1 John 4:10
Christ’s Mission The Revelation Of God’s Love
Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent His
Son to be the propitiation for our sins.’—1 John 4:10.
THIS is the second of a pair of twin verses which deal with substantially
the same subject under two slightly different aspects. The thought common
to both is that Christ’s mission is the great revelation of God’s love.
But in the preceding verse the point on which stress is laid is the
manifestation of that love, and in our text the point mainly brought out
is its essential nature. In the former we read, ‘In this was manifested
the love of God,’ and in the present verse we read, ‘Herein is love.’ In
the former verse John fixes on three things as setting forth the greatness
of that manifestation—viz., that the Christ is the only begotten Son, that
the manifestation is for the world, and that its end is the bestowment of
everlasting love. In my text the points which are fixed on are that that
Love in its nature is self-kindled—‘not that we loved God, but that He
loved us’—and that it lays hold of, and casts out of the way that which,
unremoved, would be a barrier between God and us—viz., our sin: ‘He hath
sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins.’
Now it is interesting to notice that these twin verses, like a double star
which reflects the light of a central sun, draw their brightness from the
great word of the Master, ‘God so loved the world, that He gave His only
begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have
everlasting life.’ Do you not hear the echo of His voice in the three
expressions in the verse before the text—‘only begotten,’ ‘world,’ ‘live’?
Here is one more of the innumerable links which bind together in
indissoluble union the Gospel and the Epistle. So, then, the great thought
suggested by the words before us is just this, that in the Incarnation and
Sacrifice of Jesus Christ we have the great revelation of the love of God.
I. Now There Are Three Questions That Suggest Themselves To Me, And The
First Is This, What, Then, Does Christ’s Mission Say About God’s Love?
I do not need to dwell on the previous question whether, apart from that
mission, there is any solid revelation of the fact that there is love in
Heaven, or whether we are left, apart from it, to gropings and
probabilities. I need not refer you to the ambiguous oracles of nature or
to the equally ambiguous oracles of life. I need not, I suppose, do more
than just remind you that even the men whose faith grasps the thought of
the love of God most intensely, know what it is to be brought to a stand
before some of the dreadful problems which the facts of humanity and the
facts of nature press upon us, nor need I remind you how, as we see around
us to-day, in the drift of our English literature and that of other
nations, when men turn their backs upon the Cross, they look upon a
landscape all swathed in mists, and on which darkness is steadily
settling. The reason why the men of this generation, some of them very
superficially, and for the sake of being ‘in the swim,’ and some of them
despairingly and with bleeding hearts, are turning themselves to a
reasoned pessimism, is because they will not see what shines out from the
Cross, that God is love.
Nor need I do more than remind you, in a word, of the fact that, go where
we will through this world, and consult all the conceptions that men have
made to themselves of gods many and lords many, whilst we find the
deification of power, and of vice, and of fragmentary good-nesses, of
hopes and fears, of longings, of regrets, we find nowhere a god of whom
the characteristic is love. And amidst that Pantheon of deities, some of
them savage, some of them lustful, some of them embodiments of all vices,
some of them indifferent and neutral, some of them radiant and fair, none
reveals this secret, that the centre of the universe is a heart. So we
have to turn away from hopes, from probability dashed with many a doubt,
and find something that has more solid substance in it, if it is to be
enough to bear up the man that grasps it and to yield before no tempests.
For all that Bishop Butler says, probabilities are not, the guide of life,
in its deepest and noblest aspects. They may be the guide of practice, but
for the anchorage of the soul we want no shifting sand-bank, but that to
which we may make fast and be sure that, whatever shifts, it remains
immovable. You can no more clothe the soul in ‘perhapses’ than a man can
make garments out of a spider’s web. Religion consists of the things of
which we are sure, and not of the things which are probable.
‘Peradventure’ is not the word on which a man can rest the weight of a
crushed, or an agonising, or a sinking soul; he must have ‘Verily!
verily!’ and then he is at rest.
How do we know what a man is? By seeing what a man does. How do we know
what God is? By knowing what God does. So John does not argue with logic,
either frosty or fiery, but he simply opens his mouth, and in calm,
pellucid utterances sets forth the truths and leaves them to work. He says
to us, ‘I do not relegate you to your intuitions; I do not argue with you;
I simply say, Look at Him; look, and see that God is love.’
What, then, does the mission of Christ say to us about the love of God? It
says, first, that it is a love independent of, and earlier than, ours. We
love, as a rule, because we recognise in the object to which our heart
goes out something that draws it, something that is loveable. But He whose
name is ‘I am that I am’ has all the reasons of His actions within
Himself, and just as He,
‘Sits on no precarious throne,
Nor borrows leave to be,’
nor is dependent on any creature for existence, so He is His own motive,
He is His own reason. Within that sacred circle of the Infinite Nature lie
all the energies which bring that Infinite Nature into action; and like
some clear fountain, more sparkling than crystal, there wells up for ever,
from the depths of the Divine Nature, the love which is Himself. He loves,
not because we love Him, but because He is God. The very sun itself, as
some astronomers believe, owes its radiant brightness and
ever-communicated warmth to the impact on, and reception into, it of
myriads of meteors and of matter drawn from the surrounding system. So
when the fuel fails, that fire will go out, and the sun will shrivel into
a black ball. But this central Sun of the universe has all His light
within Himself, and the rays that pour out from Him owe their being and
their motion to nothing but the force of that central fire, from which
they rush with healing on their wings.
