abide in you which ye have heard from the
beginning. If that which ye have heard from the beginning shall remain [abide]
in you, ye also shall continue [abide] in the Son, and in the Father. And this
is the promise that he hath promised us, even eternal life." - 1 John 2: 24,
25.
This practical appeal, concluding the previous argument, has a
singularly close resemblance to the opening statement of the epistle. The same
remarkable phraseology prevails. There is a "hearing from the beginning," and a
"declaration" or promise connected with it. "That which was from the
beginning," "that which we have seen and heard declare we unto you ;" so the
apostle speaks of the apostolic position and commission (1: 1-3). "That which
ye have heard from the beginning " - -" the promise which he hath promised ;" -
so he speaks here of the standing of those to whom he writes. And as, in the
former passage, it is the Word of life that is seen and heard and handled; it
is "the life," "the eternal life," that is "manifested" and "declared;" so
here, "this is the promise that he hath promised us, even eternal life." The
appeal runs exactly thus: "You, therefore, what ye have heard from the
beginning, let it abide in you." For you must now perceive that "if what ye
have heard from the beginning shall abide in you," then, and only then, shall
ye "abide in the Son and in the Father." And this is the secret of your having
fellowship with us in what is common to both of us: "the promise of eternal
life" (ver. 5).
I. "Let that
therefore which ye have heard from the beginning abide in you." The phrase
"from the beginning" must here refer to the first preaching of the gospel. It
cannot be understood in the same absolute sense in which it is used in the
opening of the epistle. And yet John, I am persuaded, has that great thought in
his mind. His object is to identify your position with that of himself and his
fellow apostles. You are to "have fellowship with us" (1: 3). We would have you
to be upon the same footing with us; in the same boat, as it were; the boat
tossed on the Galilean sea, to whose troubled crew no phantom ghost but the
living Jesus appears and says - " It is I; be not afraid." It was given to us
to see, to hear, to touch and handle, "that which was from the beginning " -
"of the Word of life." And this is that which we have declared unto you, and
which "ye have heard from the beginning." Let it abide in you.
For this
end, that it may abide in you, let "that which ye have heard from the
beginning" be not only known but felt ; not only known as a matter of fact or
doctrine, but felt as a matter of experience. Let it so lay hold of you, that
it shall be the nature of God becoming in a sense part and parcel of your
nature; the great heart of the Father entering in a measure into union with
your heart.
The nature of God is light; the heart of the Father is love.
Light, pure and unsullied, is the essence of God, and his dwelling-place. He is
light and he dwells in light. It is light which no darkness can invade. It is
light, moreover, in which nothing but love can be at home. It is light before
which, - the true light shining, - the darkness of the world, and all that is
in it, must be passing away, and only he that doeth the will of God can abide
for ever. It is in Christ that this true light now shines. Without him you
cannot come to the light, or dwell in the light, or walk in the light; without
his blood which cleanseth from all sin, without himself as your advocate with
the Father, the righteous one, the propitiation for your sins. This is what
"you have heard from the beginning" and have believed; and have found
experimentally to be true. Let it so "abide in you;" let it be "Christ dwelling
in your hearts by faith" (Eph. 3: 17).
For otherwise you cannot face the
light; you cannot meet with clear and open eye the light of that clear and open
eye of God; you quail beneath its truth and love. If at any moment you in any
measure lose Christ, you so far lose both truth and love, the truth and love
which alone can bear the light. You fall into darkness again, and come under
its power, the power of its untrue and unloving ways. The old dark doubts and
fears of guilt beset you: the old dark refuges of lies tempt you ; the old dark
devices of self-justification return upon you; the old dark habit of tampering
with the world's lusts, and listening to the world's palliations of them,
seduces you; and the old dark disquietudes of a peevish and angry discontent
with yourselves, with your God, and with your fellow-men, begin again to rankle
in your bosom. Instead of the light of truth, there is dark guile in your
spirits. Instead of the light of love, there is dark suspicion and enmity and
alienation.
Ah! if you would have all to be always clear and bright in
the spiritual atmosphere around you; all open between your God and you; open
truth and open love " let that which ye have heard from the beginning abide in
you" Let all of Christ you have ever known, seen, heard, handled, tasted,
"abide in you." Let all you have learned of Christ, - as being with the Father,
from everlasting, in his bosom, - as coming forth from the Father to reveal and
reconcile, - as purging your sin with blood, and bringing you to be all to the
Father that he is himself to the Father, - let it all "abide in you;" always,
everywhere.
II. So "ye also shall
abide in the Son and in the Father."
First, "Ye shall abide in the
Son." What the Lord elsewhere enjoins as in itself a duty, "Abide in me" (John
15: 4), the apostle describes as the consequence of another duty being rightly
discharged. He points out the condition or the means of our abiding in the Son;
as indeed Jesus also may be held to do when he says, "If ye abide in me, and my
words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will" (John 15: 7). The meaning
clearly is - "Ye abide in me through my words abiding in you" - the Lord's
expression, "my words," being equivalent to the apostle's, "that which ye have
heard" of the word of life "from the beginning." Thus it is by faith that we
"abide in the Son;" for it is by faith that what we have heard of him from the
beginning abides in us. The manner, therefore, of our abiding in the Son is
neither sacramental on the one hand, nor mystical on the other - neither
physically ritual, nor metaphysically transcendental.
We do not "abide
in the Son" by any sacramental act on our part, or any sacramental grace or
virtue on his. The Lord's Supper may be a help to our abiding in the Son; but
only indirectly, through its being a help to our having "that which we have
heard of him from the beginning abiding in us." It is the expressive sign and
sure seal of it, and therefore may contribute to its abiding in us, and so to
our abiding in the Son. But that is all. There is no charm or efficacy in the
rite itself to secure our abiding in the Son. The relation described by our
abiding in the Son is not of such a sort as can be kept up by any act or
process apart from intelligence, consciousness, and volition.
And
therefore this abiding in the Son cannot be mystical or transcendental, any
more than it can be ritual or sacramental. It cannot be such as the visionaries
of John's day imagined in their splendid dreams; in which abiding in the
Christ, or in the Son, considered as an emanation or efflux of Deity, was a
kind of absorption; a height of self-identification with some portion or
manifestation of the Divine essence, or self-annihilation in it, to be reached
by a long course of abstract musing on the first principles of things, or deep
but vague contemplation of the eternal, infinite Being.
John's idea of
abiding in the Son is much humbler and more practical. We abide in the Son, as
we may be said to abide in any one when his words abide in us. - or when that
which we have heard of him, or from him, from the beginning, abides in us ;
when we understand and know him, by what he says and what we hear; when what we
thus understand and know of him takes hold of us, carries our conviction,
commands our confidence and love, fastens and rivets itself in our mind and
heart, and so abides in us. Thus we abide in the Son precisely as we abide in a
friend whom we know, and trust, and love.
Doubtless the Son in whom we
abide transcends infinitely any such friend. In him are excellencies which are
to be found in no other. In himself personally, and in his relation as the Son
to the Father, there are riches of wisdom, knowledge, goodness, grace, and
glory, which our "abiding in him" through eternity will not enable us
thoroughly to search or ransack. Not when myriads of blessed ages in yonder
realms of light have rolled over our heads will one tithe of all the wonders of
him whose "name is Wonderful" have been discovered; no, not though our abiding
in him there will be without a break and without a cloud. And what shall I say
of the raptures of that personal intercourse and interchange of thought,
feeling, and affection, in which our abiding in the Son then must mainly
consist? Can any limit be set to the ravishing joy of our walking with him and
his walking with us in Paradise - when we go in and out together - we seeing
him without a vail, - and he, as he talks with us without reserve, causing our
hearts to burn within us? And what comparison can there be, even now, between
our abiding in him and our abiding in any other, even the best of
friends?
