Colossians 1:2 - Saints, Believers, Brethren
‘The saints and
faithful brethren in Christ.’—Col. 1:2.
‘THE disciples were called Christians first in Antioch,’ says the Acts of
the Apostles. It was a name given by outsiders, and like most of the
instances where a sect, or school, or party is labelled with the name of
its founder, it was given in scorn. It hit and yet missed its mark. The
early believers were Christians, that is, Christ’s men, but they were not
merely a group of followers of a man, like many other groups of whom the
Empire at that time was full. So they never used that name themselves. It
occurs twice only in Scripture, once when King Agrippa was immensely
amused at the audacity of Paul in thinking that he would easily make ‘a
Christian’ of him; and once when Peter speaks of ‘suffering as a
Christian,’ where he is evidently quoting, as it were, the indictment on
which the early believers were tried and punished. What did they call
themselves then?
I have chosen this text not for the purpose of speaking about it only, but
because it gathers together in brief compass the three principal
designations by which the early believers knew themselves. ‘Saints’ —that
tells their relation to God, as well as their character, for it means
‘consecrated,’ set apart for Him, and therefore pure; ‘faithful’, that
means ‘full of faith’ and is substantially equivalent to the usual
‘believers,’ which defines their relation to Jesus Christ as the Revealer
of God; ‘brethren’—that defines their relation and sentiment towards their
fellows. These terms go a great deal deeper than the nickname which the
wits of Antioch invented. The members of the Church were not content with
the vague’ Christian,’ but they called themselves ‘saints,’ ‘believers,’
‘brethren.’ One designation does not appear here, which we must take into
account for completeness: the earliest of all —disciples. Now, I purpose
to bring together these four names, by which the early believers thought
and spoke of themselves, in order to point the lessons as to our position
and our duty, which are wrapped up in them. And I may just say that,
perhaps, it is no sign of advance that the Church, as years rolled on,
accepted the world’s name for itself, and that people found it easier to
call themselves ‘Christians’—which did not mean very much—than to call
themselves ‘saints’ or ‘believers.’
Now then, to begin with,
I. They Were ‘Disciples’ First Of All.
The facts as to the use of that name are very plain, and as instructive as
they are plain. It is a standing designation in the Gospels, both in the
mouths of friends and of outsiders; it is sometimes, though very
sparingly, employed by Jesus Christ Himself. It persists on through the
book of the Acts of the Apostles, and then it stops dead, and we never
hear it again.
Now its existence at first, and its entire abandonment afterwards, both
seem to me to carry very valuable lessons. Let me try to work them out. Of
course, ‘disciple’ or ‘scholar’ has for its correlative—as the logicians
call it—‘teacher.’ And so we find that as the original adherents of Jesus
called themselves ‘disciples,’ they addressed Him as ‘Master,’ which is
the equivalent of ‘Rabbi.’ That at once suggests the thought that to
themselves, and to the people who saw the origination of the little
Christian community, the Lord and His handful of followers seemed just to
be like John and his disciples, the Pharisees and their disciples, and
many another Rabbi and his knot of admiring adherents. Therefore whilst
the name was in one view fitting, it was conspicuously inadequate, and as
time went on, and the Church became more conscious of the uniqueness of
the bond that knit it to Jesus Christ, it instinctively dropped the name
‘disciple,’ and substituted others more intimate and worthy.
But yet it remains permanently true, that Christ’s followers are Christ’s
scholars, and that He is their Rabbi and Teacher. Only the peculiarity,
the absolute uniqueness, of His attitude and action as a Teacher lies in
two things: one, that His main subject was Himself, as He said, ‘I am the
Truth,’ and consequently His characteristic demand from His scholars was
not, as with other teachers, ‘Accept this, that, or the other doctrine
which I propound,’ but ‘Believe in Me’; and the other, that He seldom if
ever argues, or draws conclusions from previous premises, that He never
speaks as if He Himself had learnt and fought His way to what He is
saying, or betrays uncertainty, limitation, or growth in His opinions, and
that for all confirmation of His declarations, He appeals only to the
light within and to His own authority: ‘Verily, verily, I say unto you.’
No wonder that the common people were astonished at His teaching, and felt
that here was an authority in which the wearisome citations of what Rabbi
So-and-So had said, altogether lacked.
That teaching abides still, and, as I believe, opens out into, and is our
source of, all that we know—in distinction and contrast from, ‘imagine,’
‘hope,’ ‘fear’—of God, and of ourselves, and of the future. It casts the
clearest light on morals for the individual and on politics for the
community. Whatever men may say about Christianity being effete, it will
not be effete till the world has learnt and absorbed the teaching of Jesus
Christ; and we are a good long way from that yet!
If He is thus the Teacher, the perpetual Teacher, and the only Teacher, of
mankind in regard to all these high things about God and man and the
relation between them, about life and death and the world, and about the
practice and conduct of the individual and of the community, then we, if
we are His disciples, build houses on the rock, in the degree in which we
not only hear but do the things that He commands. For this Teacher is no
theoretical handler of abstract propositions, but the authoritative
imposer of the law of life, and all His words have a direct bearing upon
conduct. Therefore it is vain for us to say: ‘Lord, Lord, Thou hast taught
in our streets and we have accepted Thy teaching.’ He looks down upon us
from the Throne, as He looked upon the disciples in that upper room, and
He says to each of us: ‘If ye know these things, happy are ye if ye do
them.’
But the complete disappearance of the name as the development of the
Church advanced, brings with it another lesson, and that is, that precious
and great as are the gifts which Jesus Christ bestows as a Teacher, and
unique as His act and attitude in that respect are, the name either of
teacher or of disciple fails altogether to penetrate to the essence of the
relation which knits us together. It is not enough for our needs that we
shall be taught. The worst man in the world knows a far nobler morality
than the best man practises. And if it were true, as some people
superficially say is the case, that evil-doing is the result of ignorance,
there would be far less evil-doing in the world than, alas! there is. It
is not for the want of knowing, that we go wrong, as our consciences tell
us; but it is for want of something that can conquer the evil tendencies
within, and lift off the burden of a sinful past which weighs on us. As in
the carboniferous strata what was pliant vegetation has become heavy
mineral, our evil deeds lie heavy on our souls. What we need is not to be
told what we ought to be, but to be enabled to be it. Electricity can
light the road, and it can drive the car along it; and that is what we
want, a dynamic as well as an illuminant, something that will make us able
to do and to be what conscience has told us we ought to be and do.
Teacher? Yes. But if only teacher, then He is nothing more than one of a
multitude who in all generations have vainly witnessed to sinful men of
the better path. There is no reformation for the individual, and little
hope for humanity, in a Christ whom you degrade to the level of a Rabbi,
or in a Church which has not pressed nearer to Him than to feel itself His
disciples.
There was a man who came to Jesus by night, and was in the dark about the
Jesus to whom he came, and he said, ‘We know that Thou art a Teacher come
from God.’ But Jesus did not accept the witness, though a young teacher
fighting for recognition might have been glad to get it from an
authoritative member of the Sanhedrim. But He answered, ‘Except a man be
born again, he cannot see the Kingdom of God.’ If we need to be born again
before we see it, it is not teachers of it that will serve our turn, but
One who takes us by the hand, and translates us out of the tyranny of the
darkness into the Kingdom of the Son of God’s love. So much, then, for the
first of these names and lessons.
Now turn to the second—
II. The Disciples Must Be Believers.
That name begins to appear almost immediately after Pentecost, and
continues throughout. It comes in two forms, one which is in my text, ‘the
faithful,’ meaning thereby not the reliable, but the people that are full
of faith; the other, meaning the same thing, they who believe, the
‘believers.’ The Church found that ‘disciple ‘was not enough. It went
deeper; and, with a true instinct, laid hold of the unique bond which
knits men to their Lord and Saviour. That name indicates that Jesus Christ
appears to the man who has faith in a new character. He is not any longer
the Teacher who is to be listened to, but He is the Object of trust. And
that implies the recognition, first, of His Divinity, which alone is
strong enough to bear up the weight of millions of souls leaning hard upon
it; and, second, of what He has done and not merely of what He has said.
We accept the Teacher’s word; we trust the Saviour’s Cross. And in the
measure in which men learned that the centre of the work of the Rabbi
Jesus was the death of the Incarnate Son of God, their docility was
sublimed into faith.
That faith is the real bond that knits men to Jesus Christ. We are united
to Him, and become recipient of the gifts that He has to bestow, by no
sacraments, by no externals, by no reverential admiration of His supreme
wisdom and perfect beauty of character, not by assuming the attitude of
the disciple, but by flinging our whole selves upon Him, because He is our
Saviour.
That unites us to Jesus Christ; nothing else does. Faith is the opening of
the heart, by which all His power can be poured into us. It is the
grasping of His hand, by which, even though the cold waters be above our
knees and be rising to our hearts, we are lifted above them and they are
made a solid pavement for our feet. Faith is the door opened by ourselves,
and through which will come all the Glory that dwelt between the cherubim,
and will fill the secret place in our hearts. To be the disciple of a
Rabbi is something; to be the’ faithful’ dependent on the Saviour is to be
His indeed.
And then there is to be remembered, further, that this bond, which is the
only vital link between a man and Christ, is therefore the basis of all
virtue, of all nobility, of all beauty of conduct, and that ‘whatsoever
things are lovely and of good report’ are its natural efflorescence and
fruit. And so that leads us to the third point—
III. The Believing Disciple Is A ‘Saint.’
That name does not appear in the Gospels, but it begins to show in the
Acts of the Apostles, and it becomes extremely common throughout the
Epistles of Paul. He had no hesitation in calling the very imperfect
disciples in Corinth by this great name. He was going to rebuke them for
some very great offences, not only against Christian elevation of conduct,
but against common pagan morality; but he began by calling them’ saints.’
What is a saint? First and foremost, a man who has given himself to God,
and is consecrated thereby. Whoever has cast himself on Christ, and has
taken Christ for his, therein and in the same degree as he is exercising
faith, has thus yielded himself to God. If your faith has not led you to
such a consecration of will and heart and self, you had better look out
and see whether it is faith at all. But then, because faith involves the
consecration of a man to God, and consecration necessarily implies purity,
since nothing can be laid on God’s altar which is not sanctified thereby,
the name of saint comes to imply purity of character. Sanctity is the
Christian word which means the very flower and fragrant aroma of what the
world calls virtue.
But sanctity is not emotion, A man may luxuriate in devout feeling, and
sing and praise and pray, and be very far from being a saint; and there is
a great deal of the emotional Christianity of this day which has a strange
affinity for the opposite of saintship. Sanctity is not aloofness. ‘There
were saints in Caesar’s household’—a very unlikely place; they were
flowers on a dunghill, and perhaps their blossoms were all the brighter
because of what they grew on, and which they could transmute from
corruption into beauty. So sanctity is no blue ribbon of the Christian
profession, to be given to a few select (and mostly ascetic) specimens of
consecration, but it is the designation of each of us, if we are disciples
who are more than disciples, that is, ‘believers.’ And thus, brethren, we
have to see to it that, in our own cases, our faith leads to surrender,
and our self-surrender to purity of life and conduct. Faith, if real,
brings sanctity; sanctity, if real, is progressive. Sanctity, though
imperfect, may be real.
IV. The Believing Saints Are ‘Brethren.’
That is the name that predominates over all others in the latter portions
of the New Testament, and it is very natural that it should do so. It
reposes upon and implies the three preceding. Its rapid adoption and
universal use express touchingly the wonder of the early Church at its own
unity. The then world was rent asunder by deep clefts of misunderstanding,
alienation, animosity, racial divisions of Jew and Greek, Parthian,
Scythian; by sexual divisions which flung men and women, who ought to have
been linked hand in hand, and united heart to heart, to opposite sides of
a great gulf; by divisions of culture which made wise men look down on the
unlearned, and the unlearned hate the wise men; by clefts of social
position, and mainly that diabolical one of slave and free. All these
divisive and disintegrating forces were in active operation. The only
thing except Christianity, which produced even a semblance of union, was
the iron ring of the Roman power which compressed them all into one
indeed, but crushed the life out of them in the process. Into that
disintegrating world, full of mutual repulsion, came One who drew men to
Himself and said, ‘One is your Master, even Christ, and all ye are
brethren.’ And to their own astonishment, male and female, Greek and Jew,
bond and free, philosopher and fool, found themselves sitting at the same
table as members of one family; and they looked in each other’s eyes and
said, ‘Brother!’ There had never been anything like it in the world. The
name is a memorial of the unifying power of the Christian faith.