If, then, God’s love is not evoked by anything in His creatures, then it
is universal, and we do not need anxiously to question ourselves whether
we deserve that it shall fall upon us, and no conscious unworthiness need
ever make us falter in the least in the firmness with which we grasp that
great central thought. The sun, inferior emblem as it is of that Light of
all that is, pours down its beams indiscriminately on dunghill and on
jewel, though it be true that in the one its rays breed corruption and in
the other draw out beauty. That great love wraps us all, is older than our
sins, and is not deflected by them. So that is the first thing that
Christ’s mission tells us about God’s love.
II. It Speaks To Us Of A Love Which Gives Its Best.
John says, ‘God sent His Son,’ and that word reposes, like the rest of the
passage, on many words of Christ’s—such as, for instance, when He speaks
of Himself as ‘sanctified and sent into the world,’ and many another
saying. But remember how, in the foundation passage to which I have
already referred, and of which we have some reflection in the words before
us, there is a tenderer expression—not merely ‘sent,’ but ‘gave.’ Paul
strengthens the word when he says, ‘gave up for us all.’ It is not for us
to speculate about these deep things, but I would remind you of what I
dare say I have had occasion often to point out, that Paul seems to intend
to suggest to us a mysterious parallel, when he further says, ‘He that
spared not His own Son, but freely gave Him up to death for us all.’ For
that emphatic word ‘spared’ is a distinct allusion to, and quotation of,
the story of Abraham’s sacrifice of Isaac: ‘Seeing thou hast not withheld
from Me thine only son.’ And so, mysterious as it is, we may venture to
say that He not only sent, but He gave, and not only gave, but gave up.
His love, like ours, delights to lavish its most precious gifts on its
objects.
Now there arises from this consideration a thought which I only mention,
and it is this. Christian teaching about Christ’s work has often, both by
its friends and its foes, been so presented as to lead to the conception
that it was the work of Christ which made God love men. The enemies of
evangelical truth are never tired of talking in that sense; and some of
its unwise friends have given reason for the caricature. But the true
Christian teaching is, ‘God so loved, that He gave.’ The love is the cause
of the mission, and not the mission that which evokes the love. So let us
be sure that, not because Christ died does God love us sinful creatures,
but that, because God loves us, Christ died for us.
The third thing which the mission of Christ teaches us about the love of
God is that it is a love which takes note of and overcomes man’s sin. I
have said, as plainly as I can, that I reject the travesty of Christianity
which implies that it was Christ’s mission which originated God’s love to
men. But a love that does not in the slightest degree care whether its
object is good or bad —what sort of a love do you call that? What do you
name it when a father shows it to his children? Moral indifference;
culpable and weak and fatal. And is it anything nobler, if you transfer it
to God, and say that it is all the same to Him whether a man is living the
life of a hog, and forgetting all that is high and noble, or whether he is
pressing with all his strength towards light and truth and goodness?
Surely, surely they who, in the name of their reverence for the supreme
love of God, cover over the fact of His righteousness, are mutilating and
killing the very attribute that they are trying to exalt. A love that
cares nothing for the moral character of its object is not love, but hate;
it is not kindness, but cruelty. Take away the background because it is so
black, and you lower the brilliancy of whiteness of that which stands in
front of it. There is such a property in God as is fittingly described by
that tremendous word ‘wrath.’ God cannot, being what He is, treat sin as
if it were no sin; and therefore we read, ‘He sent His son to be the
propitiation for our sins.’ The black dam, which we build up between
ourselves and the river of the water of life, is to be swept away; and it
is the death of Jesus Christ which makes it possible for the highest gift
of God’s love to pour over the ruined and partially removed barrier and to
flood a man’s soul. Brethren, no God that is worthy the name can give
Himself to a sinful soul. No sinful soul that has not the habit, the
guilt, the penalty of its sins swept away, is capable of receiving the
life, which is the highest gift of the love. So our twin texts divide what
I may call the process of redemption between them; and whilst the one
says, ‘He sent His Son that we should have life through Him,’ the other
tells us of how the sins which bar the entrance of that life into our
hearts, as our own consciences tell us they do, can be removed. There must
first be the propitiation for our sins, and then that mighty love reaches
its purpose and attains its end, and can give us the life of God to be the
life of our souls. So much for my first and principle question, If. Now I
have to ask, secondly, how comes it that Christ’s mission says anything
about God’s love?
That question is a very plain one, and I should like to press the answer
to it very emphatically. Take any other of the great names of the world’s
history of poet, thinker, philosopher, moralist, practical benefactor; is
it possible to apply such a thought as this to them—except with a hundred
explanations and limitations—that they, however radiant, however wise,
however beneficent, however fruitful their influence, make men sure that
God loves them? The thing is ridiculous, unless you are using language in
a very fantastic and artificial fashion.
Christ’s mission reveals God’s love, because Christ is the Son of God. If
it is true, as Jesus said, that ‘He that hath seen Me hath seen the
Father,’ then I can say, ‘In Thy tenderness, in Thy patience, in Thy
attracting of the publican and the harlot, in Thy sympathy with all the
erring and the sorrowful, and, most of all, in Thy agony and passion, in
Thy cross and death, I see the glory of God which is the love of God.’