Still it is important to remember, that we do abide in the Son
very much as we abide in any other friend; it is important now, as well as in
the apostle's time. For there is a fancy abroad of a sort of abiding in the Son
that may be to a large extent independent of his words, or words about him,
abiding in us. There is a tendency to put a sort of sentimental pietism, itself
undefined and hating definition, gazing with rapt and fascinated eye on a
soul-melting "Agnus Dei" or "Ecce Homo," seen in dim religious
light, in the place of intelligent faith, or the engagement of mind and heart
in personal converse with one who speaks and would be spoken to ; of whom and
from whom and about whom we hear and read, in the teaching of his own apostles,
in the Scriptures of his own Spirit's inspiration. These are practically set
aside; or, at least, any attempt to make their statements yield precise
information concerning Christ and his work is disparaged. A Son of God and Son
of man, rising out of some deep soundings of divinity and humanity, is
substituted for the Son of whom apostles spoke and disciples heard from the
beginning. And abiding in him is not a plain, practical, personal dealing with
him about that for which he came into the world, and has been manifested to us,
to us as individuals one by one; but an attempt somehow to grasp the notion of
abstract divinity and universal humanity being in him mysteriously at one. Let
no such speculations beguile us. Rather "let that which we have heard from the
beginning abide in us;" and let us thereby "abide in the Son;" using as the
means of our abiding in him the Scriptures which we search, and which testify
of him. Let us thus turn all that we learn into the materials of that personal
communing of him with us and us with him, which is indeed the essence of our
abiding in the Son .
All the rather let us do so because, secondly, this
abiding in the Son is abiding in the Father; for the Father and the Son are
one. Abiding in the Son, we enter into his relation to the Father, into the
whole of it and into all its fruits. We enter into all that the Son is to the
Father, as his chosen servant, as the man of his right hand, as his anointed,
as his lamb, the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world, as his
fellow, against whom his sword of justice awakes, as his smitten shepherd, as
his victorious king set on his holy hill of Zion, as his beloved Son in whom he
is well pleased, declared to be the Son of God with power by his resurrection
from the dead. Into all that the Son is to the Father, in these and other
similar views of his mediatorial character and ministry as the Son, we enter,
when we abide in the Son. And so we come to be to the Father all that the Son
is to the Father. We abide in the Father as the Son abides in the Father. So we
abide in the Son and in the Father. And still all this depends on our letting
"that which we have heard from the beginning abide in us." It depends on that
faith which cometh by hearing, as hearing cometh by the word of God. In vain we
look for any other mode of indwelling in God than that which is through the
Spirit giving us a sympathising insight into what we have heard and may always
hear in the gospel, - into what we have read and may always read in the
Scriptures, - of the great transaction between the Father and the Son on which
depend the expiation of our guilt, the forgiveness of our sin, the ending of
our long estrangement, and the ratifying of our reconciliation and peace. By
study, meditation and prayer, let us get more and more, - the Spirit helping us
in our musings, - into the very heart of all "that we have heard from the
beginning," from the Father, of the Son; from the Son, of the Father. So we
abide, more and more intelligently, more and more consciously, more and more
believingly, lovingly, rejoicingly, "in the Son and in the Father."
III. Of all this "the fruit is unto
holiness, and the end everlasting life." For "this is the promise that he hath
promised us, even eternal life."
The meaning here may be that "the promise
of eternal life" is superadded to the privilege or condition of our "abiding in
the Son and in the Father," that it is something over and above that, held out
to us in prospect; or it may be that our "abiding in the Son and in the Father"
is itself the very "life eternal" that is promised. The difference is not
material; the two thoughts, or rather the two modifications of the same
thought, run into one. "The promise that he hath promised us is eternal life."
And "this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and
Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent" (John 17: 3).
Hence we need inquire no
farther at present into the nature of eternal life; nor need we conceive of it
as an unknown boon held out in dim and distant prospect before us. We have only
to work out what is implied in our "knowing the Father, the only true God, and
Jesus Christ whom he has sent." We have only to prove and real/se more and
more, in our experience, what it is to "abide in the Son and in the Father."
And that is the promise already fulfilled. That is "eternal life." It is in a
real and valid sense, the very life of God himself made ours.
For the
life of God alone can be truly said to be life at all ; it alone can be "life
eternal." All other life is but death; either death possibly impending, or
death actually inflicted. At the very best, the life of an intelligent and
responsible creature is, as it was in unfallen Adam, precarious; and if not
doomed, at least liable, to death. In fallen Adam and his race, it is simply
death; "the wages of sin is death," "in the day thou eatest thou diest." "But
the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord ;" "God hath
given unto us eternal life, and this life is in his Son." For the Son liveth.
It is "given to the Son to have life in himself, even as the Father hath life
in himself." This is a gift even to the Son, in our nature and in our stead. It
is given to him, as one with us, our kinsman-redeemer; for he says, "Because I
live ye shall live also." Let us enter then into the life which the Son has by
the gift of the Father; his past life of obedience to the Father and acceptance
with the Father, on earth, his present life of fellowship with the Father in
heaven. Let us apprehend that life as a reality. Let us apprehend the essence
of it, which is really intercourse, blessed intercourse, between the Father and
the Son; converse, communion conversation.
We have materials for this in
"that which we have heard from the beginning," if we let it "abide in us." We
have the Father speaking of and to the Son, and the Son speaking of and to the
Father. That is the life of the Father and the Son; that is "life eternal." And
it is that which he has promised to us, even that very "life eternal;" the
Father so speaking of and to us as he speaks of and to the Son; and we speaking
of and to the Father as the Son speaks of and to the Father. It is that very
life that is promised to us when we, "letting that which we have heard from the
beginning abide in us, ourselves abide in the Father and the Son."
Hence
the Lord says (John 15: 7): "If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ye
shall ask what ye will and it shall be done unto you." To ask ; to be ever
asking, and asking freely, confidently, boldly; is one way in which "eternal
life," or "abiding in the Son," acts itself out. The very breath of that life
is prayer. Hence also the Lord says (ver. 5): "He that abideth in me, and I in
him, the same bringeth forth much fruit ;" for he partakes of my life; and my
life is fruitful, abundantly, richly fruitful. The life which I have with God
my Father is fruitful in all good works, to the praise of his glory. And if
that very life is yours, through your abiding in me and in my Father; if your
life is hid with me in God; then it must now be fruitful in you, as it was in
me when I was as you now are; fruitful in all the fruit of the Spirit, which is
"love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness,
temperance."
XVII. THE GUILELESS SPIRIT,
THROUGH THE ABIDING MESSIANIC UNCTION AND ILLUMINATION - OF THE HOLY
GHOST, ABIDING IN CHRIST, SO AS TO HAVE CONFIDENCE AT HIS COMING.
"These
things have I written unto you concerning them that seduce you. But the
anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you; and ye need not that
any man teach you; but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things, and is
truth, and is no lie, and even as it hath taught you, ye shall abide in him.
And now, little children, abide in him; that when he shall appear, we may have
confidence, and not be ashamed before him at his coming." 1 John 2:
26-28.
The discourse is still about abiding in God, in the Son and in
the Father. And the special lesson taught is, that the security for our thus
abiding in God is to be found, not in our resisting outward solicitations
drawing us away from him, but in our having in ourselves an inward principle to
keep us near and close to him. If we have not that, no warning, however
faithful, against seducers will avail. If we have that, no such warning should
be needed. And what is that? It is what has been already indicated in the
twentieth verse; the "unction" or anointing which we "have from the Holy One."
Of that unction or anointing it is here testified, that its teaching is both
thoroughly comprehensive and infallibly true; "It teacheth you of all things,
and is truth, and is no lie." The effect of its teaching is our abiding in him;
"Even as it has taught you, ye shall abide in him;" or it may be put
imperatively, "abide in him" "having this unction, and being taught by it,
abide in him" with whom you share it. And you have the strongest inducement to
abide in him; you and we alike. For we all look for his appearing; and must
surely wish that, "when he shall appear, we may have confidence, and not be
ashamed before him at his coming."
