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We do well
to have fixed and stated readings of the
Scripture at this breaking of bread. It
is the best foundation for every assembly
of the saints. The best thing we can do
at all our meetings is to let our minds
rest on the portions that may be read. The
best thing any one can do who desires to
speak to the edification of the hearers
is to employ what has been read as the basis
of what he has to say. Let him endeavour
to develop, amplify and illustrate this,
and he will speak to profit; whereas, if
he seek to “make a speech,” in the usual
sense of the phrase, he will be in danger
of pouring out a weak watery mixture of
his own compounding that will give no nutriment.
Sermonising is of course quite out of the
question. This is only speech-making in
the clerical shape—a worse shape than the
ordinary shape. Speech-making of all ordinary
sorts is a mere process of self-evolution—a
spinning of one’s own thoughts, which are
weak and colourless and powerless to build
the mind in the things of God. We may as
well try to make bread without flour as
try to speak to edification without the
ideas of God so abundantly supplied to us
in the word of truth.
We have
them in various shapes in the readings this
morning. We have a chapter on Moab written
in blood—“the burden of Moab”—all calamity
and broken hearts:
“In their
streets they shall gird themselves with
sackcloth: on the tops of their houses,
and in their streets, everyone shall howl,
weeping abundantly . . .. The waters of
Dimon shall be full of blood” (Isa. 15:3,9).
For what
reason was this visitation of judgment to
come? Why is it written:
“Moab is
spoiled, and gone up out of her cities,
and his chosen young men are gone down to
the slaughter”?
Why is it
written:
“Judgment
is come . . . upon all the cities of the
land of Moab, far or near”? The answer is
as clear as the description of her calamities:
“This shall
they have for their pride” (Zeph. 2:10).
“We have
heard of the pride of Moab; he is very proud:
even of his naughtiness, and his pride,
and his wrath” (Isa. 16:6).
“Make ye
him drunken, for he magnified himself against
the Lord: Moab also shall wallow in his
vomit, and he shall also be in derision.
For was not Israel a derision unto thee?”
(Jer. 48:26).
The judgment foretold became in due time
the judgment accomplished; and you may now
read, in the silent wastes of Moab’s once
populous valleys, the truth of Yahweh’s
word.
What have
we to do with this subject? Just this: the
causes that led to judgment on Moab are
operative around us in all the world today.
Pride and haughtiness and arrogance, and
contempt of Israel and all things divine;
covetousness, avarice, indifference to right,
the treading down of the weak, the disregard
of the poor, and the ignoring of the commandments
of God prevail in the Christendom of our
times as much as ever they did in Moab,
and it is an eternal truth that like causes
produce like effects. That which brought
judgment on Moab will bring judgment on
the world at large. It is revealed that
it is to be so. The work of Christ at his
coming is a work of judgment. So we are
informed in the apocalyptic words that speak
of him as “treading the winepress of the
wrath of God”; in the apostolic intimation,
that when revealed from heaven it will be
“in flaming fire, taking vengeance on them
that know not God”; and in the oft-made
prophetic announcement of his arrival as
the name of the lord from far, “burning
with his anger . . . his lips full of indignation,
and his tongue as a devouring fire.”
WHAT
IS OUR POSITION?
Seeing that
this is the uncontradictable truth, what
ought our position in the world to be? Ought
we to be friends and partakers with a generation
ripening for the judgment sickle of the
Divine reaper? Ought we to be one and the
same with the modern Moabites who despise
God, have Israel in derision, and surfeit
arrogantly in earth’s plenty, as if it were
their’s? Ought we not to “keep ourselves
unspotted from the world”? to “walk in wisdom
towards them that are without”? as “strangers
and pilgrims, to pass the time of our sojourning
here in fear”? Knowing that the friendship
of the world now will mean the enmity of
God in the day when the thunders of the
judgment-storm begin to peal throughout
the world, when “the lofty looks of man
shall be humbled, and the haughtiness of
men shall be bowed down, and the Lord alone
shall be exalted in that day”?
The reading
from the apostolic writings reminds us of
the other side of the question. It reminds
us that our relation to the day of the Lord,
as the brethren of Christ, is not one of
fear, but of joy and love and expectation.
The idea is expressed in the hymn we sometimes
sing, which is itself but the versification
of a statement in the prophet Isaiah:
O, say
to the fearful, Be strong of heart;
He comes in vengeance, but not for thee;
For thee he comes, his might to impart
To the trembling heart and the feeble knee.