Brother, if you break that link, which binds the man Christ Jesus with the
ever-living and the ever-loving God, I know not how you can draw from the
record of His life and death a confidence, which nothing can shake, in the
love of the Father.
Then there is another point. Christ’s mission speaks to us about God’s
love, if—and I was going to say only if —we regard it as His mission to be
the propitiation for our sins. Strike out the death as the sacrifice for
the world’s sin, and what you have left is a maimed something, which may
be, and I thankfully recognise often is, very strengthening, very helpful,
very calming, very ennobling, even to men who do not sympathise with the
view of that work which I am now setting forth, but which is all that to
them, very largely, because of the unconscious influence of the truths
which they have cast away. It seems to me that those who, in the name of
the highest paternal love of God, reject the thought of Christ’s
sacrificial death, are kicking away the ladder by which they have climbed,
and are better than their creeds, and happily illogical. It is the Cross
that reveals the love, and it is the Cross as the means of propitiation
that pours the light of that blessed conviction into men’s hearts.
III. My Last Question Is This: What Does Christ’s Mission Say About
God’s Love To Me?
We know what it ought to say. It ought to carry, as on the crest of a
great wave, the conviction of that divine love into our hearts, to be
fruitful there. It ought to sweep out, as on the crest of a great wave,
our sins and evils. It ought to do this; does it? On some of us I fear it
produces no effect at all. Some of you, dear friends, look at that light
with lack-lustre eyes, or, rather, with blind eyes, that are dark as
midnight in the blaze of noonday. The voice comes from the Cross, sweet as
that of harpers harping with their harps, and mighty as the voice of many
waters, and you hear nothing. Some of us it slightly moves now and then,
and there an end.
Brethren, you have to turn the world-wide generality into a personal
possession. You have to say, ‘He loved me, and gave Himself for me.’ It is
of no use to believe in a universal Saviour; do you trust in your
particular Saviour? It is of no use to have the most orthodox and clear
conceptions of the relation between the Cross of Christ and the revelation
to men of the love of God; have you made that revelation the means of
bringing into your own personal life the conviction that Jesus Christ is
your Saviour, the propitiation for your sins, the Giver to you of life
eternal? It is faith that does that. Note that, in the great foundation
passage to which I have made frequent reference, there are two conditions
put in between the beginning and the end. Some of us are disposed to say,
‘God so loved the world that every man might have eternal life.’ That is
not what Christ said, ‘God so loved the world that’—and here follows the
first condition—‘He gave His Son that’—and here follows the second—‘he
that believeth on Him should not perish, but have everlasting life.’ God
has done what it is needful for Him to do. His part of the conditions has
been fulfilled. Fulfil yours—‘He that believeth on Him.’ And if you can
say, not He is the propitiation for our sin, but for my sin, then you will
live and move and have your being in a heaven of love, and will love Him
back again with an echo and reflection of His own, and nothing shall be
able to separate you from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our
Lord.
1
John 4:17 The Servant As His Lord
“As He is, so are we in this world.’—1 John 4:17.
LARGE truths may be spoken in little words. Profundity is often supposed
to be obscurity, but the deepest depth is clear. John, in his gospel and
epistles, deals with the deepest realities, and with all things in their
eternal aspects, but his vocabulary is the simplest in the New Testament.
God and the world, life and death, love and hate, light and darkness,
these are the favourite words round which his thoughts gather. Here are
nine little monosyllables. What can be simpler than, ‘As He is, so are we
in this world?’ And what can go beyond the thought that lies in it, that a
Christian is a living likeness of Christ?
But the connection of my text is quite as striking as its substance. John
has been dwelling upon his favourite thought that to abide in love is to
abide in God, and God in us. And then he goes on to say that ‘Herein’—that
is, in such mutual abiding in love—‘is love made perfect with us’; and the
perfection of that love, which is thus communion, is in order that, at the
great solemn day of future trial, men may lift up their faces and meet His
glance—which is not strange to them, nor met for the first time—with
open-hearted and open-countenanced ‘boldness.’ But ‘love’ and ‘abiding’
are the source of confidence in the Day of Judgment, because love and
abiding are the source of assimilation to Christ’s life. We have boldness,
‘because as He is, so are we in this world’; and we are as He is, because
we love and abide in Him. So here are three thoughts, the assimilation of
the Christian man to Christ; the frank confidence which it begets; and the
process by which it is secured.
I. A Christian Is Christ’s Living Likeness.
That is a startling thing to say, and all the more startling if you notice
that John does not say ‘As He was,’ in this earthly life of humiliation
and filial obedience, but ‘as He is,’ in His heavenly life and reign and
glory. That might well repel us from all thought of possible resemblance,
but the light, however brilliant it may be, is not blinding, and it is the
Christ as He is, and not only —true as that is—the Christ as He was, who
is the original of which Christian men are copies.
Now there is the difference between the teaching of such classes of
religionists as represent Christ’s humanity as all in all, and preach to
us that He, in His earthly life is the pattern to whom we are to seek to
conform our lives, and the true evangelical teaching. That dead Man is
living, and His present life has in it elements which we can grasp, and to
which every Christian life is to be conformed.
Is there anything, then, within the glory to which I, in my poor,
struggling, hampered, imperfect life here on earth, can feel that my
character is being shaped? Yes, surely there is. I have no doubt that, in
the words of my text, the Apostle is remembering the solemn ones of our
Lord’s high-priestly prayer as recorded in the seventeenth chapter of his
gospel, where the same antithesis of our being in the world, and His not
being there, recurs; and where the analogy and resemblance are distinctly
stated—‘I in Thee, and Thou in Me, that they also may be in us.’