And it is a reminder to us of our own shortcomings. Of course, in the
early days, the little band were driven together, as sheep that stray over
a pasture in the sunshine will huddle into a corner in a storm, or when
the wolves are threatening. There are many reasons today which make less
criminal the alienation from one another of Christian communities and
Christian individuals. I am not going to dwell on the evident signs in
this day, for which God be thanked, that Christian men are beginning, more
than they once did, to realise their unity in Jesus Christ, and to be
content to think less of the things that separate than of the far greater
things that unite. But I would lay upon your hearts, as individual parts
of that great whole, this, that whatever may be the differences in
culture, outlook, social position, or the like, between two Christian men,
they each, the rich man and the poor, the educated man and the unlettered
one, the master and the servant, ought to feel that deep down in their
true selves they are nearer one another than they are to the men who,
differing from them in regard to their faith in Jesus Christ, are like
them in all these superficial respects. Regulate your conduct by that
thought.
That name, too, speaks to us of the source from which Christian
brotherhood has come. We are brethren of each other because we have one
Father, even God, and the Fatherhood which makes us brethren is not that
which communicates the common life of humanity, but that which imparts the
new life of sonship through Jesus Christ. So the name points to the only
way by which the world’s dream of a universal brotherhood can ever be
fulfilled. If there is to be fraternity there must be fatherhood, and the
life which, possessed by each, makes a family of all, is the life which He
gives, who is ‘the first-born among many brethren,’ and who, to them who
believe on Him, gives power to become the sons of God, and the brethren of
all the other sons and daughters of the Lord God Almighty.
So, dear friends, take these names, ponder their significance and the
duties they impose. Let us make sure that they are true of us. Do not be
content with the vague, often unmeaning name of Christian, but fill it
with meaning by being a believer on Christ, a saint devoted to God, and a
brother of all who, ‘by like precious faith,’ have become Sons of God.
Colossians 1:5
-The
Gospel-Hope
‘The hope of the
Gospel.’—Col. 1:5.
‘GOD never sends mouths but He sends meat to feed them,’ says the old
proverb. And yet it seems as if that were scarcely true in regard to that
strange faculty called Hope. It may well be a question whether on the
whole it has given us more pleasure than pain. How seldom it has been a
true prophet! How perpetually its pictures have been too highly coloured?
It has cast illusions over the future, colouring the far-off hills with
glorious purple which, reached, are barren rocks and cold snow. It has
held out prizes never won. It has made us toil and struggle and aspire and
fed us on empty husks. Either we have not got what we expected or have
found it to be less good than it appeared from afar.
If we think of all the lies that hope has told us, of all the vain
expenditure of effort to which it has tempted us, of the little that any
of us have of what we began by thinking we should surely attain, hope
seems a questionable good, and yet how obstinate it is, living on after
all disappointments and drawing the oldest amongst us onwards. Surely
somewhere there must be a reason for this great and in some respects awful
faculty, a vindication of its existence in an adequate object for its
grasp.
The New Testament has much to say about hope.
Christianity lays hold of it and professes to supply it with its true
nourishment and support. Let us look at the characteristics of Christian
hope, or, as our text calls it, the hope of the Gospel, that is, the hope
which the Gospel creates and feeds in our souls.
I. What Does It Hope For?
The weakness of our earthly hopes is that they are fixed on things which
are contingent and are inadequate to make us blessed. Even when tinted
with the rainbow hues, which it lends them, they are poor and small. How
much more so when seen in the plain colourless light of common day. In
contrast with these the objects of the Christian hope are certain and
sufficient for all blessedness. In the most general terms they may be
stated as ‘That blessed hope, even the appearing of the Great God and our
Saviour.’ That is the specific Christian hope, precise and definite, a
real historical event, filling the future with a certain steadfast light.
Much is lost in the daily experience of all believers by the failure to
set that great and precise hope in its true place of prominence. It is
often discredited by millenarian dreams, but altogether apart from these
it has solidity and substance enough to bear the whole weight of a world
rested upon it.
That appearance of God brings with it the fulfilment of our highest hopes
in the ‘grace that is to be brought to us at His appearing.’ All our
blessedness of every kind is to be the result of the manifestation of God
in His unobscured glory. The mirrors that are set round the fountain of
light flash into hitherto undreamed-of brightness. It is but a variation
in terms when we describe the blessedness which is to be the result of
God’s appearing as being the Hope of Salvation in its fullest sense, or,
in still other words, as being the Hope of Eternal Life. Nothing short of
the great word of the Apostle John, that when He shall appear we shall be
like Him, exhausts the greatness of the hope which the humblest and
weakest Christian is not only allowed but commanded to cherish. And that
great future is certainly capable of, and in Scripture receives, a still
more detailed specification. We hear, for example, of the hope of
Resurrection, and it is most natural that the bodily redemption which Paul
calls the adoption of the body should first emerge into distinct
consciousness as the principal object of hope in the earliest Christian
experience, and that the mighty working whereby Jesus is able to subdue
all things unto Himself, should first of all be discerned to operate in
changing the body of our humiliation into the body of His glory.
But equally natural was it that no merely corporeal transformation should
suffice to meet the deep longings of Christian souls which had learned to
entertain the wondrous thought of likeness to God as the certain result of
the vision of Him, and so believers’ wait for the hope of righteousness by
faith.’ The moral likeness to God, the perfecting of our nature into His
image, will not always be the issue of struggle and restraint, but in its
highest form will follow on sight, even as here and now it is to be won by
faith, and is more surely attained by waiting than by effort.
The highest form which the object of our hope takes is, the Hope of the
Glory of God. This goes furthest; there is nothing beyond this. The eyes
that have been wearied by looking at many fading gleams and seen them die
away, may look undazzled into the central brightness, and we may be sure
that even we shall walk there like the men in the furnace, unconsumed,
purging our sight at the fountain of radiance, and being ourselves
glorious with the image of God. This is the crown of glory which He has
promised to them that love Him. Nothing less than this is what our hope
has to entertain, and that not as a possibility, but as a certainty. The
language of Christian hope is not perhaps this may be, but verily it shall
be. To embrace its transcendent certainties with a tremulous faith broken
by much unbelief, is sin.
II. The Grounds On Which The Hope Of The Gospel Rests.
The grounds of our earthly hopes are for the most part possibilities, or,
at the best, probabilities turned by our wishes into certainties. We moor
our ships to floating islands which we resolve to think continents. So our
earthly hopes vary indefinitely in firmness and substance. They are
sometimes but wishes turned confident, and can never rise higher than
their source, or be more certain than it is. At the best they are building
on sand. At the surest there is an element of risk in them. One singer
indeed may take for his theme ‘The pleasures of Hope,’ but another answers
by singing of’ The fallacies of Hope.’ Earth-born hopes carry no anchor
and have always a latent dread looking out of their blue eyes.
But it is possible for us to dig down to and build on rock, to have a
future as certain as our past, to escape in our anticipations from the
region of the Contingent, and this we assuredly do when we take the hope
of the Gospel for ours, and listen to Paul proclaiming to us ‘Christ which
is our Hope,’ or ‘Christ in you the Hope of glory.’ If our faith grasps
Jesus Christ risen from the dead and for us entered into the heavenly
state as our forerunner, our hope will see in Him the pattern and the
pledge of our manhood, and will begin to experience even here and now the
first real though faint accomplishments of itself. The Gospel sets forth
the facts concerning Christ which fully warrant and imperatively require
our regarding Him as the perfect realised ideal of manhood as God meant it
to be, and as bearing in Himself the power to make all men even as He is.
He has entered into the fellowship of our humiliation and become bone of
our bone and flesh of our flesh that we might become life of His Life and
spirit of His Spirit. As certain as it is that ‘we have borne the image of
the earthy,’ so certain is it that ‘we shall also bear the image of the
heavenly.’
What cruel waste of a divine faculty it is, then, of which we are all
guilty when we allow our hopes to be frittered away and dissipated on
uncertain and transient goods which they may never secure, and which, even
if secured, would be ludicrously or rather tragically insufficient to make
us blessed, instead of withdrawing them from all these and fixing them on
Him who alone is able to satisfy our hungry souls in all their faculties
for ever!
The hope of the Gospel is firm enough to rest our all upon because in it,
by ‘two immutable things in which it is impossible that God should lie,’
His counsel and His oath, He has given strong encouragement to them who
have fled for refuge to lay hold of the hope set before them. Well may the
hope for which God’s own eternal character is the guarantee be called
‘sure and steadfast.’ The hope of the Gospel rests at last on the Being
and Heart of God. It is that which God ‘who cannot lie hath promised
before the world was’ is working towards whilst the world lasts, and will
accomplish when the world is no more. He has made known His purpose and
has pledged all the energies and tendernesses of His Being to its
realisation. Surely on this rock-foundation we may rest secure. The hopes
that grow on other soils creep along the surface. The hope of the Gospel
strikes its roots deep into the heart of God.
III. What The Hope Of The Gospel Is And Does For Us.
We cannot do better than to lay hold of some of the New Testament
descriptions of it. We recall first that great designation ‘A good hope
through grace.’ This hope is no illusion; it does not come from fumes of
fancy or the play of imagination. The wish is not father to the thought.
We do not make bricks without straw nor spin ropes of sand on the shore of
the great waste sea that waits to swallow us up. The cup of Tantalus has
had its leaks stopped; the sieve carries the treasure unspilled. The rock
can be rolled to the hill-top, All the disappointments, fallacies, and
torments of hope pass away. It never makes ashamed. We have a solid
certainty as solid as memory. The hope which is through grace is the full
assurance of hope, and that full assurance is just what every other hope
lacks. In that region and in that region only we can either say I hope or
I know.
Another designation is ‘A lively hope.’ It is no poor pale ghost
brightening and fading, fading and brightening, through which one can see
the stars shine, and of little power in practical life, but strong and
vigorous and not the least active amongst the many forces that make up the
sum of our lives.
It is most significantly designated as ‘The blessed hope.’ All others
quickly pass into sorrows. This alone gives lasting joys, for this alone
is blessed whilst it is only anticipation, and still more blessed when its
blossoms ripen into full fruition. In all earthly hopes there is an
element of unrest, but the hope of the Gospel is so remote, so certain,
and so satisfying, that it works stillness, and they who most firmly grasp
it ‘do with patience wait for it.’ Earthly hopes have little moral effect
and often loosen the sinews of the soul, and are distinctly unfavourable
to all strenuous effort. But ‘every man that hath this hope in Jesus
purifieth himself even as He is pure,’ and the Apostle, whose keen insight
most surely discerns the character-building value of the fundamental facts
of Christian experience, was not wrong when he bid us find in the hope of
the Gospel deeply rooted within us the driving force of the most strenuous
efforts after purity like His whom it is our deepest desire and humble
hope to become like.
Let us remember the double account which Scripture gives of the discipline
by which the hope of the Gospel is won for our very own. On the one hand,
we have ‘joy and peace in believing, that we may abound in hope.’ Our
faith breeds hope because it grasps the divine facts concerning Jesus from
which hope springs. And faith further breeds hope because it kindles joy
and peace, which are the foretastes and earnests of the future
blessedness. On the other hand, the very opposite experiences work to the
same end, for’ tribulation worketh patience, and patience experience, and
experience hope.’ Sorrow rightly borne tests for us the power of the
Gospel and the reality of our faith, and so gives us a firmer grip of hope
and of Him on whom in the last result it all depends. Out of this
collision of flint and steel the spark springs. The water churned into
foam and tortured in the cataract has the fair bow bending above it.
But this discipline will not achieve its result, therefore comes the
exhortation to us all,’ Gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and hope
to the end.’ The hope of the Gospel is the one thing that we need. Without
it all else is futile and frail. God alone is worthy to have the whole
weight and burden of a creature’s hope fixed on Him, and it is an
everlasting truth that they who are ‘without God in the world’ also ‘have
no hope.’ Saints of old held fast by an assurance, which they must often
have felt left many questions still to be asked, and because they were
sure that they were continually with Him, were also sure of His guidance
through life and of His afterwards receiving them to glory. But for us the
twilight has broadened into day, and we shall be wise if, knowing our
defencelessness, and forsaking all the lies and illusions of this vain
present, we flee for refuge to lay hold on the hope set before us in the
Gospel
Colossians 1:11 ‘All Power’
‘Strengthened with all
power, according to the might of His glory, unto all patience and
longsuffering with joy.’—Col. 1:11 (R.V.).
THERE is a wonderful rush and fervour in the prayers of Paul. No parts of
his letters are so lofty, so impassioned, so full of his soul, as when he
rises from speaking of God to men to speaking to God for men. We have him
here setting forth his loving desires for the Colossian Christians in a
prayer of remarkable fulness and sweep. Broadly taken, it is for their
perfecting in religious and moral excellence, and it is very instructive
to note the idea of what a good man is which is put forth here.