This comfort
is ours if we have made it such. The friendship
of Christ is without respect of persons,
though with great respect of character.
It is remarkable how emphatically and frequently
he uses the pronoun “whosoever”—absolutely
whosoever.
“Whosoever will, let him take of the water
of life freely.”
“Whosoever
shall do the will of my Father, the same
is my brother and sister and mother.”
“Whosoever
shall call on the name of the Lord shall
be saved.”
The coming
vengeance is not for us if we are among
the “whosoevers.” This is the point on which
we must continually judge ourselves. Do
we comply with the qualifications required
of the “whosoever” class? Obviously we cannot
answer this question without acquaintance
with the qualifications, and this acquaintance
we can only acquire in habitual intimacy
with the word. The qualifications are briefly
condensed by Jesus into the words:
“Whosoever
shall do the will of my Father who is in
heaven.”
It is a
question of doing what God desires us to
do. It is a question of:
“Lord, what
wilt thou have me to do?”
We cannot
learn this by studying science; we cannot
learn it by our own reasoning and speculation;
we cannot learn it in the works of men.
It is to be learnt in the revealed word,
and there alone; and when learnt, has to
be put into practice with all docility and
simplicity and diligence. “Whosoever” does
this may look with comfort to the day of
vengeance. Doubtless the Lord knows who
these are, as it is written:“The Lord knoweth
them that are his.” and: I know my sheep,
and am known of mine:”
But we do
not know—that is, we do not know in the
personal sense. We know that none are His
that do not do His will, and that all are
His that do; but in discriminating between
the one and the other, we may make mistakes.
We need not seek particularly to perform
this discrimination, except as regards ourselves.
As regards others, it is our duty to “judge
not”; as regards ourselves, it is a matter
of command and a matter of common wisdom
to “prove our own selves.” In a sense, like
Paul, we cannot judge ourselves:
“He that
judgeth us is the Lord:”
But we can
stand guard over ourselves; we can subject
ourselves to a continual self-scrutiny on
the question whether we walk in accordance
with the revealed will of the Father. In
this sense:
“If we judge
ourselves we shall not be judged:”
The Lord
will have no censure for those who correct
themselves continually by the word. If by
this process we bring ourselves into harmony
with the Father’s mind, having the answer
of a good conscience, we need not distress
ourselves on the question that has plagued
some—whether we are among the Father’s chosen.
This destination is not decided arbitrarily.
It is true the Father’s purpose is the foundation
of it, and that those are all foreknown
to Him who are to be the subjects of it.
It is nevertheless equally true that the
mode of realising that purpose is by the
gospel preached and proposed for the willing
faith and obedience of all who hear it.
There can be no clash between the one thing
and the other. The Father’s counsels are
inscrutable to us, but what He has revealed
with regard to them is our property. His
revelation in this matter is that He willeth
not the death of a sinner, but would rather
that he should turn and live; that “every
one that thirsteth” is invited, and will
be made welcome to the living waters; that
“whatsoever will” may come. If, then, we
thirst and drink, if we hear and come, we
may dismiss the question of whether we are
included among those who are foreknown,
for the one fact is the form and guarantee
of the other. The two things cannot be separated.
Our whole anxiety should be directed to
our side of the question. Listen to the
divine invitation and all is well. Jesus
truly says:
“All that
the Father giveth me shall come to me,”
but he adds, “and him that cometh unto me,
I will in no wise cast out” (John 6:37).
THE
FACT OF COMING TO CHRIST
Consequently,
the fact of coming to Christ is proof of
our inclusion among those given to him.
There can be no such thing as a man coming
to Christ and being excluded from those
given to him in the Father’s plan. The one
is an evidence and a means of the other.
The whole question of importance for us
is in the “coming.” Do we “come”? If so,
all is well, and cannot but be well. We
need not trouble about anything else. Nothing,
in that case, can separate us from the love
of God which is in Christ Jesus. Only let
us be sure about the “coming.” It means
much. It means the knowledge of Christ,
of course, for this is the first step; but
it means much more. A man who knows, but
does not love, has not come. A man who knows
and loves, but does not obey, deceives himself
in thinking he loves. A man who knows, loves,
and obeys; that is, who continues in “all
things” prescribed for disciples to do and
continue doing, has come, and will in no
wise be cast out. There may be mistakes,
shortcomings and offences on the part of
such, but these are foreign to the main
current of their lives, and there is forgiveness
for them. Christ’s priesthood has no other
meaning. He is High Priest over hi own house.