Two topics here occur for
consideration -
I. The provision made for our abiding in him;
II. The
motive urged for our abiding in him.
1. The provision made for our abiding in him is the "anointing which
we receive of him abiding in us." That anointing, as we have seen, is our
sharing with him in the gift of the Holy Spirit. And it is an anointing which
abideth in us. "I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another
Comforter, that he may abide with you for ever." So the Lord gives the promise
of which John here attests the fulfilment. And it is with special reference to
his teaching, illuminating, and enlightening grace, that both the Lord and the
apostle speak of the Holy Spirit and his unction abiding in us. "He shall teach
you all things and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said
unto you; " - " he shall guide you into all truth;" - " he shall take of mine
and show it unto you." That is the Lord's way of describing the Spirit's
abiding presence and its use. And to that the apostle agrees. This anointing
"teacheth you" and "hath taught you," so that you need no further teaching; for
"it teacheth you of all things, and is truth, and is no lie." There is a
fullness in its teaching that admits of no supplement, and an assurance that
excludes all doubt.
Observe the manifold worth and value of this
anointing.
It is in us; it is an inward anointing. Not with oil on the
head, but with the Holy Spirit in the heart, we are anointed; as he from whom
we receive the anointing was himself anointed. It is not an application or
appeal from without; it is a gracious influence, a gracious ovement or
experience, in the inner man. It is beyond the world's cognisance; "the world
cannot receive the Comforter, the Spirit of truth, because it seeth him not,
neither knoweth him;" and it is only what it sees and knows by the palpable
evidence of sense that the world can take in. But the inward work and witness
of the Holy Spirit is apprehended by faith as real ; as being really the
indwelling in us of the Spirit that dwelt in Christ.
2. This anointing is permanent; "it abideth in
you." It is not a fitful emotion or wayward impulse, a rapture of excitement,
alternating perhaps with deep depression. It partakes more of the nature of a
calm, constant, settled conviction. Frames, feelings, fancies, are all
fluctuating; they are like the surface waters of the ocean, agitated by every
wind. But this inward anointing is far down in the still depths beneath. It
"abideth in us;" the same always in its own inherent stillness and strength,
amid whatever tossings its contact with the upper air may cause. Through tears
and cries, as well as smiles and laughter, it abides in us the same; as it did
in him who "rejoiced in the Spirit," and who also "groaned in the Spirit."
"With our groanings which cannot be uttered," the anointing Spirit, abiding in
us, "maketh intercession for us;" and our joy, like Christ's, is "in the Holy
Spirit." This unction then is not to be confounded with our own varying moods
of mind, or the varying impressions made on us by things without. It is
something far more stable. It gives a certain firm and fixed apprehension of
divine things and persons., which these vicissitudes can scarcely interrupt or
weaken, and cannot destroy. There may be more or less of the vivid sense of
this anointing, at different seasons and in different circumstances; the signs
of it may be more or less clearly discernible and the hold we have of it in our
consciousness may be more or less strong. But it "abideth in us ;" keeping God
and eternity still before us as realities, in our sorest trials and darkest
hours; causing us, as we fall back upon it, like David in his recovery from
doubting despondency, to exclaim : - " I said, This is my infirmity: but I will
remember the years of the right hand of the most High" (Ps. lxxvii,
10).
3. This anointing is
sufficient in and of itself; its teaching needs no corroboration from any one;
it has a divine self-evidencing power of its own that makes him who receives it
independent of human testimony: "ye need not that any man teach you." The
gospel is its own witness; it carries in itself, as apprehended by this
anointing, its own credentials. Like its author, it speaks as having authority,
and approves itself experimentally to all who make trial of it. All this is
through the anointing Spirit. It is by the Spirit that we are moved to make
trial of the gospel; it is by the Spirit that the gospel is so applied and
brought home to us, - in its sovereignty, as God speaking, and in its special
and pointed adaptation to our case, as God speaking to us, - that we cannot but
say in our hearts, "Speak, Lord, for thy servant heareth." This is "the
anointing which we have received of him ;" it is the Holy Spirit causing us to
"taste and see how good he is." And this is the real ground and evidence of our
faith; that faith which realises the fulfilment of the great covenant promise,
"They shall not teach every man his neighbour, and every man his brother,
saying, Know the Lord: for all shall know me, from the least to the greatest.
For I will be merciful to their unrighteousness, and their sins and their
iniquities will I remember no more."
4. The teaching of this anointing is complete and thorough,
all-embracing, allcomprehensive; "it teacheth you of all things." It is
not partial, or one-sided, as human teaching on divine subjects is apt to be;
but full-orbed, well-rounded, like a perfect circle. It is not, of course, all
things absolutely that this anointing teaches; but all things about the theme
or subject of the teaching: about him from whom you receive it, and whose it
is.. Of the very best of human systems, I suppose that every spiritual man will
feel and confess, that it is not on all points satisfying; it cannot but bear
the marks of man's confined standing-ground and restricted range of vision.
This is no disparagement of such human systems, when used as helps to the
orderly understanding and right arrangement of the several parts of the truth
of God. But it indicates the limit to their use. They cannot come in place of
the Holy Spirit's teaching us the words of Christ. Even at the best, when the
intellect is most pleased with the symmetry and beauty of a finished
theological scheme, the spiritual mind, or :rather the spiritual heart, feels
that all is not there; that there is something wanting of what passes between
the living God and the living soul when peace is made between them; that there
are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in man's best divinity.
"The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him, and he will shew them his
covenant." It needs the divine anointing of which we speak to teach, to unfold,
to exhaust, all that is in the song of the angels, "Glory to God in the
highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men."
5. Finally, this anointing "is truth, and is no
lie." It carries with it, and in it, an assurance not to be called in question
or shaken; an assurance, one may say, infallibly sure. But you ask, Though I
may be assured of the anointing itself that "it is truth and no lie ;" how may
I be assured that my having it is truth and no lie? And without this last
assurance what will the other avail? Nay, it avails much. Even apart from the
question of your assured personal interest in it, and your assured personal
experience of it, is it not much to know and believe assuredly that in itself,
in its own proper nature and working, this anointing is very truth, and verily
is no lie? Is it not something to be told that there is such an oil of
gladness, such a precious ointment, poured out upon the High-Priest's head, and
running over upon all his members; the oil, the ointment of the Spirit,
teaching of all things, and teaching of them with absolute certainty? You know
what the things are of which his anointing teaches; they are the things,which
belong to God's glory and your peace. But you will not he content with knowing
them merely as discoveries of your own, or as communicated by others. Know them
as taught to you and attested to you; above all, as wrought out and acted out
in you; by the anointing of the Holy Spirit. Proceed upon the faith of your
thus knowing them, in the expectation of your thus knowing them, more and more.
And do so, not doubting, but believing assuredly, that "the anointing which
teacheth you of them is truth and is no lie." Yes! "There is truth and no lie"
in what the Spirit shows you of the love of God in Christ, and sheds abroad in
your heart of that love; be sure of that, and be not afraid to act upon the
assurance of it. "There is truth and no lie" in what the Spirit opens up to you
of' the free-ness and fullness of the Father's overtures of mercy in the Son;
be sure of that, and be not afraid to act upon the assurance of it. "There is
truth and no lie" in what the Spirit would have you to grasp of" the peace
which passeth understanding, the hope that maketh not ashamed, and the joy that
is unspeakable and full of glory;" be sure of that, and be not afraid to act
upon the assurance of it. "There is truth and no lie" in "that which ye have
heard from the beginning so abiding in you that you abide in the Son and in the
Father. That really is "the anointing which is truth and is no lie." Be sure of
that, and be not afraid to act out and out upon the assurance of
it.