The main petition is for wisdom and spiritual understanding applied
chiefly, as is to be carefully noted, to the knowledge of God’s will. The
thought is that what it most imports us to know is the Will of God, a
knowledge not of merely speculative points in the mysteries of the divine
nature, but of that Will which it concerns us to know because it is our
life to do it. The next element in Paul’s desires, as set forth in the
ideal here, is a worthy walk, a practical life, or course of conduct which
is worthy of Jesus Christ, and in every respect pleases Him. The highest
purpose of knowledge is a good life. The surest foundation for a good life
is a full and clear knowledge of the Will of God.
Then follow a series of clauses which seem to expand the idea of the
worthy walk and to be co-ordinate or perhaps slightly causal, and to
express the continuous condition of the soul which is walking worthily.
Let us endeavour to gather from these words some hints as to what it is
God’s purpose that we should become.
I. The Many-Sided Strength Which May Be Ours.
The form of the word ‘strengthened’ here would be more fully represented
by ‘being strengthened,’ and suggests an unintermitted process of bestowal
and reception of God’s might rendered necessary by our continuous human
weakness, and by the tear and wear of life. As in the physical life there
must be constant renewal because there is constant waste, and as every
bodily action involves destruction of tissue so that living is a continual
dying, so is it in the mental and still more in the spiritual life. Just
as there must be a perpetual oxygenation of blood in the lungs, so there
must be an uninterrupted renewal of spiritual strength for the highest
life. It is demanded by the conditions of our human weakness. It is no
less rendered necessary by the nature of the divine strength imparted,
which is ever communicating itself, and like the ocean cannot but pour so
much of its fulness as can be received into every creek and crack on its
shore.
The Apostle not merely emphasises the continuousness of this communicated
strength, but its many-sided variety, by designating it ‘all power.’ In
this whole context that word ‘all’ seems to have a charm for him. We read
in this prayer of ‘all spiritual wisdom,’ of ‘walking worthily of the Lord
unto all pleasing,’ of ‘fruit in every good work,’ and now of ‘all power,’
and lastly of ‘all patience and longsuffering.’ These are not instances of
being obsessed with a word, but each of them has its own appropriate
force, and here the comprehensive completeness of the strength available
for our many-sided weakness is marvellously revealed. There is ‘infinite
riches in a narrow room.’ All power means every kind of power, be it
bodily or mental, for all variety of circumstances, and, Protean, to take
the shape of all exigencies. Most of us are strong only at points, and
weak in others. In all human experience there is a vulnerable spot on the
heel. The most glorious image, though it has a head of gold, ends in feet,
‘part of iron and part of clay.’
And if this ideal of many-sided power stands in contrast with the
limitations of human strength, how does it rebuke and condemn the very
partial manifestations of a very narrow and one-sided power which we who
profess to have received it set forth! We have access to a source which
can fill our whole nature, can flower into all gracious forms, can cope
with all our exigencies, and make us all-round men, complete in Jesus
Christ, and, having this, what do we make of it, what do we show for it?
Does not God say to us, ‘Ye are not straitened in me, ye are straitened in
yourselves; I beseech you be ye enlarged.’
The conditions on our part requisite for possessing ‘all might’ are plain
enough. The earlier portion of the prayer plainly points to them. The
knowledge of God’s Will and the ‘walk worthy of the Lord’ are the means
whereby the power which is ever eager to make its dwelling in us, can
reach its end. If we keep the channel unchoked, no doubt ‘the river of the
water of life which proceedeth from the throne of God and the Lamb’ will
rejoice to fill it to the brim with its flashing waters. If we do not
wrench away ourselves from contact with Him, He will ‘strengthen us with
all might.’ If we keep near Him we may have calm confidence that power
will be ours that shall equal our need and outstrip our desires.
II. The Measure Of The Strength.
It is ‘according to the power of His glory.’ The Authorised Version but
poorly represents the fulness of the Apostle’s thought, which is more
adequately and accurately expressed in the Revised Version. ‘His glory’ is
the flashing brightness of the divine self-manifestation, and in that
Light resides the strength which is the standard or measure of the gift to
us. The tremendous force of the sunbeam which still falls so gently on a
sleeper’s face as not to disturb the closed eyes is but a parable of the
strength which characterises the divine glory. And wonderful and
condemnatory as the thought is, that power is the unlimited limit of the
possibilities of our possession. His gifts are proportioned to His
resources. While He is rich, can I be poor? The only real limit to His
bestowal is His own fulness. Of course, at each moment, our capacity of
receiving is for the time being the practical limit of our possession, but
that capacity varies indefinitely, and may be, and should be, indefinitely
and continuously increasing. It is an elastic boundary, and hence we may
go on making our own as much as we will, and progressively more and more,
of God’s strength. He gives it all, but there is a tragical difference
between the full cup put into our hands and the few drops carried to our
lips. The key of the treasure-chamber is in our possession, and on each of
us His gracious face smiles the permission which His gracious lips utter
in words,’ Be it unto thee even as thou wilt.’ If we are conscious of
defect, if our weakness is beaten by the assaults of temptation, or
crushed by sorrows that ride it down in a fierce attack, the fault is our
own. We have, if we choose to make it our own and to use it as ours, more
than enough to make us’ more than conquerors’ over all sins and all
sorrows.
But when we contrast what we have by God’s gift and what we have in our
personal experience and use in our daily life, the contrast may well bring
shame, even though the contrast brings to us hope to lighten the shame.
The average experience of present-day Christians reminds one of the great
tanks that may be seen in India, that have been suffered to go to ruin,
and so an elaborate system of irrigation comes to nothing, and the great
river that should have been drawn off into them runs past them, all but
unused. Repair them and keep the sluices open, and all will blossom again.
III. The Great Purpose Of This Strength.
‘Patience and longsuffering with joyfulness’ seems at first but a poor
result of such a force, but it comes from a heart that was under no
illusions as to the facts of human life, and it finds a response in us
all. It may be difficult to discriminate ‘patience’ from ‘longsuffering,’
but the general notion here is that one of the highest uses for which
divine strength is given to us, is to make us able to meet the antagonism
of evil without its shaking our souls. He who patiently endures without
despondency or the desire to ‘recompense evil for evil,’ and to whom by
faith even ‘the night is light about him,’ is far on the way to
perfection. God is always near us, but never nearer than when our hearts
are heavy and our way rough and dark. Our sorrows make rents through which
His strength flows. We can see more of heaven when the leaves are off the
trees. It is a law of the Divine dealings that His strength is ‘made
perfect in weakness.’ God leads us in to a darkened room to show us His
wonders.
That strength is to be manifested by us in’ patience and longsuffering,’
both of which are to have blended with them a real though apparently
antagonistic joy. True and profound grief is not opposed to such patience,
but the excess of it, the hopeless and hysterical outbursts certainly are.
We are all like the figures in some old Greek temples which stand upright
with their burdens on their heads. God’s strength is given that we may
bear ours calmly, and upright like these fair forms that hold up the heavy
architecture as if it were a feather, or like women with water-jars on
their heads, which only make their carriage more graceful and their step
more firm.
How different the patience which God gives by His own imparted strength,
from the sullen submission or hysterical abandonment to sorrow, or the
angry rebellion characterising Godless grief! Many of us think that we can
get on very well in prosperity and fine weather without Him. We had better
ask ourselves what we are going to do when the storm comes, which comes to
all some time or other.
The word here rendered ‘patience’ is more properly ‘perseverance.’ It is
not merely a passive but an active virtue. We do not receive that great
gift of divine strength to bear only, but also to work, and such work is
one of the best ways of bearing and one of the best helps to doing so. So
in our sorrows and trials let us feel that God’s strength is not all given
us to be expended in our own consolation, but also to be used in our plain
duties. These remain as imperative though our hearts are beating like
hammers, and there is no more unwise and cowardly surrender to trouble
than to fling away our tools and fold our hands idly on our laps.
But Paul lays a harder duty on us even in promising a great gift to us,
when he puts before us an ideal of joy mingling with patience and
longsuffering. The command would be an impossible one if there were not
the assurance that we should be ‘strengthened with all might.’ We plainly
need an infusion of diviner strength than our own, if that strange
marriage of joy and sorrow should take place, and they should at once
occupy our hearts. Yet if His strength be ours we shall be strong to
submit and acquiesce, strong to look deep enough to see His will as the
foundation of all and as ever busy for our good, strong to hope, strong to
discern the love at work, strong to trust the Father even when He
chastens. And all this will make it possible to have the paradox
practically realised in our own experience, ‘As sorrowful yet always
rejoicing.’ One has seen potassium burning underwater. Our joy may burn
under waves of sorrow. Let us bring our weakness to Jesus Christ and grasp
Him as did the sinking Peter. He will breathe His own grace into us, and
speak to our feeble and perchance sorrowful hearts, as He had done long
before Paul’s words to the Colossians, ‘My grace is sufficient for thee,
and my strength is made perfect in weakness.’
Colossians 1:12 - Thankful For Inheritance
‘Giving thanks unto the
Father, who made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints
in light.’—Col. 1:12 (R.V.)
IT is interesting to notice how much the thought of inheritance seems to
have been filling the Apostle’s mind during his writing of Ephesians and
Colossians. Its recurrence is one of the points of contact between them.
For example, in Ephesians, we read, ‘In whom also were made a heritage’
(Col. 1:11); ‘An earnest of our inheritance’ (Col. 1:14); ‘His inheritance
in the saints’ (Col. 1:18); ‘Inheritance in the Kingdom of Christ’ (Eph.
5:5). We notice too that in the address to the Elders of the Church at
Ephesus, we read of ‘the inheritance among all them that are sanctified’
(Acts 20:32).
In the text the climax of the Apostle’s prayer is presented as
thankfulness, the perpetual recognition of the Divine hand in all that
befalls us, the perpetual confidence that all which befalls us is good,
and the perpetual gushing out towards Him of love and praise. The highest
diligence, the most strenuous fruit-bearing, and the most submissive
patience and longsuffering would be incomplete without the consecration of
a grateful heart, and the noblest beauty of a Christian character would
lack its rarest lustre. This crown of Christian perfectness the Apostle
regards as being called into action mainly by the contemplation of that
great act and continuous work of God’s Fatherly love by which he makes us
fit for our portion of the inheritance which the same love has prepared
for us. That inheritance is the great cause for Christian thankfulness;
the more immediate cause is His preparation of us for it. So we have three
points here to consider; the inheritance; God’s Fatherly preparation of
His children for it; the continual temper of thankfulness which these
should evoke.
I. The Inheritance.
The frequent recurrence of this idea in the Old Testament supplies Paul
with a thought which he uses to set forth the most characteristic
blessings of the New. The promised land belonged to Israel, and each
member of each tribe had his own little holding in the tribal territory.
Christians have in common the higher spiritual blessings which Christ
brings, “and Himself is, and each individual has his own portion of, the
general good.
We must begin by dismissing from our minds the common idea, which a
shallow experience tends to find confirmed by the associations ordinarily
attached to the word ‘inheritance,’ that it is entered upon by death. No
doubt, that great change does effect an unspeakable change in our fitness
for, and consequently in our possession of, the gifts which we receive
from Christ’s pierced hands, and, as the Apostle has told us, the highest
of these possessed on earth is but the ‘earnest of the inheritance ‘; but
we must ever bear in mind that the distinction between a Christian life on
earth and one in heaven is by no means so sharply drawn in Scripture as it
generally is by us, and that death has by no means so great importance as
we faithlessly attribute to it. The life here and hereafter is like a road
which passes the frontiers of two kingdoms divided by a bridged river, but
runs on in the same direction on both sides of the stream. The flood had
to be forded until Jesus bridged it. The elements of the future and the
present are the same, as the apostolic metaphor of the ‘earnest of the
inheritance’ teaches us. The handful of soil which constitutes the ‘arles’
is part of the broad acres made over by it.