So, then, when we stand with our letter-writer in his Patmos island, and
see the countenance ‘as the sun shining in his strength, and the eyes as a
flame of fire,’ and the many crowns upon the head, and the many stars in
the hand, though we may feel as if all resemblance was at an end, and
aspiration after likeness could only fall at His feet and cover its face,
yet there is within the glory something which may be repeated and
reproduced in our lives, and that is, the indissoluble union of a Son with
a Father, in all loving obedience, in all perfect harmony, in all mutual
affection and outgoing of heart and thoughts. This is the centre of the
life, alike of the Christ when He is glorified, and of the Christ when He
was upon earth. So the very secret heart of the mysterious being of the
Son is to be, and necessarily is, repeated in all those who in Him have
received the adoption of sons.
Or to put the whole thing into plainer words, it is the religious and the
moral aspects of Christ’s being, and not any one particular detail
thereof; and these, as they live and reign on the Throne, just as truly as
these, as they suffered and wept upon earth—it is these to which it is our
destiny to be conformed. We are like Him, if we are His, in this,—that we
are joined to God, that we hold fellowship with Him, that our lives are
all permeated with the divine, that we are saturated with the presence of
God, that we have submitted ourselves to Him and to His will, that ‘not my
will, but Thine, be done’ is the very inmost meaning of our hearts and our
lives. And thus ‘we,’ even here, ‘bear the image of the heavenly, as we
have borne the images of the earthly.’ Now I am not going to dwell upon
details; all these can be filled in by each of us for himself. The
centre-point which I insist upon is this—the filial union with God, the
filial submission to Him, and the consequent purity as Christ is pure,
righteousness as Christ is righteous, and walking even as Christ walked,
for ever in the light.
But then there is another point that I desire to refer to. I have put an
emphasis upon the ‘is’ instead of the ‘was,’ as it applies to Jesus
Christ. I would further put an emphasis upon the ‘are,’ as it applies to
us—‘So are we.’
John is not exhorting, he is affirming. He is not saying what Christian
men ought to strive to be, but he is saying what all Christian men, by
virtue of their Christian character, are. Or, to put it into other words,
likeness to the Master is certain. It is inevitably involved in the
relation which a Christian man bears to the Lord. There may be degrees in
the likeness, there may be differences of skill and earnestness in the
artist. We have to labour like a portrait painter, slowly and tentatively
approaching to the complete resemblance. It is ‘a lifelong task ere the
lump be leavened.’ This likeness does not reach its completeness by a
leap. It is not struck, as the image of a king is, upon the blank metal
disc, by one stroke, but it is wrought out by long, laborious, and, as I
said, approximating and tentative touches. My text suggests that to us by
its addition, ‘So are we, in this world.’ The ‘world’—or, to use modern
phraseology, ‘the environment’—conditions the resemblance. As far as it is
possible for a thing encompassed with dust and ashes to resemble the
radiant sun in the heavens, so far is the resemblance carried here. Some
measure of it, and a growing measure, is inseparable from the reality of a
Christian life.
Now, you Christian people, does that plain statement touch you anywhere?
‘So are we.’ Well! you would be quite easy if John had said: ‘So may we
be; so should we be; so shall we be.’ But what about the so are we’? What
a ghastly contradiction the lives of multitudes of professing Christians
are to that plain statement! ‘Like Jesus Christ’—would anybody say that
about anything in me? ‘So are we’—no words of mine, dear brethren, can
make the statement more searching, more impressive; but, I pray you, lay
this to heart: ‘If any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of
His.’ You may take sacraments and profess Christianity, or, as we
Nonconformists have it, ‘join churches,’ and do all manner of outward work
for ever and a day; but if you have not the likeness of Christ, at least
in germ, and growing to something more than a germ, in your characters,
you had better revise your position, and ask whether, after all, you have
not been walking in a vain show, and fancied yourselves the servants of
Christ, while you bear the image of Christ’s enemy.
A very tiny gully on a hillside, made by showers of rain, may fall into
the same slopes, and has been created by the very same forces, working
according to the same laws, as have scooped out valleys miles broad,
bordered by mountains thousands of feet high. And in my little life, poor
as it is, limited as it is, environed as it is by the world, and therefore
often hampered and stained, as well as helped and brightened, by its
environment, there may be, and there will be, in some degree, if I am a
Christian man, the very same power at work by which Jesus Christ, the Son
of the Father shines as the sun on the throne of the universe.
But then, notice further, how that limitation to which I have referred in
this world carries with it another message. There is Christ in the
heavens, veiled and unseen. Here are you on earth, his representative.
There is a rage at present for putting pictures into all books, and folk
will scarcely read unless they get illustrated literature. The world has
for its illustrations of the gospel the lives of us Christian people. In
the book there are principles and facts, and readers should be able to
turn the page and see all pictured in us.
That is what you are set to do in this world. ‘As the Father sent Me, even
so send I you.’ ‘As He is, so are we in this world.’ It may be our
antagonist, but it is our sphere, and its presence is necessary to evoke
our characters. Christ has entrusted His reputation, His honour, to us,
and many a man that never cares to look at Him as He is revealed in
Scripture, would be wooed and won to look at Him and love Him, if we
Christian people were more true to our vocation, and bore more
conspicuously on our faces and in our characters the image of the
heavenly.