He ever liveth to make intercession for
them. He makes requests for brethren whom
he loves, and the Father hears him, and
is faithful and just to forgive all of whom
the appointed High Priest thus makes mention:
“If we walk
in the light, the blood of Jesus Christ
cleanseth from all sin.”
Those who
walk in sin have no representative in Christ.
Those who are born of God sin not; that
is, they are not unrighteous in their habit
of mind and action: their failures are exceptions
to the habitual run of their lives, and,
confessed and repented of, they are forgiven,
and they stand at the last before the judgment
seat to be proclaimed as constituents of
the one body, “having neither spot, nor
wrinkle, nor any such thing,” of whom it
is testified in the language of figure,
that they have washed their robes, and made
them white in the blood of the Lamb; that
is, they are forgiven for Christ’s sake,
who shed his blood.
It is our
privilege to stand related to this glorious
position, if, having obeyed the truth, we
walk in it. This is the meaning of our meeting
round this table. Even now are we the sons
of God—even now are we forgiven—even now
do we stand in the love of God which is
in Christ Jesus. Let us open our minds to
this great fact. Christ’s interest is great
in all who stand accepted in him. It is
no ordinary interest. There is no parallel
to it in human experience. We know something
of friendship between man and man—in some
cases attaining a very ardent development—but
here is a friendship of one for many, and
that of a strength that never burnt in human
bosom before. Paul speaks of it as “the
love of Christ that passeth knowledge.”
For one to love a multitude with a love
that shall be personal to each individual
in the multitude, and that shall glow with
equal ardour for all, is certainly a love
passing human knowledge. Such a love is
an impossibility in fragile human nature.
It requires the strength of the spirit,
compassing all and sustaining its own fire
with the inexhaustible fuel of the divine
energy. It is the love that exists in Christ
and glows for ever towards his brethren.
It is the love of God: God is love, and
Christ is His glory in manifestation.
THE
EXQUISITENESS OF DIVINE WISDOM
We see the
exquisiteness of the divine wisdom in the
finished workmanship of creation around
us; we see something of His exhaustless
beneficence in the manifest design of all
things to confer goodness; but we see these
in Christ as they are nowhere else to be
seen. They are here brought to a personal
focus, and directed towards us in the pledge
of unutterable well-being in due time. It
is something for us to ponder, to rest on,
to be comforted by, to admire. It is a glorious
reality—the most glorious reality in creation—made
ours in the gospel. It is a great possession
now, though by faith only; but what shall
it be when we stand before the presence
of his glory, to receive its healing effulgence
in the company of the mustered friends of
God of every age, and in the presence of
a countless host of angelic spectators?
These things are not “cunningly-devised
fables,” though so gorgeous. They are the
realities of sober truth, though hidden
from the eyes of man for a necessary reason.
They will burst upon our delighted vision
by-and-by. It is only a question of time—and
of a short time at the longest. The announcement
of the Lord’s arrival may any day hurry
us into their presence, or the fall of death’s
curtain on our path may at any time, as
with the wave of a magician’s wand, conjure
us away in a moment from the horrors of
this evil state, and show us the manifold
glories of the divine purpose in the presence
of Christ returned.
In this
sense, living or dying, our position is
a position of constantly imminent hope.
Living or dying, we are the Lord’s; and
to be His, we are related to the glories
of the great salvation which transcend the
wildest dreams of the most imaginative of
poets, and beggar all human speech to convey
an adequate idea of them. They are well
named by Paul “the unsearchable riches of
Christ.” It is only a sober fact that it
hath not entered into the heart of man to
conceive of them. God hath revealed them
by His spirit; but, for all that, the vision
of them in great measure lies latent in
the words that convey them, and remains
invisible to millions who have the words
but discern them not.
To the common
run, “the love of Christ” is but a phrase—a
theological phrase—a collocation of words
that jingles dryly in the ear, and suggests
nothing more interesting than pews and pulpits
and weary hours. To the ear of enlightened
intelligence, it is a joyful sound, to know
which makes a people palpably blessed. It
represents the most precious fact in the
universe. What is a man without the love
of Christ—if Christ regard him not? Only
a superior animal dragging out a sluggish
existence which, by and by, must end in
darkness under the grave-digger’s spade.