We should be saved from many unworthy conceptions of the future life, if
we held more steadfastly to the great truth that God Himself is the
portion of the inheritance. The human spirit is too great and too exacting
to be satisfied with anything less than Him, and the possession of Him
opens out into every blessedness, and includes all the minor joys and
privileges that can gladden and enrich the soul. We degrade the future if
we think of it only, or even chiefly, as a state in which faculties are
enlarged, and sorrows and sins are for ever ended. Neither such negatives
as’ no night there,’ ‘neither sorrow nor crime,’ ‘no more pain,’ nor such
metaphors as’ white robes’ and ‘golden crowns and ‘seats on thrones’ are
enough. We are ‘heirs of God,’ and only as we possess Him, and know that
we are His, and He is ours, are we ‘rich to all intents of bliss.’ That
inheritance is here set forth as being’ in light’ and as belonging to
saints. Light is the element and atmosphere of God. He is in light. He is
the fountain of all light. He is light; perfect in wisdom, perfect in
purity. The sun has its spots, but in Him is no darkness at all, Moons wax
and wane, shadows of eclipse fall, stars have their time to set, but ‘He
Is the Father of lights with whom can be no variation, neither shadow that
is cast by turning.’ All that light is focussed in Jesus the Light of the
world. That Light fills the earth, but here it shineth in darkness that
obstructs its rays. But there must be a place and a time where the
manifestation of God corresponds with the reality of God, where His beams
pour out and there is nothing hid from the heat thereof, nothing which
they do not bless, nothing which does not flash them back rejoicing. There
is a land whereof the Lord God is the Light. In it is the inheritance of
the ‘saints,’ and in its light live the nations of the saved, and have God
for their companion. All darkness of ignorance, of sorrow, and of sin will
fade away as the night flees and ceases to be, before the rising sun.
The phrase ‘to be partakers’ is accurately rendered ‘for the portion,’ and
carries a distinct allusion to the partition of the promised land to
Israel by which each man had his lot or share in the common inheritance.
So the one word inheritance brings with it blessed thoughts of a common
possession of a happy society in which no man’s gain is another’s loss,
and all envyings, rivalries, and jealousies have ceased to be, and the
other word, ‘the portion,’ suggests the individual possession by each of
his own vision and experience. Each man’s ‘portion’ is capable of growth;
each has as much of God as he can hold. The measure of his desire is the
measure of his capacity. There are infinite differences in the ‘portions’
of the saints on earth, and heaven is robbed of one of its chief charms
unless we recognise that there are infinite differences among the saints
there. For both states the charter by which the portion is held is’ Be it
unto thee even as thou wilt,’ and in both the law holds ‘To him that hath
shall be given.’
II. The Fatherly Preparation For The Inheritance.
It is obvious from all which we have been saying that without holiness no
man shall see the Lord. The inheritance being what it is, the possession,
the enjoyment of communion with a Holy God, it is absolutely incapable of
being entered upon by any who are unholy. That is true about both the
partial possession of the earnest of it here and of its fulness hereafter.
In the present life all tolerated sin bars us out from enjoying God, and
in the future nothing can enter that defileth nor whatsoever worketh or
maketh a lie. There are many people who think that they would like ‘to go
to heaven,’ but who would find it difficult to answer such questions as
these: Do you like to think of God? Do you find any joy in holy thoughts?
What do you feel about prayer? Does the name of Christ make your heart
leap? Is righteousness your passion? If you have to answer these questions
with a silence which is the saddest negative, what do you think you would
do in heaven? I remember that the Greenlanders told the Moravian
missionaries who were trying to move them by conventional pictures of its
delights, that the heaven which these pious souls had painted would not do
for them, for there were no seals there. There are thousands of us who, if
we spoke the truth, would say the same thing, with the necessary
variations arising from our environment. There is not a spinning-mill in
it all. How would some of us like that? There is not a ledger, nor a
theatre, no novels, no amusements. Would it not be intolerable ennui to be
put down in such an order of things? You would be like the Israelites,
loathing ‘this tight bread’ and hungering for the strong-smelling and
savoury-tasting leeks and garlic, even if in order to taste them you had
to be slaves again.
Heaven would be no heaven to you if you could go there and be thus minded.
But you could not. God Himself cannot carry men thither but by fitting
them for it. It is not a place so much as a state, and the mighty hand
that works on one side of the thick curtain preparing the inheritance in
light for the saints, is equally busy on this side making the saints meet
for the inheritance.
I do not wish to enter here on grammatical niceties, but I must point out
that the form of the word which the Apostle employs to express it points
to an act in the past which still runs on.
The Revised Version’s rendering,’ made us meet,’ is preferable to the
Authorised Version’s, because of its omission of the’ hath’ which
relegates the whole process of preparation to the past. And it is of
importance to recognise that the difference between these two
representations of the divine preparation is not a piece of pedantry, for
that preparation has indeed its beginnings in the past of every Christian
soul, but is continuous throughout its whole earthly experience. There is
the great act of forgiveness and justifying which is contemporaneous with
the earliest and most imperfect faith, and there is the being born again,
the implanting of a new life which is the life of Christ Himself, and has
no spot nor wrinkle nor any such thing. That new life is infantile, but it
is there, the real man, and it will grow and conquer. Take an extreme case
and suppose a man who has just received forgiveness for his past and the
endowment of a new nature. Though he were to die at that moment he would
still in the basis of his being and real self be meet for the inheritance.
He who truly trusts in Jesus is passed from death unto life, though the
habits of sins which are forgiven still cling to him, and his new life has
not yet exercised a controlling power or begun to build up character. So
Christians ought not to think that, because they are conscious of much
unholiness, they are not ready for the inheritance. The wild brigand
through whose glazing eyeballs faith looked out to his fellow-sufferer on
the central cross was adjudged meet to be with him in Paradise, and if all
his deeds of violence and wild outrages on the laws of God and man did not
make him unmeet, who amongst us need write bitter things against himself?
The preparation is further effected through all the future earthly life.
The only true way to regard everything that befalls us here is to see in
it the Fatherly discipline preparing us for a fuller possession of a
richer inheritance. Gains and losses, joys and sorrows, and all the
endless variety of experiences through which we all have to pass, are an
unintelligible mystery unless we apply to them this solution, ‘He for our
profit that we might be partakers of His holiness.’ It is not a blind Fate
or a still blinder Chance that hurtles sorrows and changes at us, but a
loving Father; and we do not grasp the meaning of our lives unless we
feel, even about their darkest moments, that the end of them all is to
make us more capable of possessing more of Himself.
III. The Thankfulness Which These Thoughts Should Evoke.
Thankfulness ought to be a sweet duty. It is a joy to cherish gratitude.
Generous hearts do not need to be told to be thankful, and they who are
only thankful to order are not thankful at all. In nothing is the ordinary
experience of the ordinary Christian more defective, and significant of
the deficiencies of their faith, than in the tepidness and interruptedness
of their gratitude. The blessings bestowed are continuous and unspeakable.
The thanks returned are grudging and scanty. The river that flows from God
is ‘full of water’ and pours out unceasingly, and all that we return is a
tiny trickle, often choked and sometimes lost in the sands:
Our thankfulness ought to be constant. The fire on the altar should never
be quenched. The odour of the sweet-smelling incense should ever ascend.
Why is it that we have so little of this grace which the Apostle in our
text regards as the precious stone that binds all Christian graces
together, the sparkling crest of the wave of a Christian life? Mainly
because we have so little of the habit of regarding all things as God’s
Fatherly discipline and meditating on that for which they are making us
meet. We need a far more habitual contemplation of our inheritance, of our
experience as lovingly given by God to fit us for it and of the darkest
hours which would otherwise try our faith and silence our praise as
necessary parts of that preparation. If this be our habitual attitude of
mind, and these be ever present to us, our song will be always of His
mercy and our whole lives a thank-offering.
The text is a prophecy describing the inheritance in its perfect form.
Earthly life must be ended before it is fully understood. Down in the
valleys we praised God, but tears and mysteries sometimes saddened our
songs; but now on the summit surveying all behind, and knowing by a
blessed eternity of experience to what it has led, even an inheritance
incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away, we shall praise Him
with a new song for ever.
Thankfulness is the one element of worship common to earth and heaven, to
angels and to us. Whilst they sing,’ Bless the Lord all ye His hosts,’
redeemed men have still better reason to join in the chorus and answer,
‘Bless the Lord, O my soul.’
Colossians 1:29
Christian Endeavour
‘I also labour, striving
according to His working, which worketh in me mightily.’—Col. 1:29.
I HAVE chosen this text principally because it brings together the two
subjects which are naturally before us to-day. All ‘Western Christendom,’
as it is called, is to-day commemorating the Pentecostal gift. My text
speaks about that power that’ worketh in us mightily.’ True, the Apostle
is speaking in reference to the fiery energy and persistent toil which
characterised him in proclaiming Christ, that he might present men perfect
before Him. But the same energy which he expended on his apostolic office
he expended on his individual personality. And he would not have
discharged the one unless he had first laboured on the other. And although
in a letter contemporary with this one from which my text is taken he
speaks of himself as no longer young, but’ such an one as Paul the aged,
and likewise, also a prisoner of Jesus Christ,’ the young spirit was in
him, and the continual pressing forward to unattained heights. And that is
the spirit, not only of a section of the Church divided from the rest by
youth and by special effort, but of the whole Church if it is worth
calling a Church, and unless it is thus instinct, it is a mere dead
organisation.
So I hope that what few things I have to say may apply to, and be felt to
be suitable by all of us, whether we are nominally Christian Endeavourers
or not. If we are Christian people, we are such. If we are not
endeavouring, shall I venture to say we are not Christians? At any rate,
we are very poor ones.
Now here, then, are two plain things, a great universal Christian duty and
a sufficient universal Christian endowment. ‘I work striving’; that is the
description of every true Christian. ‘I work striving, according to His
working, who worketh in me mightily’: there is the great gift which makes
the work and the striving possible. Let me briefly deal, then, with these
two.
I. The Solemn Universal Christian Obligation.
Now the two words which the Apostle employs here are both of them very
emphatic. ‘His words were half battles,’ was said about Luther. It may be
as truly said about Paul. And that word ‘work’ which he employs, means,
not work with one hand, or with a delicate forefinger, but it means toil
up to the verge of weariness. The notion of fatigue is almost, I might
say, uppermost in the word as it is used in the New Testament. Some people
like to’ labour’ so as never to turn a hair, or bring a sweat-drop on to
their foreheads. That is not Christian Endeavour. Work that does not ‘take
it out of you’ is not worth doing. The other word ‘striving’ brings up the
picture of the arena with the combatants’ strain of muscle, their set
teeth, their quick, short breathing, their deadly struggle. That is Paul’s
notion of Endeavour. Now’ Endeavour,’ like a great many other words, has a
baser and a nobler side to it. Some people, when they say, ‘I will
endeavour,’ mean that they are going to try in a halfhearted way, with no
prospect of succeeding. That is not Christian Endeavour. The meaning of
the word —for the expression in my text might just as well be rendered
‘endeavouring’ as ‘striving’— is that of a buoyant confident effort of all
the concentrated powers, with the certainty of success. That is the
endeavour that we have to cultivate as Christian men. And there is only
one field of human effort in which that absolute confidence that it shall
not be in vain is anything but presumptuous arrogance; namely, in the
effort after making ourselves what God means us to be, what Jesus Christ
longs for us to be, what the Spirit of God is given to us in order that we
should be. ‘We shall not fail,’ ought to be the word of every man and
woman when they set themselves to the great task of working out, in their
own characters and personalities, the Divine intention which is made a
Divine possibility by the sacrifice of Jesus Christ and the gift of the
Divine Spirit.
So then what we come to is just this, dear brethren, if we are Christians
at all, we have to make a business of our religion; to go about it as if
we meant work. Ah I what a contrast there is between the languid way in
which Christian men pursue what the Bible designates their ‘calling’ and
that in which men with far paltrier aims pursue theirs I And what a still
sadder contrast there is between the way in which we Christians go about
our daily business, and the way in which we go about our Christian life I
Why, a man will take more pains to learn some ornamental art, or some
game, than he will ever take to make himself a better Christian. The one
is work. What is the other? To a very large extent dawdling and
make-believe.
You remember the old story,—it may raise a smile, but there should be a
deep thought below the smile,—of the little child that said as to his
father that ‘he was a Christian, but he had not been working much at it
lately.’ Do not laugh. It is a great deal too true of.- I will not venture
to say what percentage of—the professing Christians of this day. Work at
your religion. That is the great lesson of my text. Endeavour with
confidence of success. The Book of Proverbs says: ‘He that is slothful in
his work is brother to him that is a great waster,’ and that is true. A
man that does ‘the work of the Lord negligently’ is scarcely to be
credited with doing it at all Dear friends, young or old, if you name the
name of Christ, be in earnest, and make earnest work of your Christian
character.
And now may I venture two or three very plain exhortations? First, I would
say—if you mean to make your Christian life a piece of genuine work and
striving, the first thing that you have to do is to endeavour in the
direction of keeping its aim very clear before you. There are many ways in
which we may state the goal of the Christian life, but let us put it now
into the all-comprehensive form of likeness to Jesus Christ, by entire
conformity to His Example and full interpretation of His life. I do not
say ‘Heaven’; I say ‘Christ.’