II. Look For A Moment At The Second Thought That Is Here: The Day Of
Judgment.
Such a likeness to Jesus Christ is the only thing that will enable a man
to lift up his head in the Day of Judgment.
‘We have boldness,’ says John, because ‘as He is, so are we.’ Now that is
a very strong statement of a truth that popular, evangelical theology has
far too much obscured. People talk about being, at the last, ‘accepted in
the beloved.’ God be thanked, it is true. A sweet old hymn that a great
many of us learned when we were children, though it is not so well known
in these days, says:-
‘Bold shall I stand in that great day,
For who aught to my charge shall lay,
While through Thy blood absolved I am
From sin’s tremendous curse and
shame?’
I believe that, and I try to preach it. But do not let us forget the other
side. My text is in full accordance with the principles of our Lord’s own
teaching; and who knows the principles of His own words so well as the
judge, who tells us, in His pictures of that great day, that the question
put to every man will be, not what you believe, but what did you do, and
what are you?
But this truth of my text has been not only wounded in the house of the
friends of Christianity, but it has been overlooked by one of the very
frequent objections that we hear made to evangelical teaching, that,
according to it, a man is judged according to his belief and not according
to his deeds. A man is judged according to his—not belief—but according to
his faith. But he is judged according also to—not his work—but according
to his character.
And I wish, dear friends, to lay this upon your hearts, because many of us
are too apt to forget it, that whilst unquestionably the beginning of
salvation, and the condition of forgiveness here, and of acceptance
hereafter, are laid in trust in Jesus Christ, that trust is sure to work
out a character which is in conformity with His requirements and moulded
after the likeness of Himself. ‘The judgment of God is according to
truth,’ and what a man is determines where a man shall be, and what he
shall receive through all eternity. Remember Christ’s own teaching.
Remember the teaching of that other apostle than John, according to which
the ‘wood, hay, stubble,’ built by a man upon the foundation shall be
burned up, and the builder himself be saved, yet so as by fire. And lay
this to heart, that it is only when faith works in us, through love and
communion, characters like Jesus Christ’s, that we shall be able to
stand—though even then we shall have to trust to divine and infinite
mercy, and to the sprinkling of His blood—before the Throne of God. Lay up
in store for yourselves a good foundation unto eternal life. And take this
as the preaching of my text; character, and character alone, will stand
the judgment of that great day.
There is no real antagonism between such truths and the widest preaching
of salvation by faith. It is the same man who, in his gospel, says, as
from the lips of the Lord Himself, ‘He that believeth is not judged,’ and
in his letter says, ‘We may have boldness in that day, because, as He is,
so are we in this world.’
III. One Word About The Last Point; The Process By Which This Likeness
Is Secured.
That is contained, as I tried to show in my introductory remarks, in the
earlier part of the verse. Our love is made perfect by dwelling in God,
and God in us; in order that we may be thus conformed to Christ’s
likeness, and so have boldness in that great day. To be like Jesus Christ,
what is needed is that we love Him, and that we keep in touch with Him.
What is it to ‘abide’ in Him? —to direct the continual flow of mind and
love and will and practical obedience to Him, to bear Him ever in the
secret place of my heart whilst my hands are occupied with daily business,
and my feet are running the sometimes rough race that is set before me.
Think of Him ever, love Him ever. Let His name be like a perfume breathed
through the whole atmosphere of your lives. Keep your wills in the
attitude of submission, of acceptance, of indecision when necessary, and
of absolute dependence upon Him. Let your outward acts be such as shall
not bring a film Of separation between Him and you. When thus our whole
being is steeped and drenched with Christ, then it cannot but be that we
shall be like Him. Even ‘clouds themselves as suns appear, when the sun
pierces them with light.’ ‘Abide in Me, and I in you.’ You cannot make
yourselves like Christ, but you can fasten yourselves to Christ, and He
will give you power which shall make you like Him.
But, remember, such abiding is no idle waiting, no passive confidence. It
is full of energy, full of suppression, when necessary, of what is
contrary to your truest self, and full of strenuous cultivation of that
which is in accord with the will of the Father, and with the likeness of
the ‘first-born among many brethren.’
Dear friends, lie in the light and you will become light. Abide in Christ,
and you will get like Christ; and, being like Him, you will be able to
lift up your heads, and rejoice when you front Him on the Throne, and you
are at the bar. Then, when you are no more in the world, the likeness will
be perfected, because the communion is complete. ‘We shall be like Him,
for we shall see Him as He is.’
1 John 4:18
Love And Fear
There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear: because fear
hath torment. He that feareth is not made perfect in love.’ —1 John 4:18.
JOHN has been speaking of boldness, and that naturally suggests its
opposite—fear. He has been saying that perfect love produces courage in
the day of judgment, because it produces likeness to Christ, who is the
Judge. In my text he explains and enlarges that statement. For there is
another way in which love produces boldness, and that is by its casting
out fear. These two are mutually exclusive. The entrance of the one is for
the other a notice to quit. We cannot both love and fear the same person
or thing; and where love comes in, the darker form slips out at the door;
and where Love comes in, it brings hand in hand with itself Courage with
her radiant face. But boldness is the companion of love, only when love is
perfect. For, inconsistent as the two emotions are, love, in its earlier
stages and lower degrees, is often perturbed and dashed by apprehension
and dread.