The love of Christ is a necessity even now,
as that “uplifting ideal” which Professor
Tyndall acknowledges man requires, but which
he cannot find in nature. A man may think
he can do without it: so he can, as the
famine-stricken peasantry of Egypt can do
without food. He can do without it and famish;
he can do without it and die. He can get
through life as it now is, consumed and
deteriorated by the reigning vanity, and
eligible for a properly certificated burial
in some picturesque cemetery, in which the
birds will twitter and the flowers will
bow, in total indifference to his finished
life and to his sepulchred remains. A man
of true reason cannot thus be content with
“vanity and vexation of spirit.” If there
were nothing else, he would try to reconcile
himself to his wretchedness. But with God’s
written invitation on the glowing page of
Scripture he cannot, he will not, he dare
not, hold the love of Christ cheaply. Despised
love will turn to appalling hatred in the
day of “the wrath of God revealed from heaven
against all ungodliness and unrighteousness
of men.”
The love
of Christ is even now an ennobling blessing;
but how shall it be estimated when it becomes
visible to all men as the effectual means
of physical renovation, the gateway to riches,
honour, power, gladness, strength, and immortality?
Every one will place the right value on
it then, if they never did before. But many
will awake to a realisation of it when it
is too late.
“Now is
the accepted time; now is the day of salvation.”
It is while
these things are yet all a matter of faith
that God is pleased to enable us to acquire
a right to their possession in the day of
the manifested tree of life. This is why
we are assembled this morning. God has asked
at our hand “a patient continuance in well-doing.”
He has enlightened us as to the nature of
what He considers well-doing. He commands
us to “be not weary in well-doing;” and
we advantage ourselves and do honour to
Him in this weekly assembly to listen to
His voice. We require to be continually
strengthened in our endeavours. The way
is hard, and, as in the journeyings of Israel
in the wilderness, “the soul of the people”
is liable to be “discouraged because of
the way.” How can we hold up against it
but by recollection of the promises and
by prayer to the God of Israel—the God who
covenanted the promises—the God who made
us and who knows all our difficulties and
infirmities; that He would strengthen our
heart in the endurance of the darkness that
covers all the earth, and in the performance
of the difficult part which He has asked
at our hands!
It is helpful to recollect the fact referred
to by Paul, when he says,
“There hath
no temptation taken you but such as is common
to man”
(1 Cor. 10:13).
At the worst,
we are only fellow-sufferers with the common
stock of which we form a part. As the brethren
of Christ looking for his appearing, and
striving to qualify ourselves for that event
by the self-denial of all ungodliness and
worldly lusts, we are not worse off than
those whose portion is in this life, and
to whom the great and precious promises
of God are as the mere froth of fanaticism.
Nay, we are much better off than they even
now. It is in many senses true that:
“Godliness
hath profit both for the life that now is
and for that which is to come.”
There is
no true happiness in the world. With all
the fuss and the show of importance, with
all the colour and apparent zest of pleasure-following,
with all the display and the honouring of
one another, there is a gnawing worm at
the heart. Only the young are delighted,
and they but for a short time. A cloud settles
on all mortal things for the blithest and
the most spirited. It must be so. Though
disfigured, we are in the image of the elohim
as a race. We are mentally constituted for
friendship with God. It is impossible we
can have peace and joy in alienation from
Him. “Vanity and vexation of spirit” must
come of all attempts to employ existence
without Him. The world is not happy: it
cannot be. It is of the Lord that the people
weary themselves in the fires of vanity.
But in the truth, we are reconciled to God,
and if we are living in a state of reconciliation
(that is, doing those things in which He
has declared His pleasure), then we are
living in a state of peace. There may be—there
is—much deprivation to be endured—many crosses
to be carried—many present advantages to
be sacrificed as the result of trying to
live the lives of saints in the present
evil world; but, with all the drawbacks,
we are happier in our activity, have more
interest in existence, and can indulge in
a more effective manner in the pleasure
of anticipation, than those who know not
God and obey not the gospel of our Lord
Jesus Christ. The world has all the chafe
and fretfulness of an evil state without
any of the alleviations that come with the
gospel. Therefore, let us rightly estimate
our position. Let us realise that even now
we are greatly favoured in knowing God,
or rather in being known of Him, while as
regards the measureless futurity of the
ages that are to come, it is difficult to
express, and impossible to exaggerate, the
glory of our standing as “fellow citizens
with the saints and of the household of
God.”
“Seasons of Comfort” Vol. 1 Pages 393-399
by Bro Robert Roberts
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