That is our aim, the loftiest idea of development that any human spirit
can grasp, and rising high above a great many others which are noble but
incomplete. The Christian ideal is the greatest in the universe. There is
no other system of thought that paints man as he is, so darkly; there is
none that paints man as he is meant to be, in such radiant colours. The
blacks upon the palette of Christianity are blacker, and the whites are
whiter, and the golden is more radiant, than any other painter has ever
mixed. And so just because the aim which lies before the least and lowest
of us, possessing the most imperfect and rudimentary Christianity’, is so
transcendent and lofty, it is hard to keep it clear before our eyes,
especially when all the shabby little necessities of daily life come in to
clutter up the foreground, and hide the great distance. Men may live up at
Darjeeling there on the heights for weeks, and never see the Himalayas
towering opposite. The lower hills are clear; the peaks are wreathed in
cloud. So the little aims, the nearer purposes, stand out distinct and
obtrusive, and force themselves, as it were, upon our eyeballs, and the
solemn white Throne of the Eternal away across the marshy levels, is often
hid, and it needs an effort for us to keep it clear before us. One of the
main reasons for much that is unsatisfactory in the spiritual condition of
the average Christian of this day is precisely that he has not burning
ever before him there, the great aim to which he ought to be tending. So
he gets loose and diffused, and vague and uncertain. That is what Paul
tells you when he proposes himself as an example: ‘So run I, not as
uncertainly.’ The man who knows where he is running makes a bee-line for
the goal. If he is not sure of his destination, of course he zigzags. ‘So
fight I, not as one that beateth the air’—if I see my antagonist I can hit
him. If I do not see him clearly I strike like a swordsman in the dark, at
random, and my sword comes back unstained. If you want to make the harbour,
keep the harbour lights always clear before you, or you will go yawing
about, and washing here and there, in the trough of the wave, and the
tempest will be your master. If you do not know where you are going you
will have to say, like the men in the old story in the Old Book, ‘Thy
servant went no whither.’ If you are going to endeavour, endeavour first
to keep the goal clear before you.
And endeavour next to keep up communion with Jesus Christ, which is the
secret of all peaceful and of all noble living. And endeavour next after
concentration. And what does that mean? It means that you have to detach
yourself from hindrances. It means that you have to prosecute the
Christian aim all through the common things of Christian life. If it were
not possible to be pursuing the great aim of likeness to Jesus Christ, in
the veriest secularities of the most insignificant and trivial
occupations, then it would be no use talking about that being our aim. If
we are not making ourselves more like Jesus Christ by the way in which we
handle our books, or our pen, or our loom, or our scalpel, or our kitchen
utensils, then there is little chance of our ever making ourselves like
Jesus Christ. For it is these trifles that make life, and to concentrate
ourselves on the pursuit of the Christian aim is, in other words, to carry
that Christian aim into every triviality of our daily lives.
There are three Scripture passages which set forth various aspects of the
aim that we have before us, and from each of these aspects deduce the one
same lesson. The Apostle says ‘giving all diligence, add to your faith
virtue,’ etc., ‘for if ye do these things ye shall never fail.’ He also
exhorts: ‘Give diligence to make your calling and election sure.’ And
finally he says: ‘Be diligent, that ye may be found of Him in peace,
without spot, blameless.’ There are three aspects of the Christian course,
and the Christian aim, the addition to our faith of all the clustering
graces and virtues and powers that can be hung upon it, like jewels on the
neck of a queen; the making our calling and election sure, and the being
found at last tranquil, spotless, stainless, and being found so by Him.
These great aims are incumbent on all Christians, they require diligence,
and ennoble the diligence which they require.
So, brethren, we have all to be Endeavourers if we are Christians, and
that to the very end of our lives. For our path is the only path on which
men tread that has for its goal an object so far off that it never can be
attained, so near that it can ever be approached. This infinite goal of
the Christian Endeavour means inspiration for youth, and freshness for old
age, and that man is happy who can say: ‘Not as though I had already
attained’ at the end of a long life, and can say it, not because he has
failed, but because in a measure he has succeeded. Other courses of life
are like the voyages of the old mariners which were confined within the
narrow limits of the Mediterranean, and steered from headland to headland.
But the Christian passes through the jaws of the straits, and comes out on
a boundless sunlit ocean where, though he sees no land ahead, he knows
there is a peaceful shore, beyond the western waves. ‘I work striving.’
Now one word as to the other thought that is here, and that is,
II. The All-Sufficient Christian Gift.
‘According to His working, which worketh in me mightily.’ I need not
discuss whether’ His’ in my text refers to God or to Christ. The thing
meant is the operation upon the Christian spirit, of that Divine Spirit
whose descent the Church to-day commemorates. At this stage of my sermon I
can only remind you in a word, first of all, that the Apostle here is
arrogating to himself no special or peculiar gift, is not egotistically
setting forth something which he possessed and other Christian people did
not—that power which, ‘working in him mightily,’ worked in all his
brethren as well. It was his conviction and his teaching —would that it
were more operatively and vitally the conviction of all professing
Christians to-day, and would that it were more conspicuously, and in due
proportion to the rest of Christian truth, the teaching of all Christian
teachers to-day!—that that Divine power is in the very act of faith
received and implanted in every believing soul. ‘Know ye not,’ the Apostle
could say to his hearers, ‘that ye have the Spirit of God, except ye be
reprobates.’ I doubt whether the affirmative response would spring to the
lips of all professing or real Christians to-day as swiftly as it would
have done then. And I cannot help feeling, and feeling with increasing
gravity of pressure as the days go on, that the thing that our churches,
and we as individuals, perhaps need most to-day, is the replacing of that
great truth—I do not call it a ‘doctrine,’ that is cold, it is
experience—in its proper place. They who believe on Him do receive a new
life, a supernatural communication of the new Spirit, to be the very power
that rules in their lives.
It is an inward gift. It is not like the help that men can render us,
given from without and apprehended and incorporated with ourselves through
the medium of the understanding or of the heart. There is an old story in
the history of Israel about a young king that was bid by the prophet to
bend his bow against the enemies of Israel, as a symbol; and the old
prophet put his withered, skinny brown hand on the young man’s fleshy one,
and then said to him, ‘Shoot.’ But this Divine Spirit comes to strengthen
us in a more intimate and blessed fashion than that, for it glides into
our hearts and dwells in our spirits, and our work, as my text says, is
His working. This ‘working within’ is stated in the original of my text
most emphatically, for it is literally ‘the inworking which inworketh in
me mightily.’
So, dear brethren, the first direct aim of all our endeavour ought to be
to receive and to keep and to increase our gift of that Divine Spirit. The
work and the striving of which my text speaks would be sheer slavery
unless we had that help. It would be impossible of accomplishment unless
we had it.
‘If any power we have, it is to ill,
And all the power is Thine, to do and
eke to will.’
Let us, then, begin our endeavour, not by working but by receiving. Is not
that the very meaning of the doctrine that we are always talking about,
that men are saved, not by works but by faith? Does not that mean that the
first step is reception, and the first requisite is receptiveness, and
that then, and after that, second and not first, come working and
striving? To keep our hearts open by desire, to keep them open by purity,
are the essentials. The dove will not come into a fouled nest. It is said
that they forsake polluted places. But also we have to use the power which
is inwrought. Use is the way to increase all gifts, from the muscle in
your arm to the Christian life in your spirit. Use it, and it grows.
Neglect it, and it vanishes, and like the old Jewish heroes, a man may go
forth to exercise himself as of old time, and know not that the Spirit of
God hath departed from him. Dear friends, do not bind yourselves to the
slavery of Endeavour, until you come into the liberty and wealth of
receiving. He gives first, and then says to you, ‘Now go to work and keep
that good thing which is committed unto thee’ There is but one thought
more in this last part of my text, which I must not leave untouched, and
that is that this sufficient and universal gift is not only the means by
which the great universal duty can be discharged, but it ought to be the
measure in which it is discharged. ‘I work according to the working in
me.’ That is, all the force that came into Paul by that Divine Spirit,
came out of Paul in his Christian conduct, and the gift was not only the
source, but also the measure, of this man’s Christian Endeavour. Is that
true about us? They say that the steam-engine is a most wasteful
application of power, that a great deal of the energy which is generated
goes without ever doing any work. They tell us that one of the great
difficulties in the way of economic application of electricity is the loss
which comes through using accumulators. Is not that like a great many of
us? So much power poured into us; so little coming out from us and
translated into actual work! Such a ‘rushing mighty wind,’ and the air
about us so heavy and stagnant and corrupt! Such a blaze of fire, and we
so cold! Such a cataract of the river of the water of life, and our lips
parched and our crops seared and worthless! Ah, brethren! when we look at
ourselves, and when we think of the condition of so many of the churches
to which we belong, the old rebuke of the prophet comes back to us in this
generation, ‘Thou that art named the House of Israel, is the Spirit of the
Lord straitened? Are these His doings?’ We have an all-sufficient power.
May our working and striving be according to it, and may we work mightily,
being ‘strong in the Lord, and in the power of His might!’
Colossians 2:6, 7 -
Christian Progress
‘As therefore ye received
Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in Him, rooted and builded up in Him.’—Col.
2:6, 7 (R.V.).
IT is characteristic of Paul that he should here use three figures
incongruous with each other to express the same idea, the figures of
walking, being rooted, and built up. They, however, have in common that
they all suggest an initial act by which we are brought into connection
with Christ, and a subsequent process flowing from and following on it.
Receiving Christ, being rooted in Him, being founded on Him, stand for the
first; walking in Him, growing up from the root in Him, being built up on
Him as foundation, stand for the second. Fully expressed then, the text
would run, ‘As ye have received Christ, so walk in Him; as ye have been
rooted in Him, so grow up in Him; as ye have been founded on Him, so be
built up.’ These three clauses present the one idea in slightly different
forms. The first expresses Christian progress as the manifestation before
the world of an inward possession, the exhibition in the outward life of a
treasure hid in the heart. The second expresses the same pro-gross as the
development by its own vital energy of the life of Christ in the soul. The
third expresses the progress as the addition, by conscious efforts, of
portion after portion to the character, which is manifestly incomplete
until the headstone crowns the structure. We may then take the passage
before us as exhibiting the principles of Christian progress.
I. The Origin Of All, Or How Christian Progress Begins.
These three figures, receiving, rooted, founded, all express a great deal
more than merely accepting certain truths about Him. The acceptance of
truths is the means by which we come to what is more than any belief of
truths. We possess Christ when we believe with a true faith in Him. We are
rooted in Him. His life flows into us. We draw nourishment from that soil.
We are built on Him, and in our compact union find a real support to a
life which is otherwise baseless and blown about like thistle-down by
every breath. The union which all these metaphors presupposes is a vital
connection; the possession which is the first step in the Christian life
is a real possession.
There is no progress without that initial step. Our own experience tells
us but too plainly and loudly that we need the impartation of a new life,
and to be set on a new foundation, if we are ever to be anything else than
failures and blots.
There is sure to be progress if the initial step has been taken. If Christ
has been received, the life possessed will certainly manifest itself. It
will go on to perfection. The union effected will work on through the
whole character and nature. It is the beginning of all; it is only the
beginning.
II. The Manner Of Christian Progress Or In What It Consists.
It consists in a more complete possession of Him, in a more constant
approximation to Him, and a more entire appropriation of Him. Christian
progress is not a growing up from Christ as starting-point, but into
Christ as goal. All is contained in the first act by which He is first
received; the remainder is but the working out of that. All our growth in
knowledge and wisdom consists in our knowing what we have when we receive
Christ. We grow in proportion as we learn to see in Him the centre of all
truth, as the Revealer of God, as the Teacher of man, as the Interpreter
of nature, as the meaning and end of history, as the Lord of life and
death. Morals, politics, and philosophy flow from Him. His lips and His
life and death proclaim all truth, human and divine.
As in wisdom so in character, all progress consists in coming closer to
Jesus and receiving more and more of His many-sided grace. He is the
pattern of all excellence, the living ideal of whatsoever things are pure,
whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report, virtue
incarnate, praise embodied. He is the power by which we become gradually
and growingly moulded into His likeness. Every part of our nature finds
its best stimulus in Jesus for individuals and for societies. Christ and
growth into Him is progress, and the only way by which men can be
presented perfect, is that they shall be presented ‘perfect in Christ,’
whereunto every man must labour who would that his labour should not be in
vain. That progress must follow the threefold direction in the text. There
must first be the progressive manifestation in act and life of the Christ
already possessed, ‘As ye received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in Him.’