Now John is speaking about the two emotions in themselves, irrespective,
so far as his language goes, of the objects to which they are directed.
What he is saying is true about love and fear, whatever or whosoever may
be loved or dreaded. But the context suggests the application in his mind,
for it is ‘boldness before him’ about which he has been speaking; and so
it is love and fear directed towards God which are meant in my text. The
experience of hosts of professing Christians is only too forcible a
comment upon the possibility of a partial Love lodging in the heart side
by side with a fellow-lodger, Fear, whom it ought to have expelled. So
there are three things here that I wish to notice—the empire of fear, the
mission of fear, and the expulsion of fear.
I. The Empire Of Fear.
Fear is a shrinking apprehension of evil as befalling us, from the person
or thing which we dread. My text brings us face to face with that solemn
thought that there are conditions of human nature, in which the God who
ought to be our dearest joy and most ardent desire becomes our ghastliest
dread. The root of such an unnatural perversion of all that a creature
ought to feel towards its loving Creator lies in the simple consciousness
of discordance between God and man, which is the shadow cast over the
heart by the fact of sin. God is righteous; God righteously administers
His universe. God enters into relations of approval or disapproval with
His responsible creature. Therefore there lies, dormant for the most part,
but present in every heart, and active in the measure in which that heart
is informed as to itself, the slumbering, cold dread that between it and
God things are not as they ought to be.
I believe, for my part, that such a dumb, dim consciousness of discord
attaches to all men, though it is often smothered, often ignored, and
often denied. But there it is; the snake hibernates, but it is coiled in
the heart all the same; and warmth will awake it. Then it lifts its
crested head, and shoots out its forked tongue, and venom passes into the
veins. A dread of God is the ghastliest thing in the world, the most
unnatural, but universal, unless expelled by perfect love.
Arising from that discomforting consciousness of discord there come,
likewise, other forms and objects of dread. For if I am out of harmony
with Him, what will be my fate in the midst of a universe administered by
Him, and in which all are His servants? Oh! I sometimes wonder how it is
that godless men front the facts of human life and do not go mad. For here
are we, naked, feeble, alone, plunged into a whirlpool, from the awful
vortices of which we cannot extricate ourselves. There foam and swirl all
manner of evils, some of them certain, some of them probable, any of them
possible, since we are at discord with Him who wields all the forces of
the universe, and wields them all with a righteous hand. ‘The stars in
their courses fight against’ the man that does not fight for God. Whilst
all things serve the soul that serve Him, all are embattled against the
man that is against, or not for, God and His will.
Then there arises up another object of dread, which, in like manner,
derives all its power to terrify and to hurt from the fact of our
discordance with God; and that is ‘the shadow feared of man,’ that stands
shrouded by the path, and waits for each of us.
God; God’s universe; God’s messenger, Death—these are facts with which we
stand in relation, and if our relations with Him are out of gear, then He
and all of these are legitimate objects of dread to us.
But now there is something else that casts out fear than perfect love, and
that is—perfect levity. For it is the explanation of the fact that so many
of us know nothing of this fear of which I speak, and fancy that I am
exaggerating, or putting forward false views. There is a type of man, and
I have no doubt there are some of its representatives among my hearers,
who are below both fear and love as directed towards God; for they never
think about Him, or trouble their heads concerning either Him or their
relations to Him or anything that flows therefrom. It is a strange faculty
that we all have, of forgetting unwelcome thoughts and shutting our eyes
to the things that we do not want to see, like Nelson when he puts the
telescope to his blind eye at Copenhagen, because he would not obey the
signal of recall. But surely it is an ignoble thing that men should ignore
or shuffle out of sight with inconsiderateness the real facts of their
condition, like boys whistling in a churchyard to keep their spirits up,
and saying, ‘Who’s afraid?’ just because they are so very much afraid. Ah,
dear friends, do not rest until you face the facts, and having faced them,
have found the way to reverse them! Surely, surely it is not worthy of men
to turn away from anything so certain as that between a sin-loving man and
God there must exist such a relation as will bring evil and sorrow to that
man, as surely as God is and he is. I beseech you, take to heart these
things, and do not turn away from them with a shake of your shoulders, and
say, ‘He is preaching the narrow, old-fashioned doctrine of a religion of
fear.’ No! I am not. But I am preaching this plain fact, that a man who is
in discord with God has reason to he afraid, and I come to you with the
old exhortation of the prophet, ‘Be troubled, ye careless ones.’ For there
is nothing more ignoble or irrational than security which is only made
possible by covering over unwelcome facts. ‘Be troubled’; and let the
trouble lead you to the Refuge.
II. That Brings Me To The Second Point—Viz., The Mission Of Fear.
John uses a rare word in my text when he says ‘fear hath torment.’
‘Torment’ does not convey the whole idea of the word. It means suffering,
but suffering for a purpose; suffering which is correction; suffering
which is disciplinary; suffering which is intended to lead to something
beyond itself. Fear, the apprehension of personal evil, has the same
function in the moral world as pain has in the physical. It is a symptom
of disease, and is intended to bid us look for the remedy and the
Physician. What is an alarm hell for but to rouse the sleepers, and to
hurry them to the refuge? And so this wholesome, manly dread of the
certain issue of discord with God is meant to do for us what the angels
did for Lot—to lay a mercifully violent hand on the shoulder of the
sleeper, and shake him into aroused wakefulness, and hasten him out of
Sodom, before the fire bursts through the ground, and is met by the fire
from above. The intention of fear is to lead to that which shall
annihilate it by taking away its cause.