Thus receiving of the Lord Christ this anointing, you may well be
proof against all seducing anti-Christs (ver. 26). And not otherwise can you be
proof against them; for not otherwise can you abide in him. "Abide in me," he
says, "and I in you." Abide in me; and that you may abide in me, let me abide
in you. Let my word dwell in you richly; and my Spirit, giving to my word
fragrance to fill the whole heart with the sweet savour of my name, as well as
also penetrating power to reach every hard corner of the heart with the
softening influence of my grace. Yes; let Christ dwell in your hearts by faith.
Let the anointing Spirit infuse into your whole inner man the holy beauty, the
meekness, the gentleness of Christ. Let his anointing mould and mellow your
whole moral nature into a real identity with that of Christ. Thus becoming
assimilated to him, growing up into him, you more and more closely and surely
abide in him, and so are safe from "all them that would seduce you." No other
security, in fact, will suffice; not your utmost vigilance against their lies,
but the full indwelling in you of the truth, and the Spirit $of the
truth.
II. The motive urged for your
abiding in Christ is the hope or prospect of "his appearing," "his coming." It
is urged very earnestly and affectionately. There is a tender emphasis in the
appeal "And now, little children!" Nor is the change of person, from the second
to the first, insignificant - "that we". .
John might have kept to the mode
of address which he has been using, and to which in the next verse he returns;
as an apostle exhorting his disciples; a teacher instructing his scholars;
speaking authoritatively or ex cathedra. But when the end of all comes in view,
he cannot separate himself from them. We are to be together with the Lord, you
and we; you disciples and we apostles; you scholars and we teachers. And for
this end we would have you to abide in him, that we may have confidence
together when he appears.
John had said at the outset, "That which we,"
who are apostles, "have seen and heard declare we unto you, that ye also may
have fellowship with us," the same fellowship that we have, "with the Father
and with his Son Jesus Christ." Our object is to make you joint partakers with
us in what might seem to be our distinctive privilege as apostles, our having
seen the Lord. That is our aim in all that we write to you. With a view to that
we tell you of the light in which we may jointly walk together, and of the
blood of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, which cleanseth us all alike from all
sin. With a view to that we warn you against having any fellowship with the
unfruitful works of darkness. With a view to that we remind you of the
anointing which you as well as we have received of Christ, the Holy One. With a
view to that we counsel you to abide in him; that as there is no real
difference now between you and us, there may be none hereafter, when it would
be final and fatal; that when he shall appear, we may altogether appear with
him in glory; that you and we alike "may have confidence and not be ashamed
before him at his coming." For we all alike need to be admonished of this
risk.
And what a thought! what a contingency or possiibility to be
imagined! "To be ashamed before him at his coming!" It is a very strong
expression. It carries us back to that old scene in Paradise when it was lost.
The guilty pair "hear the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden, in the
cool of the day." And they shrink with shame from him "at his coming." Is it
thus that we should shrink at his coming now? Were he at this moment to appear,
how would we feel? What would be our first impulse, our instinct? To run to
meet him, or to shrink from him in shame? There are those who at the coming of
the Lord shall "hide themselves in the dens and in the rocks of the mountains,
and say to the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, and hide us from the face of
him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb; for the great
day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand?" Would we be among
that terrified multitude, that woeful crowd
It is to have in it not a
little of the pomp and fashion of the world; "kings of the earth, great men,
rich men, chief captains, mighty men, as well as bond and free men, without
number." They may know no shame or fear now; unused to blush, or be abashed, or
tremble in any presence, however they may force others to blush, and be
abashed, and tremble before them. But at the Lord's appearing, their brave,
bold looks are gone. Ashamed, alarmed, despairing, they shrink from him. Surely
we would not be of that miserable crew. Nay, fear apart, we who believe and
love him would not wish to be found by him, at his coming, in any mood of mind,
in any attitude of body, in any company, at any work, in any pleasure, over any
book, that would cause even a momentary shrinking from him in shame. We would
not choose to be so caught by him and taken by surprise; when we were not
thinking of him, or serving him; when perhaps we were tempted to be ashamed of
him, or of one of his saints, or of some things about his cause and kingdom,
before those who happened to be our associates at the time ; - so caught, I
say, and taken by surprise, as to wish for a moment's delay, that we might get
over our nervous flutter and confusion, and summon courage to bid him welcome.
Who is he who comes? And for what it is not "he whom our soul loveth," our
Saviour, friend, brother, who has gone to prepare a place for us among the many
mansions of his Father's house? And for what does he come? To take us to
himself, that where he is we may be also. Can we tolerate the idea of being
ashamed before him when he comes, and comes on such an errand? Ah! if we would
be safe from any such risk then, let us "abide in him" now; "abide in him"
always. So, "when he shall appear, we may have confidence."
Let me be
ever asking myself, at every moment, If he were to appear now, would I have
confidence? If he were to come into my house, my room, and show himself, and
speak to me face to face; would I have confidence? Could I meet his look of
love without embarrassment? Only if he found me "abiding in him " doing
whatever I might be doing "in his name, giving thanks unto God even the Father
by him;" only if he found me keeping him in my heart. Let us then be always
abiding in him; every day, every hour, every instant; even as we would wish to
be found abiding in him, were he to appear this very day, this very hour, this
very instant. He is about to appear; to appear suddenly; to come quickly. Oh
let us see to it, that as we would not wish him to come when we were in such a
state as to cause shrinking from him in shame; as we would rather that when he
appears we were in a position to spring forward with keen eye and outstretched
arm, to welcome in all confidence him whom we love; let us see to it that we
"abide in him." Let us be always in the posture in which he who gives his
"little children" this counsel was himself when he closed the book of the
Revelation. "He which testifieth these things saith, Surely I come quickly,
Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus."
PART SECOND.
INTERMEDIATE CONDITION OF THE
DIVINE FELLOWSHIP - RIGHTEOUSNESS ( 1 John 2: 28 - 4: 6).
XVIII., GROUND OR REASON OF THIS CONDITION
IN THE RIGHTEOUS NATURE OF GOD - THE NEW BIRTH UNTO RIGHTEOUSNESS.
"If ye
know that he is righteous, ye know that every one that doeth righteousness is
born of him. Behold, what manner of love the Father hath bestowed on us, that
we should be called the sons of God." - 1 JOHN 2: 29; 3: 1.
The apostle
passes to a new thought or theme; a new view of the fellowship in which he
would have us to be partakers with himself and all the apostles. It is
"fellowship with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ." He has viewed it as
a fellowship of light. He now views it as a fellowship of righteousness. "God
is light,' - that is the key-note to the former view. "God is righteous," -
that is the keynote to the present view. It is introductory to the third, -
"God is love."
For it is an indispensable condition of this fellowship
with God that we realise in ourselves, and in our doings, what is in accordance
with his nature. If therefore it is his nature to be righteous, it must be our
nature to do righteousness. But that to us is a new nature. It implies that we
are born of him to whose nature ours is to be conformed; that we are "born of
God."
"Born of God!" The idea seems to strike John's mind with fresh
astonishment. Familiar as it is, he sees in it, as it here occurs to him, new
cause of wonder; "Behold, what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us,
that we should be called the sons of God!" For this rapturous exclamation in
the beginning of the third chapter is based on the principle of sonship brought
out in the last verse of the second; "If ye know that he is righteous, ye know
that every one that doeth righteousness is born of him."
The
starting-point in this new line of argument is the statement that "God is
righteous." It is analogous to that given before, that "God is light." And as
there, so here, the inference is obvious. Only the doer of righteousness can be
really born of him, and the doer of righteousness certainly is so.
For
to be born of God implies community of nature between him and us. I cannot be
really his child unless I am possessed of the same nature with him. So the Lord
Jesus himself teaches in two remarkable passages (Matt. 5: 5-45, John 8:
38-44). In both of these passages, but especially in the last, there is a
general principle involved. A family likeness, in features of character as well
as of countenance, will betray an evil paternity, and must prove a good one; "I
speak that which I have seen with my Father; and ye do that which ye have seen
with your father." You say that you are Abraham's children. If that were true,
you would do the works of Abraham. He would not like you have sought to kill
me, for telling the truth which I have heard of God. But I will tell you whose
children you are, and who is your father. It is he whose deeds you do. You
reply, We have one Father, even God. Nay; if God were your Father, you would do
the work of your Father, which is "loving me;" for he loveth me. But you reject
me, and so prove that, in spite of your claim to be God's children, your actual
paternity is very different; "Ye are of your father the devil."