There must also be the completer growth in the soul of the new life
already received. As the leaf grows green and broad, so a Christlike
character must grow not altogether by effort. And there must be a
continual being builded up in Him by constant additions to the fabric of
graces set on that foundation.
III. The Means, Or How It Is Accomplished.
The first words of our text tell us that ‘Ye have received Christ Jesus as
Lord,’ and all depends on keeping the channels of communication open so
that the reception may be continuous and progressive. We must live near
and ever nearer to the Lord, and seek that our communion with Him may be
strengthened. On the other hand, it is not only by the spontaneous
development of the implanted life, but by conscious and continuous efforts
which sometimes involve vigorous repression of the old self that progress
is realised. The two metaphors of our text have to be united in our
experience. Neither the effortless growth of the tree nor the toilsome
work of the builder suffice to represent the whole truth. The two sides of
deep and still communion, and of strenuous effort based on that communion,
must be found in the experience of every Christian who has received
Christ, and is advancing through the imperfect manifestations of earth to
the perfect union with, and perfect assimilation to, the Lord.
To all men who are ready to despair of themselves, here is the way to
realise the grandest hopes. Nothing is too great to be attained by one
who, having received Christ Jesus as Lord, walks in Him, rooted and
builded up in Him, ‘a holy temple to the Lord.’
Colossians 3:1-15 Risen With Christ
THE resurrection is regarded in Scripture in three aspects—as a fact
establishing our Lord’s Messiahship, as a prophecy of our rising from the
dead, and as a symbol of the Christian life even now. The last is the
aspect under which Paul deals with it here.
I. Col. 3:1–4 Set Forth The Wonderful But Most Real Union Of The
Believer With The Risen Christ.
We have said that the Lord’s resurrection is regarded as a symbol, but
that is an incomplete representation of the truth here taught, for Paul
believed that the Christian is so joined to Jesus as that he has, not in
symbol only, but in truth, risen with him. Mark the emphasis and depth of
the expressions setting forth the believer’s unity with his Lord: ‘Ye were
raised together with Christ’; ‘Ye died, and your life is hid with Christ.’
And these wonderful statements do not go to the bottom of the fact, for
Paul goes beyond even them, and does not scruple to say that Christ ‘is
our life.’
The ground of these great declarations is found in the fact that faith
joins us in most real and close union to Jesus Christ, so that in His
death we die to sin and the world, and that, even while we live the bodily
life of men here, we have in us another life, derived from Jesus. Unless
our Christianity has grasped that great truth, it has not risen to the
height of New Testament teaching and Christian privilege. We cannot make
too much of’ Christ our sacrifice,’ but some of us make too little of
‘Christ our life,’ and thereby fail to understand in all its fulness that
other truth on which they fasten so exclusively. Union with Christ in the
possession of His life in us, and the consequent rooting of our lives in
Him, is a truth which much of the evangelical Christianity of this day
needs to see more clearly.
The life is ‘hid,’ as being united with Jesus, and consequently withdrawn
from the world, which neither comprehends nor sustains it. A Christian man
is bound to manifest to the utmost of his power what is the motive and aim
of his life; but the devout life is, like the divine life, a mystery,
unrevealed after all revelation.
The practical conclusion from this blessed union with Jesus is that we
are, as Christians, bound to be true in our conduct to the facts of our
spiritual life, and to turn away from the world, which is now not our
home, and set our mind (not only our ‘affections ‘) on things above.
Surely the Christ, ‘seated on the right hand of God,’ will be as a magnet
to draw our conscious being upwards to Himself. Surely union with Him in
His death will lead us to die to the world which is alien to us, and to
live in aspiration, thought, desire, love, and obedience with Him in His
calm abode, whence He rules and blesses the souls whom, through their
faith, He has made to live the new life of heaven on earth.
II. The First Consequence Of The Risen Life Is Negative, The Death Or
‘Putting Off’ Of The Old Nature, The Life Which Belongs To And Is Ruled By
Earth.
Col. 3:5–9 solemnly lay on the Christian the obligation to put this to
death. The ‘therefore’ in Col. 3:5 teaches a great lesson, for it implies
that the union with Jesus by faith must precede all self-denial which is
true to the spirit of the Gospel. Asceticism of any sort which is not
built on the evangelical foundation is thereby condemned, whether it is
practised by Buddhist, or monk, or Protestant. First be partaker of the
new life, and then put off the old man with his deeds. The withered fronds
of last year are pushed off the fern by the new ones as they uncurl. That
doctrine of life in Christ is set down as mystical; but it is mysticism of
the wholesome sort, which is intensely practical, and comes down to the
level of the lowest duties,—for observe what homely virtues are enjoined,
and how the things prohibited are no fantastic classifications of vices,
but the things which all the world owns to be ugly and wrong.
We cannot here enlarge on Paul’s grim catalogue, but only point out that
it is in two parts, the former (Col. 3:5–6) being principally sins of
impurity and unregulated passion, to which is added ‘covetousness,’ as the
other great vice to which the old nature is exposed. Lust and greed
between them are the occasions of most of the sins of men. Stop these
fountains, and the streams of evil would shrink to very small trickles.
These twin vices attract the lightning of God’s wrath, which ‘cometh’ on
their perpetrators, not only in some final future judgment, but here and
now. If we were not blind, we should see that thundercloud steadily
drawing nearer, and ready to launch its terrors on impure and greedy men.
They have set it in motion, and they are right in the path of the
avalanche which they have loosened.
The possessors of the risen life are exhorted to put off these things, not
only because of the coming wrath, but because continuance in them is
inconsistent with their present standing and life (Col. 3:7). They do not
now’ live in them,’ but in the heavenly places with the risen Lord,
therefore to walk in them is a contradiction. Our conduct should
correspond to our real affinities, and the surface of our lives should be
true to their depths and roots.
The second class of vices are those which mar our intercourse with our
fellows,—the more passionate anger and wrath and the more cold-blooded and
deadly malice, with the many sins of speech.
III. In Col. 3:9 Paul Appends The Great Reason For All The Preceding
Injunctions;
Namely, the fact, already enlarged on in Col. 3:1–4, of the Christian’s
death and new life by union with Jesus. He need only have stated the
one-half of the fact here, but he never can touch one member of the
antithesis without catching fire, as it were, and so he goes on to dwell
on the new life in Christ, and thus to prepare for the transition to the
exhortation to ‘put on’ its characteristic excellences. We note how true
to fact, though apparently illogical, his representation is. He bases the
command to put off the old man on the fact that Christians have put it
off. They are to be what they are, to work out in daily acts what they did
in its full ideal completeness when by faith they died to self and were
made alive in and to Christ. A strong motive for a continuous Christian
life is the recollection of the initial Christian act.
But Paul’s fervent spirit blazes up as he thinks of that new nature which
union with Jesus has brought, and he turns aside from his exhortations to
gaze on that great sight. He condenses volumes into a sentence. That new
man is not only new, but is perpetually being renewed with a renovation
penetrating more and more deeply, and extending more and more widely, in
the Christian’s nature. It is continually advancing in knowledge, and
tending towards perfect knowledge of Christ. It is being fashioned, by a
better creation than that of Adam, into a more perfect likeness of God
than our first father bore in his sinless freshness. The possession of it
gathers all Christians into a unity in which all distinctions of
nationality, religious privilege, culture, or social condition, are lost.
Paul the Pharisee and the Colossian brethren, Onesimus the slave and
Philemon his master, are one in Jesus. The new life is one in all its
recipients, and makes them one. The phenomena of the lowest forms of life
are almost repeated in the highest, and, just as in a coral reef the
myriads of workers are not individuals so much as parts of one living
whole, ‘so also is Christ.’ The union is the closest possible without
destruction of our individuality.
IV. The Final, Positive Consequence Of The Risen Life Follows In Col.
3:12–15.
Again the Apostle reminds Christians of what they are, as the great motive
for putting on the new man. The contemplation of privileges may tend to
proud isolation and neglect of duty to our fellows, but the true effect of
knowing that we are ‘God’s elect, holy and beloved,’ is to soften our
hearts, and to lead us to walk among men as mirrors and embodiments of
God’s mercy to us. The only virtues touched on here are the various
manifestations of love, such as quick susceptibility to others’ sorrows;
readiness to help by act as well as to pity in word; lowliness in
estimating one’s own claims, which will lead to bearing evils without
resentment or recompensing the like; and patient forgiveness, after the
pattern and measure of the forgiveness we have received. All these graces,
which would make earth an Eden, and our hearts temples, and our lives
calm, are outcomes of love, and must never be divorced from it. Paul uses
a striking image to express this thought of their dependence on it. He
likens them to the various articles of dress, and bids us hold them all in
place with love as a girdle, which keeps together all the various graces
that make up ‘perfectness.’
Thus living in love, we shall be free from the tumult of spirit which ever
attends a selfish life; for nothing is more certain to stuff a man’s
pillow with thorns, and to wreck his tranquillity, than to live in hate
and suspicion, or self-absorbed. ‘The peace of Christ’ is ours in the
measure in which we live the risen life and put on the new man, and that
peace in our hearts will rule, that is, will sit there as umpire; for it
will instinctively draw itself into itself, as it were, like the leaves of
a sensitive plant, at the approach of evil, and, if we will give heed to
its warnings, and have nothing to do with what disturbs it, we shall be
saved from falling into many a sin. That peace gathers all the possessors
of the new life into blessed harmony. It is peace with God, with
ourselves, and with all our brethren; and the fact that all Christians
are, by their common life, members of the one body, lays on them all the
obligation to keep the unity in the bond of peace. And for all these great
blessings, especially for that union with Jesus which gives us a share in
his risen life, thankfulness should ever fill our hearts and make all our
days and deeds the sacrifice of praise unto him continually.
Colossians 3:1-2
Risen With Christ
‘If ye then be risen with
Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the
right hand of God. Set your affection on things above, not on things on
the earth.’—Col. 3:1–2.
THERE are three aspects in which the New Testament treats the
Resurrection, and these three seem to have successively come into the
consciousness of the Church. First, as is natural, it was considered
mainly in its bearing on the person and work of our Lord. We may point for
illustration to the way in which the Resurrection is treated in the
earliest of the apostolic discourses, as recorded in the Acts of the
Apostles. Then it came, with further reflection and experience, to be
discerned that it had a bearing on the hope of the immortality of man. And
last of all, as the Christian life deepened, it came to be discerned that
the Resurrection was the pattern of the life of the Christian disciples.
It was regarded first as a witness, then as a prophecy, then as a symbol.
Three fragments of Scripture express these three phases: for the first,
‘Declared to be the Son of God with power by the Resurrection from the
dead’; for the second, ‘Now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the
first-fruits of them that slept’; for the third, ‘God hath raised us up
together with Him, and made us sit together in the heavenly places.’ I
have considered incidentally the two former aspects in the course of
previous sermons; I wish to turn at present to that final third one.
One more observation I must make by way of introduction, and that is, that
the way in which the Apostle here glides from ‘being risen with Christ’ to
where’ Christ is, sitting at the right hand of God,’ confirms what I have
pointed out in former discourses, that the Ascension of Jesus Christ is
always considered in Scripture as being nothing more than the necessary
outcome and issue of the process which began in the Resurrection. They are
not separate facts, but they are two ends of one process. And so with
these thoughts, that Resurrection develops into Ascension, and that in
both Jesus Christ is the pattern for His followers, let us turn to the
words before us.
Then we have here,
I. The Christian Life Considered As A Risen Life.
Now, we are all familiar with the great evangelical point of view from
which the death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ are usually contemplated.
To many of us Christ’s sacrifice is nothing more or less than the means by
which the world is reconciled to God, and Christ’s Resurrection nothing
more than the seal which was set by Divinity upon that work. ‘Crucified
for our offences, and raised again for our justification,’ as Paul has
it—that is the point of view from which most evangelical or orthodox
Christian people are contented to regard the solemn fact of the Death and
the radiant fact of the Resurrection. You cannot be too emphatic about
these truths, but you may be too exclusive in your contemplation of them.
You do well when you say that they are the Gospel; you do not well when
you say, as some of you do, that they are the whole Gospel. For there is
another stream of teaching in the New Testament, of which my text is an
example, and a multitude of other passages that I cannot refer to now are
equally conspicuous instances, in which that death and that Resurrection
are regarded, not so much in respect to the power which they exercise in
the reconciliation of the world to God, as in their aspect as the type of
all noble and true Christian life. You remember how, when our Lord Himself
touched upon the fruitful issues of His death, and said: ‘Except a corn of
wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone; but if it die it
bringeth forth much fruit,’ He at once went on to say that a man that
loved his life would lose it; and that a man that lost his life would find
it, and proceeded to point, even then, and in that connection, to His
Cross as our pattern, declaring: ‘If any man serve Me, let him follow Me;
and where I am, there shall also My servant be.’