There is nothing more ridiculous, nothing more likely to destroy a man,
than the indulgence in an idle fear which does nothing to prevent its own
fulfilment. Horses in a burning stable are so paralysed by dread that they
cannot stir, and get burnt to death. And for a man to be afraid—as every
one ought to be who is conscious of unforgiven sin—for a man to be afraid
and there an end, is absolute insanity. I fear; then what do I do?
Nothing. That is true about hosts of us.
What ought I to do? Let the dread direct me to its source, my own
sinfulness. Let the discovery of my own sinfulness direct me to its
remedy, the righteousness and the Cross of Jesus Christ. He, and He alone,
can deal with the disturbing element in my relation to God. He can
‘deliver me from my enemies, for they are too strong for me.’ It is Christ
and His work, Christ and His sacrifice, Christ and His indwelling Spirit
that will grapple with and overcome sin and all its consequences, in any
man and in every man; taking away its penalty, lightening the heart of the
burden of its guilt, delivering from its love and dominion—all three of
which things are the barbs of the arrows with which fear riddles heart and
conscience. So my fear should proclaim to me the merciful ‘Name that is
above every name,’ and drive me as well as draw me to Christ, the
Conqueror of sin, and the Antagonist of all dread.
Brethren, I said I was not preaching the religion of Fear. But I think we
shall scarcely understand the religion of Love unless we recognise that
dread is a legitimate part of an unforgiven man’s attitude towards God. My
fear should be to me like the misshapen guide that may lead me to the
fortress where I shall be safe. Oh, do not tamper with the wholesome sense
of dread! Do not let it lie, generally sleeping, and now and then waking
in your hearts, and bringing about nothing. Sailors that crash on with all
sails set—stunsails and all—whilst the barometer is rapidly falling, and
boding clouds are on the horizon, and the line of the approaching gale is
ruffling the sea yonder, have themselves to blame if they founder. Look to
the falling barometer, and make ready for the coming storm, and remember
that the mission of fear is to lead you to the Christ who will take it
away.
III. Lastly, The Expulsion Of Fear.
My text points out the natural antagonism, and mutual exclusiveness, of
these two emotions. If I go to Jesus Christ as a sinful man, and get His
love bestowed upon me, then, as the next verse to my text says, my love
springs in response to His to me, and in the measure in which that love
rises in my heart will it frustrate its antagonistic dread.
As I said, you cannot love and fear the same person, unless the love is of
a very rudimentary and imperfect character. But just as when you pour pure
water into a bladder, the poisonous gases that it may have contained will
be driven out before it, so when love comes in, dread goes out. The river,
turned into the foul Augean stables of the heart, will sweep out all the
filth and leave everything clean. The black, greasy smoke-wreath, touched
by the fire of Christ’s love, will flash out into ruddy flames, like that
which has kindled them; and Christ’s love will kindle in your hearts, if
you accept it and apprehend it aright, a love which shall burn up and turn
into fuel for itself the now useless dread.
But, brethren, remember that it is ‘perfect love’ which ‘casts out fear.’
Inconsistent as the two emotions are in themselves, in practice, they may
be united, by reason of the imperfection of the nobler. And in the
Christian life they are united with terrible frequency. There are many
professing Christian people who live all their days with a burden of
shivering dread upon their shoulders, and an icy cold fear in their
hearts, just because they have not got close enough to Jesus Christ, nor
kept their hearts with sufficient steadfastness under the quickening
influences of His love, to have shaken off their dread as a sick man’s
distempered fancies. A little love has not mass enough in it to drive out
thick, clustering fears. There are hundreds of professing Christians who
know very little indeed of that joyous love of God which swallows up and
makes impossible all dread, who, because they have not a loving present
consciousness of a loving Father’s loving will, tremble when they front in
imagination, and still more when they meet in reality, the evils that must
come, and who cannot face the thought of death with anything but shrinking
apprehension. There is far too much of the old leaven of selfish dread
left in the experiences of many Christians. ‘I feared thee, because thou
wert an austere man, and so, because I was afraid, I went and hid my
talent, and did nothing for thee’ is a transcript of the experience of far
too many of us. The one way to get deliverance is to go to Jesus Christ
and keep close by Him.
And my last word to you is, see that you resort only to the sane, sound
way of getting rid of the wholesome, rational dread of which I have been
speaking. You can ignore it; and buy immunity at the price of leaving in
full operation the causes of your dread—and that is stupid. There is only
one wise thing to do, and that is, to make sure work of getting rid of the
occasion of dread, which is the fact of sin. Take all your sin to Jesus
Christ; He will—and He only can—deal with it. He will lay His hand on you,
as He did of old, with the characteristic word that was so often upon His
lips, and which He alone is competent to speak in its deepest meaning,
‘Fear not, it is I,’ and He will give you the courage that He commands.
‘God hath not given us the spirit of fear, but of power, and of love, and
of a sound mind.’ ‘Ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to
fear, but ye have received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry Abba,
Father,’ and cling to Him, as a child who knows his father’s heart too
well to be afraid of anything in his father, or of anything that his
father’s hand can send.
1 John 4:19
The
Ray And The Reflection
“We love Him, because He first loved us.’—1 John 4:19.