John
may have had these words of his Master in his mind when he wrote down the brief
and pithy maxim, "God is righteous, and every one that doeth righteousness is
born of him" His object is to supply a searching test by which our abiding in
God may be surely tried. For our abiding in God is our abiding in the Son; and
through our abiding in the Son, abiding in the Father, as the Son abides in the
Father. But that implies our being "born of God." It is as "born of God" that
the Son abides in the Father. And it must be as "born of God" that we, abiding
in the Son, abide in the Father as he does.
The practical way of
proving so high and holy a filiation is very simple: "If ye know that he is
righteous, ye know that every one that doeth righteousness is born of him." It
is a mode of proof which may, without irreverence, be applied in the first
instance to the Son himself. We have his own warrant for so applying it (1 John
15: 9, 10). It is by keeping his Father's commandments that he, as the Sons
born of the Father, abides in the Father's love. As the Father is known by him
as righteous, so he, doing righteousness, is proved to be born of him. He doeth
the works of his Father, and so evinces his sonship. All through, the stress is
laid on righteousness. That is the distinguishing characteristic which
identifies him that is born of God; the common quality connecting what he does
as born of God with the nature of him of whom he is born. Already this
attribute of righteousness has been brought prominently forward in this
epistle. God is righteous in forgiving sin (1: 9). Jesus Christ is righteous as
our advocate with the Father (2: 1). But it is in the section on which we are
now entering that righteousness bulks most largely. "God is righteous;" that is
his perfection. We are to "know that he is righteous." His Son, born of him,
knew this; "O righteous Father, the world hath not known thee, but I have known
thee." I have known that thou art righteous. It is a great matter to know that,
in the midst of a world that knows it not.
For does the world know that
God is righteous? Have "the workers of iniquity" that knowledge, when "they eat
up God's people like bread, and say God seeth not"? when they call not upon the
name of the Lord? when they do deeds of darkness, and, because he keeps
silence, think that he is altogether such an one as themselves?. Do we know
that God is righteous? That God is kind, compassionate, merciful, bountiful, -
all that we can easily know. Such knowledge is not too wonderful for us; it is
not high or unattainable. But that he is righteous! Have we a fixed and firm
knowledge of that? Do we understand what it means? Do we grasp the meaning of
it and hold it fast?
It is not natural for us to do so. That God is
righteous, absolutely and perfectly righteous;- that he thinks and feels and
purposes and acts, always according to what ought to be, and never in
accommodation to what is; that he makes uncompromising rectitude the rule of
all his judgments and proceedings in all his dealings with men ;-that he is not
facile and bending, open to appeals and appliances from without, but inherently
and unalterably righteous ; - to know that; really to know it as a fact, and a
great fact; true now and true for eternity; ah! such knowledge is not easy for
me, a guilty and fallen man. It is not possible, unless I am "born of
God."
Jesus knew it; he knew the righteous Father. Born of God, he knew
that God is righteous; and he did righteousness accordingly. How thoroughly he
did so, let some cases in which he might have been tempted to do otherwise
attest. I. I cite an instance already referred to in a somewhat different
connection. A young man comes to him asking the way to eternal life. He is
rich, amiable, good; a keeper of the commandments from his youth; ingenuous,
attractive, sincere; so that Jesus beholding him loveth him. May he not stretch
a point in this goodly youth's favour? May he not accept his goodness as being,
if not all that strict law requires, yet on the whole sufficient? No. He knows
that God is righteous. And, knowing that, he doeth righteousness, though his
doing it drives the youth away, with what issue who can tell?
2. He draws near Jerusalem, and beholds the city.
It is inexpressibly dear to him. If other Israelites hailed it as beautiful for
situation, and boasted of it as the joy of the whole earth, the city of the
great king; the great king himself may well have a favour for it. The anguish
of his human soul, as he contemplates its present security and coming
desolation, must be all but intolerable. Can there be no help? Is no indulgence
possible for his own chosen city's sm? May no miracle be wrought sufficient to
rouse it to repentance? He knows that God is righteous; and he doeth
righteousness. He weeps in the doing of it. The city's fate rings his heart.
But what can he say? What but "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem!"
3. He is in the garden; praying the prayer of
agony; sweating great drops of blood. The cup is handed to him; the cup of woe;
the cup of wrath; the cup of his Father's judicial reckoning with him as
answerable for all his people's sins. "Father, if it be possible!" May it not
be possible? Is there no way of salvation but through the shedding of my blood?
No. He knows that God is righteous; and he doeth righteousness. "Father, thy
will be done l" Thus it is plainly seen that he is born of God. He knows the
righteous Father. And knowing him as the righteous Father, he doeth
righteousness as his only begotten Son. You who believe are born of God as he
is. I speak of his human birth; in which you, in your new birth, are partakers
with him; the same Spirit of God being the agent in both, and originating in
both the same new life. His birth was humiliation to him, though it was of God:
your new birth is exaltation to you, because it is of God. His being born of
God by the Spirit made him partaker of your human nature ; - your being born
again of God by the Spirit makes you partakers of his "divine nature."
You, thus born of God, come to be of the same mind with him who is the first
begotten of the Father; especially as regards your knowing that God is
righteous, and that it is, therefore, and must be, the impulse and
characteristic of every one that is born of him to do righteousness. For if you
are thus born of God, must you not be as thoroughly on his side, as
unreservedly in his interest, in the great outstanding controversy between his
righteousness and man's sin, as is his well-beloved Son himself?
Is it
really so? Was he ever seen as infirm and irresolute, as weak and wavering, in
his moral judgments, as you too frequently are in yours? Was he ever equivocal
or feeble in his utterances about God's claims, and man's duty, and man's
guilt? Did he ever hesitate to act upon the principle: "Let God be true and
every man a liar?"
Nor will it do to say that he had not so much
inducement as you have to tamper with God's righteousness, and be disloyal to
his throne. Personally, it is true that he had no need to have recourse to any
expedient of accommodation or compromise. God's judicial righteousness and his
acceptance in God's sight never could come into collision. Never could he have
occasion to desire that God were less righteous than he is, in order that there
might be hope for him. But when I think of him as taking my place, bearing my
sin, receiving in his bosom the sword that should have smitten me; can I say
that he had no cause to wish, had it been possible, that God might be less
inflexibly and inexorably righteous than he there and then found him to be? And
when I think of the exquisite tenderness of his sensibility; how he could not
witness human suffering unmoved, or see a human soul perish, or run the hazard
of perishing, without a tear ; - I can scarcely fancy it less difficult for him
than for me to acquiesce complacently in God's righteousness reigning, as it
must reign, not only "through grace unto eternal life," but through wrath unto
everlasting death. But that is what is implied in knowing that God is
righteous. And to do righteousness, is to think and speak and act accordingly.
It is to be unflinching and unfaltering in preferring God's righteousness to
man's sin. It is to justify God's righteousness and condemn man's sin, with an
entire and utter abandonment of all attempts, and even of all desire, to make
terms between them. It is to proclaim internecine war between them; yes, even
though the issue should be the triumph of God's righteousness in the sinner's
inevitable ruin.
A hard saying this! Who can hear it? A heavy burden!
Who can bear it? Who that is not born of God? Who but one who reaches, by the
new birth, the position which the Son, in his birth, took as his? Who but one
who, born again of the Spirit as he was born of the Spirit, comes to occupy the
same point of view that he did; to see righteousness and sin, God's
righteousness and man's sin, as he saw them; and to deal with them as he dealt
with them in all his ministry, and especially on the cross.