Made like Him, like Him we rise;
Ours the cross, the grave, the skies.’
So, then, a risen life is the type of all noble life, and before there can
be a risen life there must have been a death. True, we may say that the
spiritual facts in a man’s experience, which are represented by these two
great symbols of a death and a rising, are but like the segment of a
circle which, seen from the one side is convex and from the other is
concave. But however loosely we may feel that the metaphors represent the
facts, this is plain, that unless a man dies to flesh, to self-will, to
the world, he never will live a life that is worth calling life. The
condition of all nobleness and all growth upwards is that we shall die
daily, and live a life that has sprung victorious from the death of self.
All lofty ethics teach that; and Christianity teaches it, with redoubled
emphasis, because it says to us, that the Cross and the Resurrection are
not merely imaginative emblems of the noble and the Christian life, but
are a great deal more than that. For, brethren, do not forget—if you do,
you will be hopelessly at sea as to large tracts of blessed Christian
truth—that by faith in Jesus Christ we are brought into such a true deep
union with Him as that, in no mere metaphorical or analogous sense, but in
most blessed reality, there comes into the believing heart a spark of the
life that is Christ’s own, so that with Him we do live, and from Him we do
live a life cognate with His, who, having risen from the dead, dieth no
more, and over whom death hath no dominion. So it is not a metaphor only,
but a spiritual truth, when we speak of being risen with Christ, seeing
that our faith, in the measure of its genuineness, its depth and its
operative power upon our characters, will be the gate through which there
shall pass into our deadness the life that truly is, the life that has
nought to do with death or sin. And this unity with Jesus, brought about
by faith, brings about that the depths of the Christian life are hid with
Christ in God, and that we, risen with Him, do even now sit ‘at the right
hand in heavenly places,’ whilst our feet, dusty and sometimes
blood-stained, are journeying along the paths of life. This is the great
teaching of my text, and of a multitude of other places; and this is the
teaching which modern Christianity, in its exclusive, or all but
exclusive, contemplation of the Cross as the sacrifice for sin, has far
too much forgotten. ‘Ye are risen with Christ.’
Let me remind you that this veritable death and rising again, which marks
the Christian life, is set forth before us in the initial rite of the
Christian Church. Some of you do not agree with me in my view, either of
what is the mode or of who are the subjects of that ordinance, but if you
know anything about the question, you know that everybody that has a right
to give a judgment agrees with us Baptists in saying—although they may not
think that it carries anything obligatory upon the practice of to-day—that
the primitive Church baptized by immersion. Now, the meaning of baptism is
to symbolise these two inseparable moments, dying to sin, to self, to the
world, to the old past, and rising again to newness of life. Our
sacramentarian friends say that, in my text, it was in baptism that these
Colossian Christians rose again with Christ. I, for my part, do not
believe that, but that baptism was the speaking sign of what lies at the
gate of a true Christian life I have no manner of doubt.
So the first thought of our text is not only taught us in words, but it
stands manifest in the ritual of the Church as it was from the beginning.
We die, and we rise again, through faith and by union through faith, with
Christ’ that died, yea, rather that is risen again, who is even at the
right hand of God.’
Let me turn, secondly, to
II. The Consequent Aims Of The Christian Life.
‘If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above.’ ‘To
seek’ implies the direction of the external life toward certain objects.
It is not to seek as if perhaps we might not find; it is not even to seek
in the sense of searching for, but it is to seek in the sense of aiming
at. And now do you not think that if we had burning in our hearts, and
conscious to our experiences, the sense of union with Jesus Christ the
risen Saviour, that would shape the direction and dictate the aims of our
earthly life? As surely as the elevation of the rocket tube determines the
flight of the projectile that comes from it, so surely would the inward
consciousness, if it were vivid as it ought to be in all Christian people,
of that risen life throbbing within the heart, shape all the external
conduct. It would give us wings and make us soar. It would make us
buoyant, and lift us above the creeping aims that constitute the objects
of life for so many men.
But you say, ‘Things above: that is an indefinite phrase. What do you mean
by it?’ I will tell you what the Bible means by it. It means Jesus Christ.
All the nebulous splendours of that firmament are gathered together into
one blazing sun. It is a vague direction to tell a man to shoot up, into
an empty heaven. It is not a vague direction to tell him to seek the
‘things above’; for they are all gathered into a person. ‘Where Christ is,
sitting at the right hand of God,’—that is the meaning of ‘things above,’
which are to be the continual aim of the man who is conscious of a risen
life. And of course they will be, for if we feel, as we ought to feel
habitually, though with varying clearness, that we do carry within us a
spark, if I might use that phrase, of the very life of Jesus Christ, so
surely as fire will spring upwards, so surely as water will rise to the
height of its source, so surely will our outward lives be directed towards
Him, who is the life of our inward lives, and the goal therefore of our
outward actions?
Jesus Christ is the summing up of ‘the things that are above’; therefore
there stands out clear this one great truth, that the only aim for a
Christian soul, consistent with the facts of its Christian life, is to be
like Christ, to be with Christ, to please Christ.
Now, how does that aim — ‘whether present or absent we labour that we may
be well pleasing to Him’—how does that aim bear upon the multitude of
inferior and nearer alms which men pursue, and which Christians have to
pursue along with other men? How does it bear upon them?—Why thus—as the
culminating peak of a mountain-chain bears on the lower hills that for
miles and miles buttress it, and hold it up, and aspire towards it, and
find their perfection in its calm summit that touches the skies. The more
we have in view, as our aim in life, Christ who is ‘at the right hand of
God,’ and assimilation, communion with Him, approbation from Him, the more
will all immediate aims be ennobled and delivered from the evils that else
cleave to them. They are more when they are second than when they are
first. ‘Seek ye first the Kingdom of God,’ and all your other aims—as
students, as thinkers, as scientists, as men of business, as parents, as
lovers, or anything else—will be greatened by being subordinated to the
conscious aim of pleasing Him. That aim should persist, like a strain of
melody, one long, holden-down, diapason note, through all our lives.
Perfume can be diffused into the air, and dislodge no atom of that which
it makes fragrant. This supreme aim can be pursued through, and by means
of, all nearer ones, and is inconsistent with nothing but sin. ‘Seek the
things that are above.’
Lastly, we have here,
III. The Discipline Which Is Needed To Secure The Right Direction Of
The Life.
The Apostle does not content himself with pointing out the aims. He adds
practical advice as to how these aims can be made dominant in our
individual cases, when he says, ‘Set your affections on things above.’
Now, many of you will know that’ affections’ is not the full sense of the
word that is here employed, and that the Revised Version gives a more
adequate rendering when it says, ‘Set your minds on the things that are
above.’ A man cannot do with his love according to his will. He cannot
say: ‘Resolved, that I love So-and-So’; and then set himself to do it. But
though you cannot act on the emotions directly by the will, you can act
directly on your understandings, on your thoughts, and your thoughts will
act on your affections. If a man wants to love Jesus Christ he must think
about Him. That is plain English. It is vain for a man to try to coerce
his wandering affections by any other course than by concentrating his
thoughts. Set your minds on the things that are above, and that will
consolidate and direct the emotions; and the thoughts and the emotions
together will shape the outward efforts. Seeking the things that are above
will come, and will only come, when mind and heart and inward life are
occupied with Him. There is no other way by which the externals can be
made right than by setting a watch on the door of our hearts and minds,
and this inward discipline must be put in force before there will be any
continuity or sureness in the outward aim. We want, for that direction of
the life of which I have been speaking, a clear perception and a
concentrated purpose, and we shall not get either of these unless we fall
back, by thought and meditation, upon the truths which will provide them
both.
Brethren, there is another aspect of the connection between these two
parts of our text, which I can only touch. Not only is the setting of our
thoughts on the things above, the way by which we can make these the aim
of our lives. They are not only aims to be reached at some future stage of
our progress, but they are possessions to be enjoyed at the present. We
may have a present Christ and a present Heaven. The Christian life is not
all aspiration; it is fruition as well. We have to seek, but even whilst
we seek, we should be conscious that we possess what we are seeking, even
whilst we seek it. Do you know anything of that double experience of
having the things that are above, here and now, as well as reaching out
towards them?
I am afraid that the Christian life of this generation suffers at a
thousand points, because it is more concerned with the ordering of the
outward life, and the manifold activities which this busy generation has
struck out for itself, than it is with the quiet setting of the mind, in
silent sunken depths of contemplation, on the things that are above. Oh,
if we would think more about them we should aim more at them; and if we
were sure that we possessed them to-day we should be more eager for a
larger possession to morrow.
Dear brethren, we may all have the risen life for ours, if we will knit
ourselves, in humble dependence and utter self-surrender, to the Christ
who died for us that we might be dead to sin, and rose again that we might
rise to righteousness. And if we have Him, in any deep and real sense, as
the life of our lives, then we shall be blessed, amid all the divergent
and sometimes conflicting nearer aims, which we have to pursue, by seeing
clear above them that to which they all may tend, the one aim which
corresponds to a man’s nature, which meets his condition, which satisfies
his needs, which can always be attained if it is followed, and which, when
secured, never disappoints. God help us all to say, ‘This one thing I do,
and all else I count but dung, that I may know Him, and the power of His
Resurrection, and the fellowship of His sufferings, being made conformable
unto His death, if by any means I may attain unto the Resurrection from
the dead!’
Colossians 4:5
Without And Within
‘Them that are
without.’—Col. 4:5.
THAT is, of course, an expression for the non-Christian world; the
outsiders who are beyond the pale of the Church. There was a very broad
line of distinction between it and the surrounding world in the early
Christian days, and the handful of Christians in a heathen country felt a
great gulf between them and the society in which they lived. That
distinction varies in form, and varies somewhat in apparent magnitude
according as Christianity has been rooted in a country for a longer or a
shorter time, but it remains, and is as real to-day as it ever was, and
there is neither wisdom nor kindness in ignoring the distinction.
The phrase of our text may sound harsh, and might be used, as it was by
the Jews, from whom it was borrowed, in a very narrow and bitter spirit.
Close corporations of any sort are apt to generate, not only a wholesome
esprit de corps, but a hostile contempt for outsiders, and Christianity
has too often been misrepresented by its professors, who have looked down
upon those that are without with supercilious and unchristian
self-complacency.
There is nothing of that sort in the words themselves; the very opposite
is in them. They sound to me like the expression of a man conscious of the
security and comfort and blessedness of the home where he sat, and with
his heart yearning for all the houseless wanderers that were abiding the
pelting of the pitiless storm out in the darkness there. The spirit and
attitude of Christianity to such is one of yearning pity and urgent
entreaty to come in and share in the blessings. There is deep pathos in
the words, as well as solemn earnestness, and in such a spirit I wish to
dwell upon them now for a short time.
I. I Begin With The Question:
Who are they that are outside? And what is it of which they are
outside?
As I have already remarked, the phrase was apparently borrowed from
Judaism, where it meant, ‘outside the Jewish congregation,’ and its
primary application, as used here, is no doubt to those who are outside
the Christian Church. But do not let us suppose that that explanation gets
to the bottom of the meaning of the words. It may stand as a partial
answer, but only as partial. The evil tendency which attends all
externalising of truth in the concrete form of institutions works in full
force on the Church, and ever tempts us to substitute outward connection
with the institution for real possession of the truth of which the
institution is the outgrowth. Therefore I urge upon you very emphatically-
and all the more earnestly because of the superstitious overestimate of
outward connection with the outward institution of the Church which is
eagerly proclaimed all around us to-day—that connection with any organised
body of believing men is not ‘being within,’ and that isolation from all
these is not necessarily being without. Many a man who is within the
organisation is not ‘in the truth,’ and, blessed be God, a man may be
outside all churches, and yet be one of God’s hidden ones, and may dwell
safe and instructed in the very innermost shrine of the secret place of
the Most High. We hear from priestly lips, both Roman Catholic and
Anglican, that there is ‘no safety outside the Church.’ The saying is true
when rightly understood. If by the Church be meant the whole company of
those who are trusting to Jesus Christ, of course there is no safety
outside, because to trust in Jesus is the one condition of safety, and
unless we belong to those who so trust we shall not possess the blessing.
So understood, the phrase may pass, and is only objectionable as a
round-about and easily misunderstood way of saying what is much better
expressed by ‘Whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be
saved.’
But that is not the meaning of the phrase in the mouths of those who use
it most frequently. To them the Church is a visible corporation, and not
only so, but as one of the many organisations into which believers are
moulded, it is distinguished from the others by certain offices and rites,
bishops, priests, and sacraments, through whom and which certain grace is
supposed to flow, no drop of which can reach a community otherwise shaped
and officered!
Nor is it only Roman Catholics and Anglicans who are in danger of
externalising personal Christianity into a connection with a church. The
tendency has its roots deep in human nature, and may be found flourishing
quite as rankly in the least sacerdotal of the ‘sects’ as in the Vatican
itself. There is very special need at present for those who understand
that Christianity is an immensely deeper thing than connection with any
organised body of Christians, to speak out the truth that is in them, and
to protest against the vulgar and fleshly notion which is forcing itself
into prominence in this day when societies of all sorts are gaining such
undue power, and religion, like much else, is being smothered under forms,
as was the maiden in the old story, under the weight of her ornaments.
External relationships and rites cannot determine spiritual conditions. It
does not follow because you have passed through certain forms, and stand
in visible connection with any visible community, that you are therefore
within the pale and safe. Churches are appointed by Christ. Men who
believe and love naturally draw together. The life of Christ is in them.
Many spiritual blessings are received through believing association with
His people. Illumination and stimulus, succour and sympathy pass from one
to another, each in turn experiencing the blessedness of receiving, and
the greater blessedness of giving. No wise man who has learned of Christ
will undervalue the blessings which come through union with the outward
body which is a consequence of union with the unseen Head. But men may be
in the Church and out of Christ. Not connection with it, but connection
with Him, brings us ‘within.’ ‘Those that are without’ may be either in or
out of the pale of any church.
We may put the answer to this question in another form, and going deeper
than the idea of being within a visible church, we may say, ‘those, that
are without’ are they who are outside the Kingdom of Christ.
The Kingdom of Christ is not a visible external community. The Kingdom of
Christ, or of God, or of Heaven, is found wherever human wills obey the
Law of Christ, which is the will of God, the decrees of Heaven; as Christ
himself put it, in profound words—profound in all their simplicity—when He
said, ‘Not every man that saith unto Me Lord! Lord! shall enter into the
Kingdom of Heaven, but he that doeth the will of My Father, which is in
Heaven.’ ‘Them that are without’ are they whose wills are not bent in
loving obedience to the Lord of their spirit.
But we must go deeper than that. In the Church? Yes! In the Kingdom? Yes!
But I venture to take another Scripture phrase as being the one
satisfactory fundamental answer to the question: What is it that these
people are outside of? and I say Christ, Christ. If you will take your New
Testament as your guide, you will find that the one question upon which
all is suspended is the, Am I, or Am I not, in Jesus Christ? Am I in Him,
or Am I outside of Him? And the answer to that question is the answer to
this other: Who are they that are without?
They that are outside are not’ the ‘non-Christian world’ who are not
church members; they that are inside are not the’ Christian world’ who
make an outward profession of being in the Kingdom. It is not going down
to the foundation to explain the antithesis so; but’ those that are
within’ are those who have simple trust upon Jesus Christ as the sole and
all-sufficient Saviour of their sinful spirits and the life of their life,
and having entered into that great love, have plunged themselves, as it
were, into the very heart of Jesus; have found in Him righteousness and
peace, forgiveness and love, joy and salvation. Are you in Christ because
you love Him and trust your soul to Him? If not, if not, you are amongst
those ‘that are without,’ though you be ever so much joined to the visible
Church of the living God.
And then there is one more remark that I must drop in here before I go on,
namely, that whilst I thankfully admit, and joyfully preach, that the most
imperfect, rudimentary faith knits a man to Jesus Christ, even if in this
life it may be found covered over with a great deal that is contradictory
and inconsistent; on the other hand there are some people who stand like
the angel in the Apocalypse, with one foot on the solid land and one upon
the restless sea, half in and half out, undecided, halting—that is,
‘limping’—between two opinions. Some people of that sort are listening to
me now, who have been like that for years. Now I want them to remember
this plain piece of common-sense—half in is altogether out! So that is my
answer to the first question: Who are they that are outside, and what is
it that they are outside of?
I cannot carry round these principles and lay them upon the conscience of
each hearer, but I pray you to listen to your own inmost voice speaking,
and I am mistaken if many will not hear it saying: ‘Thou art the man!’ Do
not stop your ears to that voice!
II. Notice Next The Force Of This Phrase As Implying The Woeful
Condition Of Those Without.
I have said that it is full of pathos. It is the language of a man whose
heart yearns as, in the midst of his own security, he thinks of the
houseless wanderers in the dark and the storm. He thinks pityingly of what
they lose, and of that to which they are exposed.
There are two or three ways in which I may illustrate that condition, but
perhaps the most graphic and impressive may be just to recall for a moment
three or four of the Scripture metaphors that fit into this
representation:’ Those that are without’; and thus to gain some different
pictures of what the inside and the outside means in these varying
figures.
First, then, there is a figure drawn from the Old Testament which is often
applied, and correctly applied, to this subject—Noah’s Ark.
Think of that safe abode floating across the waters, whilst all without it
was a dreary waste. Without were death and despair, but those that were
within sat warm and dry and safe and fed and living. The men that were
without, high as they might climb upon rocks and hills, strong as they
might be—when the dreary rainstorm wept itself dry, ‘they were all dead
corpses.’ To be in was life, to be out was death.
That is the first metaphor. Take another. That singular institution of the
old Mosaic system, in which the man who inadvertently, and therefore
without any guilt or crime of his own, had been the cause of death to his
brother, had provided for him, half on one side Jordan and half on the
other, and dotted over the land, so that it should not be too far to run
to one of them, Cities of Refuge. And when the wild vendetta of those days
stirred up the next of kin to pursue at his heels, if he could get inside
the nearest of these he was secure. They that were within could stand at
the city gates and look out upon the plain, and see the pursuer with his
hate glaring from his eyes, and almost feel his hot breath on their
cheeks, and know that though but a yard from him, his arm durst not touch
them. To be inside was to be safe, to be outside was certain bloody death.
That is the second figure; take a third; one which our Lord Himself has
given us. Here is the picture—a palace, a table abundantly spread, lights
and music, delight and banqueting, gladness and fulness, society and
sustenance. The guests sit close and all partake. To be within means food,
shelter, warmth, festivity, society; to be without, like Lear on the moor,
is to stand the pelting of the storm, weary, stumbling in the dark,
starving, solitary, and sad. Within is brightness and good cheer; without
is darkness, hunger, death.
That is the third figure. Take a fourth, another of our Master’s. Picture
a little rude, stone-built enclosure with the rough walls piled high, and
a narrow aperture at one point, big enough for one creature to pass
through at a time. Within, huddled together, are the innocent sheep;
without, the lion and the bear. Above, the vault of night with all its
stars, and watching all, the shepherd, with unslumbering eye. In the fold
is rest for the weary limbs that have been plodding through valleys of the
shadow of death, and dusty ways; peace for the panting hearts that are
trembling at every danger, real and imaginary. Inside the fold is
tranquillity, repose for the wearied frame, safety, and the companionship
of the Shepherd; and without, ravening foes and a dreary wilderness, and
flinty paths and sparse herbage and muddy pools. Inside is life; without
is death. That is the fourth figure.
In the Ark no Deluge can touch; in the City of Refuge no avenger can
smite; in the banqueting-hall no thirst nor hunger but can be satisfied;
in the fold no enemy can come and no terror can live.
Brethren! are you amongst ‘them that are without,’ or are you within?
III. Lastly—Why Is Anybody Outside?
Why? It is no one’s fault but their own. It is not God’s. He can appeal
with clean hands and ask us to judge what more could have been done for
His vineyard that He has not done for it. The great parable which
represents Him as sending out His summons to the feast in His palace puts
the wonderful words in she mouth of the master of the house, after his
call by his servants had been refused. ‘Go out into the highways and
hedges,’ beneath which the beggars squat, ‘and compel them to come in,
that my house may be full.’ ‘Nature abhors a vacuum,’ the old natural
philosophers used to say. So does grace; so does God’s love. It hates to
have His house empty and His provisions unconsumed. And so He has done all
that He could do to bring you and me inside. He has sent His Son, He
beckons us, He draws us by countless mercies day by day. He appeals to our
hearts, and would have us gathered into the fold. And if we are outside it
is not because He has neglected to do anything which He can do in order to
bring us in.
But why is it that any of us resist such drawing, and make the wretched
choice of perishing without, rather than find safety within? The deepest
reason is an alienated heart, a rebellious will. But the reason for
alienation and rebellion lie among the inscrutable mysteries of our awful
being. All sin is irrational. The fact is plain, the temptations are
obvious; excuses there are in plenty, but reasons there are none. Still we
may touch for a moment on some of the causes which operate with many
hearers of God’s merciful call to enter in, and keep them without.
Many remain outside because they do not really believe in the danger. No
doubt there was a great deal of brilliant sarcasm launched at Noah for his
folly in thinking that there was anything coming that needed an ark. It
seemed, no doubt, food for much laughter, and altogether impossible to
think of gravely, that this flood which he talked about should ever come.
So they had their laughter out as they saw him working away at his
ludicrous task ‘until the day when the flood came and swept them all
away,’ and the laughter ended in gurgling sobs of despair.
If a manslayer does not believe that the next of kin is on his track, he
will not flee to the City of Refuge. If the sheep has no fear of wolves,
it will choose to be outside the fold among the succulent herbage. Did you
ever see how, in a Welsh slate-quarry, before a blast, a horn is blown,
and at its sound all along the face of the quarry the miners run to their
shelters, where they stay until the explosion is over? What do you suppose
would become of one of them who stood there after the horn had blown, and
said: ‘Nonsense! There is nothing coming! I will take my chance where I
am!’ Very likely a bit of slate would end him before he had finished his
speech. At any rate, do not you, dear friend, trifle with the warning that
says: ‘Flee for refuge to Christ and shelter yourself in Him.’
There are some people, too, who stop outside because they do not much care
for the entertainment that they will get within. It does not strike them
as being very desirable. They have no appetite for it. We preachers seek
to draw hearts to Jesus by many motives—and among others by setting forth
the blessings which he bestows. But if a man does not care about pardon,
does not fear judgment, does not want to be good, has no taste for
righteousness, is not attracted by the pure and calm pleasures which
Christ offers, the invitation falls fiat upon his ear. Wisdom cries aloud
and invites the sons of men to her feast, but the fare she provides is not
coarse and high spiced enough, and her table is left unfilled, while the
crowd runs to the strong-flavoured meats and foaming drinks which her
rival, Folly, offers. Many of us say, like the Israelites ‘Our souls
loathe this light bread,’ this manna, white and sweet, and
Heaven-descended, and angels’ food though it be, and we hanker after the
reeking garlic and leeks and onions of Egypt.
Some of us again, would like well enough to be inside, if that would keep
us from dangers which we believe to be real, but we do not like the
doorway. You may see in some remote parts of the country strange,
half-subterranean structures which are supposed to have been the houses of
a vanished race. They have a long, narrow, low passage, through which a
man has to creep with his face very near the ground. He has to go low and
take to his knees to get through; and at the end the passage opens out
into ampler, loftier space, where the dwellers could sit safe from wild
weather and wilder beasts and wildest men. That is like the way into the
fortress home which we have in Jesus Christ. We must stoop very low to
enter there. And some of us do not like that. We do not like to fall on
our knees and say, I am a sinful man, O Lord. We do not like to bow
ourselves in penitence. And the passage is narrow as well as low. It is
broad enough for you, but not for what some of you would fain carry in on
your back. The pack which you bear, of earthly vanities and loves, and
sinful habits, will be brushed off your shoulders in that narrow entrance,
like the hay off a cart in a country lane bordered by high hedges. And
some of us do not like that. So, because the way is narrow, and we have to
stoop, our pride kicks at the idea of having to confess ourselves sinners,
and of having to owe all our hope and salvation to God’s undeserved mercy,
therefore we stay outside. And because the way is narrow, and we have to
put off some of our treasures, our earthward-looking desires shrink from
laying these aside, and therefore we stop outside. There was room in the
boat for the last man who stood on the deck, but he could not make up his
mind to leave a bag of gold. There was no room for that. Therefore he
would not leap, and went down with the ship.
The door is open. The Master calls. The feast is spread. Dangers threaten.
The flood comes. The avenger of blood makes haste. ‘Why standest thou
without?’ Enter in, before the door is shut. And if you ask, How shall I
pass within?—the answer is plain: ‘They could not enter in because of
unbelief. We which have believed do enter into rest.’