First, in
him, and with him, - born of God into fellowship with him in his birth, - you
enter into that doing of righteousness on his part, which was the main design
of his being born; which brings into perfect harmony, not God's righteousness
and man's sin, but God's righteousness and man's salvation from sin. This is
your first step, as born of God; and it is all-important for yourselves, and
for your fellow-men. It places you on the very vantageground on which the Son
himself stood, when, coming into the world, he surveyed its sad, sinful case,
in the light of the will of God which he came to do, and the righteousness of
God which he came to vindicate and fulfil It enables you to draw the line sharp
and dear, as he did, between that loving embrace of him and his cross which
wins salvation for the chief of sinners from a righteous God, and in a way of
perfect righteousness, that rejection of him which seals the fate of the very
best of those who, refusing his righteous justifying mercy, brave his righteous
retributive wrath. Thus, knowing for yourselves, in and with Christ, that God
is righteous, you do righteousness, as he did.
And thus also, in your
customary intercourse with other men, you act upon the deep conviction that God
is righteous; that his righteousness admits of no relaxation; that there is
between it and all manner of iniquity a terrible incompatibility; that there is
one only way in which the workers of iniquity can be righteously delivered; and
that all who are not found in that way, be they ever so respectable, ever so
amiable, are righteously condemned. Fully to realise that assurance, and to act
upon it, without any wavering ; - as if you still regarded being in Christ of
little moment or being out of Christ of little peril ; - so to live in your
closet and in the world, at home and abroad, under the constant urgent sense of
there being safety only in Christ, and only ruin out of Christ, for you, for
all, for any ; - -that is to do righteousness, in the knowledge that God is
righteous.
Ah! what an insight into the righteous nature and character
of God; what a measure of cordial oneness of principle and sentiment with him;
entering into his very mind and heart; does all this involve! How far removed
is it from that loose, easy-going sort of Christian virtue which would not
itself do iniquity, but is very tolerant of those who do it; not, like Lot's
righteous soul, vexed with evil; nor, like Lot, preaching righteousness; but
rather prone to look on sin with indifference or complacency, and to let the
sinner go on, without warning or entreaty, to his doom. If you know that God is
righteous, and make conscience of doing righteousness accordingly, you cannot
be thus tame and acquiescent; thus cold and callous. To you, righteousness,
God's righteousness, is not a name but a reality. To be conformed to it, to
submit to it, is life. To be ignorant of it, or opposed to it, or far from it,
is death. Do you know that? Do you know it so as to feel it for others as well
as for yourselves? Can you look out upon the world that knows not the righteous
Father, and not be more in earnest than you are.
"Who is on the Lord's
side - who?" Who is in the interest of the "righteous Father"? Who is he whose
soul burns within him at the thought of the righteous Father being so little
known? - -whose bowels of compassion melt at the sight of men perishing in the
world that know him not? Truly he is "born of God." None but one born ,of God
can be so like his onlybegotten Son.
Is not this a position eminently
high and holy? Is it not a position, our occupancy of which may well be matter
of surprise even to ourselves? Does it not imply a wondrous manner of love
bestowed on us by the Father, that on such a footing, in such a sense, and for
such an end, "we should be called the sons of God? " - born of him; so born of
him as to do righteousness, even as he is righteous; to uphold practically the
very righteousness which is his essential characteristic, the peculiar and
consummate glory of his infinitely perfect nature I do not speak now, at least
not yet, of the amazing love manifested by the Father in the provision made for
our being called or constituted his sons, through the giving up of his own dear
Son for us, to bear our guilt as criminals, that we may share with him his
grace and glory as the Son What at present we have to consider is, not how we
become sons of God, but rather what it is to be sons of God; what oneness of
nature and character, of sentiment and sympathy, of feeling and action, between
God and us, - especially in respect of that righteousness of his which we thus
come to know, - our being his sons, or being born of him, implies. He would
have us to be his sons, as he had Jesus to be his Son, when he was on the
earth; knowing him as the "righteous Father," and doing righteousness as he is
righteous. He would have us, as his sons, to be true and loyal to him, as Jesus
his Son was, in the great outstanding controversy of his righteousness with the
world's sin; as faithful ; and as tender too. He would have us, as his sons, to
go on the very errand on which his Son, as his righteous servant, went; and in
his very spirit; with the law of God in our heart, and rivers of water running
down our eyes because men will not keep that law.
Ah! to be thus the
sons of God; as thoroughly at one with God as Jesus his Son was; witnessing
everywhere and evermore that God is righteous; righteous to punish; righteous
to forgive and save! What an attainment! What a responsibility! What a rank!
Well may it prompt the abrupt ejaculation, - " Behold, what manner of love the
Father hath bestowed on us, that we should be called the sons of God."
XIX. THE DIVINE BIRTH - THE FAMILY
LIKENESS.
"If ye know that he is righteous, ye know that every
one that doeth righteousness is born of him. Behold, what manner of love the
Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called [the] sons" [children]
"of God!" [and so we are!] "Therefore the world knoweth us not, because it knew
him" [God] "not. Beloved, now are we [the] sons" [children] "of God, and it
doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear"
[when that shall appear "we shall be like him" [God]; "for we shall see him as
he is." - 1 John 2: 29 - 3: 2. The first verses of the third chapter are to be
viewed as inseparable from the last verse of the second. It is that verse which
starts the new line of thought; our "knowing that God is righteous, and doing
righteousness accordingly," in virtue of our "being born of him." Born of
him! That is what awakens John's grateful surprise, and occasions his
exclamation, "Behold, what manner of love!" His discourse now is an expansion
of that thought.
I. In every view
that can be taken of it, our being called the sons of God is a wonderful
instance of the Father's love. That we - Who? The lost and guilty; who have
forfeited by sin whatever claim we might have on God originally; who have
become rebels against his authority and criminals under the sentence of his
law; who, if left to ourselves, would rather continue estranged from him for
ever than consent to return and be reconciled to him in peace: - -That such as
we should be called the sons of God! And then how? Through his own Son making
common cause with us, that we may have a common standing with him; and by his
own Spirit making us willing, almost against our wills, to acquiesce in that
arrangement. And to what effect? That we may be to him what his own Son is to
him; the objects of the same love; sharers of the same rank. Well may we
exclaim, "Behold what manner of love!" But it is chiefly one element or feature
in this high calling that the apostle has before him when he breaks out into
this rapturous exclamation; our being the sons of God as "born of him" (2: 29);
our undergoing a divine birth which, making us partakers of the divine nature,
makes us thereby really and truly children of God; children, in a sense, by
nature; and therefore fitly acknowledged as children.
Observe the
peculiar turn of expression. As exactly rendered, it is not that we should be
called "the sons," but rather, that we should be called "children," of God. It
is not said merely that we are called his sons, as having him standing to us in
the relation of a Father; but that we are called his children; his
divinely-born children; deriving from a divine birth a divine nature; children
of God, in respect of our being born of God.
Of course this last view
does not exclude the other; on the contrary, they virtually coincide. The
thought of our being born of God immediately suggests the thought of the
Father's love.. It is fatherly love that explains our being called children of
God in virtue of our being born of God. It is the very glory and perfection of
the love which the Father bestows on us, that we are thus called or constituted
children of God. For it is conceivable that in some other way, and on some
other footing, we might be called children of God.
In point of fact, men
dream of their being God's children altogether irrespectively of any new divine
birth, - anything like "being born of God." Paul, at Athens, quoted a Greek
poet as saying, "We are also his offspring." From him we have our origin, and
"in him we live, and move, and have our being." Simply as his dependent
offspring, we may think that we are entitled to be called his children, and to
call him Father. We may speak of his love in creating us and caring for us as
fatherly love. It is not however really so, in any valid scriptural sense. At
any rate it is not the "manner of love" which John thinks it so amazing a
wonder that the Father should have bestowed upon us in our being called
children of God.
Again, our being "called children of God" may be
considered simply as an act of adoption, very much analogous to what is
practised among men. Viewed in that light, it is unquestionably an instance of
fatherly love; and fatherly love of no ordinary kind. It is as if a judge were
not only to procure a pardon for the criminal he has doomed to death, and hand
it to him on the scaffold as he is awaiting execution; but were to take him
home, and, by a legal deed, constitute him his son and heir; or as if the
monarch were to admit into the royal household a vanquished and forgiven rebel,
to be on the same filial terms with him, and enjoy the same filial privileges,
as his own first-begotten.
Or take the better example of the reception
of the prodigal son. The sympathising witnesses of that scene of reconciliation
might well utter the ejaculation, Behold, what manner of love the father has
bestowed on him! He himself could never cease to feel the wonder of it. And yet
even this is not the manner of love that awakens John's admiring rapture; or at
least not the whole of it. The parable, for its purpose, is complete, although
it takes no express notice of anything on the father's part but his welcoming
his son, "once dead but now alive, - once lost but now found;" or anything on
the son's part but his "coming to himself and going to his father." But he who
uttered the parable spoke of our being "born again ;" "born of the Spirit;" as
explicitly as his beloved disciple speaks here of our being "born of God." And
we cannot know what manner of love the Father hath bestowed on us in our being
called the children of God, unless we realise our being so in virtue of this
new divine birth. Here the parable does not help; it may even, if taken alone,
mislead. It teaches its own lesson; but it does not teach the whole truth of
God on the subject of our being "called children of God." The prodigal's mind
underwent a mighty revolution with reference to his father and his father's
house. It must have done so before he could be willing, either to accept the
father's terms of pardon and peace, or to accommodate himself afterwards to the
father's character and way of life; and without such willingness he could not
have been really his son. That surely implied a great change of mind, which the
parable, however, does not fully, or indeed at all explain.
But. we
know well, as spiritual men, how the corresponding change in our nature must be
wrought. We must be born of God; so born of God that it shall be as truly our
nature to do righteousness as it is his nature to be righteous. It is not
merely that we need to be made willing to embrace his righteous overtures of
mercy, in order to our personal acceptance in his sight. That doubtless
requires that we should be born of God; for no man ever yet was found willing
to know and submit to the righteousness of God, or unreservedly to consent to
be "justified freely by God's grace through the redemption that is in Christ,"
without so thorough a revolution in his whole inner man, so complete an
abandonment of his own way of peace, and such entire acquiescence in that of
God, as could only come from his being indeed born of God. To be born of God to
this effect, to the effect of our coming to be of the same mind with him, in
the great and vital matter of a sinner's justification, and our justification
as sinners ; - that is much. It :is the proof or manifestation of a fatherly
love bestowed on us that is of a very wonderful sort indeed. But that is not
all. Not only are we to be of one mind with the righteous Father as to the
manner of our return and reconciliation to him; we are so born of God as to be
ever after of the same mind with him, as to the whole of his righteous laws,
and his righteous administration of them; "doing righteousness as we know that
he is righteous." That is what his heart is set upon; that is his fatherly
love. It goes far beyond his simply consenting to regard us, in spite of all
our estrangement, as still his children, if we consent to be so regarded. It is
very different from his merely passing an act of indemnity, and by a summary
and sovereign process of will, executing, as it were, a deed whereby we are
declared to be in law his children. That is all the love which a father can
bestow in adopting a child, according to the usages of earth. But it is not all
that our Father in heaven bestows upon us, when we are called children of God.
He contemplates a far more thorough filiation, a more intensely real sonship,
than what can result from any such transaction outside of us ; - any agreement
between him and us, however generous and gracious. He "begets us" to himself
(James 1: 18); "we are born of God," by an inward communication of his nature
to us. He must have us to be, not titular, but real and actual children;
children by participation of nature as well as by deed of adoption; by a new
creation as well as a new covenant; of one mind and heart, of one character and
moral frame with himself; "doing righteousness," as we "know that he is
righteous;" - so, and no otherwise, "born of him."
"Behold what manner
of love" is this that "the Father hath bestowed upon us!" That in such a sense,
and to such an effect, the righteous God should be bent on our "being called
his children;" his very children; his children in respect of our being made
partakers of his righteous nature as God! Truly it is a love which it would
never have entered into man's heart to conceive, that in this marvellous way of
such a new birth, "we should be called children of God."
l. And we are his children ;. "Beloved, now are we
children of God." Our being called children of God is a reality; our being born
of God makes it so. The world may not know us in that character, for "it knows
not God," and has never known him. We "know that God is righteous;" but the
world does not so know him, has not so known him, will not and cannot so know
him. How then should it know us, when, born of God, we do righteousness as he
is righteous? On the contrary, for this very reason, because we are called
children of God, and indeed are so, - therefore "the world knoweth us
not."
In this respect our position in the world is identical with that
of Christ himself. He was called the Son of God, and was so; therefore the
world did not own him any more than it owns us; because "it knew not him whose
Son he was." The world could not understand his thorough sympathy with
God; his burning zeal for God; his holy anger kindled at the sight of whatever
outraged the righteous character and claims of God; his lofty, uncompromising
loyalty to God's righteous government and law; his tender concern for the
little ones given to him by God, .that they might be shielded from man's wrong
and led in God's righteous way. His being the Son of God, not in name only but
in nature also ; - his being so constantly and consistently true, in all his
life, and in his death, to what his sonship involved ; - was the very thing
which made him incomprehensible to the world. Even his own chosen ones, when he
was in the crisis and agony of doing righteousness, knew him not. The three who
should have watched with him in the garden, slept. When he was on his way to
trial and death, they all forsook him and fled. They knew him not as the
Father's "righteous servant, by his righteousness justifying many, through
bearing their iniquities;" because they knew not the righteous Father himself,
laying upon him their iniquities. He was left alone with the Father in that
last scene of all (John 16: 32). All throughout he was constrained painfully to
realise the fact that his mission from the righteous Father, and the righteous
meaning of it, were but dimly apprehended by his closest friends, and were
wholly set at nought by a world "that by wisdom knew not God."
II That same world has not known God since, any more
than it did before; his children have still to live in thc midst of a world
that knows not him, and therefore will not know them. This is their trial, as
it was Christ's. And in one respect it is to them, if not a sorer or more
painful, yet a more perilous trial, than it was to him. If the world knew not
him, he in a corresponding sense knew not it. If the world had no sympathy with
him in what he knew of the righteous Father, he had no sympathy with the world
in what it thought of the righteous Father. If men, not knowing God whose only
begotten and well beloved Son he was, could not enter into his deep views of
God's righteous character and claims, he had no leaning toward their loose
notion of all in God's government being made to bend and give way to them, that
they might not die. That never could be his infirmity. But it is ours; it is
our temptation. Children of God as we are called, and really are; "born of
God," so as to be partakers of his nature, and to "do righteousness as he is
righteous;" we are not so thoroughly rid of the old nature but that still we
have too strong an inclination to think as the world thinks, and feel as the
world feels, about the righteous God and his righteousness. Especially when
there comes to be a heavy strain upon us as God's children; and a strong case
is made out for some concession; and we begin to doubt if we have not been too
stiff and strict in refusing this or that compliance, or condemning this or
that liberty and ask if we might not perhaps do more good, and better serve the
cause of righteousness and a righteous God, By being a little less precise and
more accommodating. Yes; we might in that way disarm somewhat the world's
hostility, and win a character for amiable courtesy and a liberal spirit. The
world might come to know us, so as to like us better than it does now; better
than it likes our more scrupulous brethren. But would not its knowing us in
that way be just in proportion to our ceasing so far practically to be God's
children, "doing righteousness as he is righteous?" Let us be upon our guard
against so great a danger. Let us lay our account with having to judge and act
on principles which the world cannot understand. Let us be God's children
indeed; though on that very account the world that has not known God should not
know us.
III. For, whatever the
world may think or say, "we are the children of God," his dear children;
sharers of his divine nature; the objects of his fatherly love. It concerns us
to bear this in mind; to apprehend and feel it to be true. It is our safety to
do so. It is what is due to ourselves; it is what God expects, and has a right
to expect, from us.
And it is especially on our community of nature
with God, as being "born of him" and so "called his children," that we are to
dwell. It is not so much with a view to heighten our sense of privilege, as to
deepen our sense of obligation, that John so emphatically repeats this
assertion; - " Now are we the children of God." It is our nature, as such,
being born of God, to "do righteousness, as we know him to be righteous." That
is a new nature in us, and it is to be cultivated, exercised, developed,
ripened. The field in which it is to grow and be matured is not at all
congenial or favourable. It is the world, which not knowing him who begets,
cannot be expected to know us who are begotten of him. It is the world, whose
influences are all hostile to what is the great characteristic of the new
nature in us which our being born of God creates, our "doing righteousness as
we know that God is righteous." Still that is our nature; our new nature: "Now
are we the children of God." And be the world ever so unpropitious in its
atmosphere and soil, we are here in it as "trees of righteousness, the planting
of the Lord," to grow as his children, "that he may be glorified."
That
is what is John's chief design, in reminding us, in this connection, that we
are the children of God. Other views are not to be excluded. The high rank in
God's kingdom; the intimate, familiar footing in his house; the warm place in
his heart; which that wondrous manner of love bestowed upon us in our being
called his children implies ; - these all are animating and spirit-stirring
motives to face the worst the world can do to us, through its not knowing us
any more than it knows him whose children we are. It is a legitimate source of
comfort and encouragement when, disallowed of men, we have to fall back upon
"the witness of the Spirit, witnessing with our spirits that we are the
children of God; and if children then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-heirs with
Christ." It is, moreover, a strong and telling appeal that is made to our sense
of honour, to every noble and generous impulse of the new nature in us, when we
are reminded that we are sent as God's children into the very midst of a world
that knows neither our Father nor ourselves; and sent for this very end, that
we may approve ourselves to be his children indeed; and may "let our light so
shine before men, that they may see our good works, and glorify our Father
which is in heaven." In the face of the world's ignorance of us and of our
Father, and its ignorant opposition to us and to our Father; though the world
may refuse to acknowledge us as God's children, and give us credit for being
what we profess to be; still let us not lose our own sense of the reality of
what we are. Let us stay ourselves on the conviction that our being God's
children is not a matter of ()pinion, dependent on the world's vote, but a
matter of fact, flowing from the amazing manner of love which the Father hath
bestowed upon us. And let us be put, as the saying is, upon our mettle, to make
good our claim to be God's children, by such a manifestation of our oneness of
nature with him of whom we are born, as may, by God's blessing, overcome some
of the world's ignorant unbelief, and lead some of the world's children to try
that manner of love for themselves, to taste and see how good the Lord is.
These are important and relevant practical considerations, to which we do well
to give heed.
But they must not thrust aside the apostle's main design,
which is that our own personal holiness may be preserved and may grow. We are
the children of God, as born of him; so born of him as to have the great
fundamental principle of his righteous nature wrought and implanted in us. And
our task, our trial, our probation, is, to give that principle fair play and
full scope, in opposition to the world which disowns it; to act out all that is
implied in our being God's children, in the very heart of the world which knows
neither him nor us; to grow in filial likeness and filial love to God amid all
the adverse influences of the world's ignorant ungodliness. "Now are we the
children of God," as being "born of him;" having his moral image stamped upon
us; his moral nature formed in us. That is what we are ever more and more to
realise ourselves to be, amid all the drawbacks and disadvantages of our
present state.
IV. And we are to do
so all the rather, because these drawbacks and disadvantages will not last
long. We are only at the beginning of our life as God's children. What we are,
in that character, we grasp, or try to grasp, by faith; "what we shall be does
not yet appear." But it is to appear soon. And one thing we know about it is,
that our participation in God's nature, as his children, must then be perfect,
for our knowledge of him will be perfect: "We shall be like him, for we shall
see him as he is." This suggests two thoughts. In the first place, what is set
before us, as matter of hope in the future life, is not something different
from what is to be attained, enjoyed, and improved by us, as matter of faith,
and of the experience of faith, in the present life. It is not that now we are
the children of God, and that hereafter we are to be something else, or
something more.
The sole and simple contrast is between what we are now, as
children of God, and what we shall be hereafter as such. "Now we are the
children of God ;" "born of him;" partakers of his nature; "doing
righteousness, as he is righteous," in the midst of a world that knows us not
as doing righteousness, any more than it knows him, the righteous Father, whose
righteousness we do. But "the world passes away, and the lust thereof;" and,
lo! "new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness!" What shall
we then be as children of God, in a new world, that knows both him and us, all
whose arrangements and ongoings are in sympathy with him and us? "It doth not
yet appear." There is a veil hiding that glory from our eyes; and John does not
lift it.
But, secondly, one thing he tells us plainly enough. When it
does appear what we are to be; when that is no more hidden but disclosed; we
shall be like God whose children we are as being born of him; "for we shall see
him as he is."
We shall be like him; we shall be such as he is, not
almost but altogether. We are like him now. We are of his mind and on his side
in all that pertains to his righteous character and government; his righteous
condemnation of all iniquity; his righteous way of saving sinners. But the
likeness is broken and imperfect. It is a real family likeness so far as it
goes, a real oneness of nature; it identifies us as his children. But the
features of resemblance are faint at the best, and marred by traces ever
reappearing of our old likeness to the world and its prince, whose children we
once were. It will be otherwise when "what we shall be" is made manifest or
appears. Then our likeness to God will be complete; for then "we shall see him
as he is." "We shall see him as he is;" for "the pure in heart shall see God."
The full light of all his perfection as the righteous God will open upon our
view; we shall know the righteous Father as the Son knows Him.
The Son
knows him ; - " O righteous Father, the world hath not known thee: but I have
known thee; and these have known that thou hast sent me." Here are the two
extremes - "The world hath not known thee; but I have known thee." And here
also is, as it were, the intermediate position occupied by us : - " these have
known that thou hast sent me." They do not know thee yet, as I, O righteous
Father, know thee. But they are in the way of learning thus to know thee; for
they know me as sent by thee. I am educating and training them in that
knowledge of thee which I would have them to possess as perfectly as I possess
it myself; "I have declared unto them thy name, and will declare it." Nor will
I desist until they know thee, as I know thee, by experience of thy love; "the
love wherewith thou hast loved me dwelling in them and I in them" (John 17: 25,
26).
So Jesus, the first-begotten among many brethren, is teaching us
now to know, as he knows, the righteous Father, through the love wherewith the
Father loveth him dwelling in us, and himself dwelling in us. The school is
ill-suited, in many respects, to the teaching; and the scholars are not so apt
as might be wished. The school is but dimly lighted and badly aired; the
atmosphere is too full of dust and smoke; the learners also are often drowsy;
and the lesson-object is seen through a glass darkly. But lo! the hour comes
when the benign master, the loving elder brother, leads us into the spacious,
lofty, bright hall of his Father's many-mansioned house, and presents us to the
Father, face to face, saying, "Behold I and the little ones whom thou hast
given me." Then there is clear sight; unclouded vision; a full and perfect
understanding of the righteous Father; a full and perfect understanding between
him and us; as full and perfect an understanding as there is in the case of his
own beloved Son himself. All that is dark or doubtful about his character and
ways is cleared up. There is nothing anywhere to awaken a suspicion or suggest
a question; nothing to give a partial or distorted view of what he is or what
he does. We see him as he is; and so seeing him, we approve, and love, and are
like him evermore!
Is not this a hope "full of glory"? And is it not a
hope full of holiness too? Surely it must be true that "every man that hath
this hope in God," the righteous Father, - the hope of being like him through
seeing him as he is - "purifieth himself even as Jesus, the Son, is pure."
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