Very simple words! but they go down into the depths of God, lifting
burdens off the heart of humanity, turning duty into delight, and changing
the aspect of all things. He who knows that God loves him needs little
more for blessedness; he who loves God back again offers more than all
burnt offering and sacrifices. But it is to be observed that the correct
reading of my text, as you will find in the Revised Version, omits ‘Him’
in the first clause, and simply says ‘we love,’ without specifying the
object. That is to say, for the moment John’s thought is fixed rather on
the inward transformation effected, from self-regard to love—than on
considering the object on which the love is expended. When the heart is
melted, the streams flow wherever there is a channel. The river, as he
goes on to show us, parts into two heads, and love to God and love to man
are, in their essence and root-principle, one thing.
So my text is the summary of all revelation about God, the ultimate word
about all our relations to Him, and the all-inclusive directory as to our
conduct to one another. To know that God loves, and to love again—there is
a little pocket encyclopaedia in two volumes, which contains the
smelted-down essence of all theology and of all morality. Let us look at
these three points.
I. The Ultimate Word About God.
‘He first loved us.’ Properly and strictly speaking, that ‘first’ only
declares the priority of the divine love towards us over ours towards Him.
But we may fairly give it a wider meaning, and say—first of all, ere
Creation and Time, away back in the abysmal depths of an everlasting and
changeless heart, changeless in the sense that its love was eternal, but
not changeless in the sense that love could have no place within it—first
of all things was God’s love; last to be discovered because most ancient
of all. The foundation is disclosed last when you come to dig, and the
essence is grasped last in the process of analysis.
So one of the old psalms, with wondrous depth of truth, traces up
everything to this, ‘For His mercy endureth for ever.’ Therefore, there
was time; therefore, there were creatures—‘He made great lights, for His
mercy endureth for ever.’ Therefore, there were judgments—‘He slew famous
kings for His mercy endures forever.’ And so we may pass through all the
works of the divine energy, and say, ‘He first loved us.’
It is no accident that there are but foregleams of this great thought
brightening the words and the thoughts of psalmist and prophet, saint and
sage, from the beginning onwards, while the articulate utterance of the
simple sentence was first heard from the lips of Him who declared the
Father, and stands in that part of the Book which, both in its position
there, and in its date of composition is the last of the Apostolic
utterances. ‘God is love’;-that is in one aspect the foundation of His
being, and in another aspect the shining ruby set on the very sky piercing
summit of the completed process of the revelation of that Being to man.
‘He first loved us’; and thence, from that centre and germinal point,
streams out the whole train of consequences in the divine activity, and in
the divine self-revelation.
I need not ask you to contrast with this infinitely simple and infinitely
deep utterance all other thoughts of a divine Being—the cold abstractions
of Theism, the dim dreads of popular apprehension, the vague utterances of
any mythology, the clouds that men’s thoughts have covered over the face
of this great truth—and then, to set by the side of all these groping,
these peradventures, these fears, these narrow, unworthy ideas, the clear
simplicity, the infinite depth of ‘He first loved us.’
But I may ask you to consider, but for a moment, the relation which all
the other perfection of the divine nature have to this central and
foundation one. There are all those pompous names, ‘Omnipresence’ and
‘Omniscience’ and the like, which are but the negations of the limitations
of humanity or of finite creatures. There are the more spiritual and moral
thoughts of Wisdom and Righteousness and the like. These are but the
fringes of the glory: I was going to venture to say that the divinest
thing in God is love. There is the central blaze; the rest is but the
brilliant periphery that encloses it. And that infinite love stands to all
these other attributes in the relation of being their master and motive
spring. They are Love’s instrument, and in the divine nature Love is Lord
of all. They give it majesty; it gives them tenderness. We may reverently
say, in regard to the divine nature, what the Apostle says about our
humanity, that love is the ‘bond of perfectness’—the girdle which, braced
round all the garments, keeps them in their place.
For round these infinite, innumerable, unnameable, and named divine
perfections, is that which brings them all into symmetry and keeps them
all in harmonious action—Love. He has wisdom, and power, and eternal
being, but He is Love.
But do not let us forget that whilst thus my text proclaims the ultimate
truth, these other attributes, as they are called, are all smelted down,
as it were, into, and present in, the love which is their crown. The same
Apostle, who has thus the honour of ringing out to the world the good news
that God is Love, declares that ‘this is the message’ which he has to
tell, that ‘God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all.’ So the light
of righteousness, as well as the lambent flame of love, burn together on
that central fire of the universe. We must not so conceive of the love of
God, as to darken the radiance of His righteousness, or to obscure the
brilliancy of that pure light which tolerates no admixture of darkness.
May I venture a step further, and ask whether we are not warranted in
believing that in that which we call the love of God there do abide the
same elements as characterise the thing that bears the same name in our
human experience? The spectrum has told us that the constituents of the
mighty sun in the heavens are the same as the constituents of this little
darkened earth. And there are the same lines in the divine spectrum that
there are in ours. So if we can venture to say of Him, He is Love, do not
let us shrink from saying that then, like us, He delights in the
companionship of His beloved; that, like us, He rejoices in giving Himself
to His beloved; that, like us, but infinitely, He desires the good of His
beloved; and that, like us, He seeks only for the requital of an answering
love. All these things, the joy of the Lord in 1 John 5:19 man, the
yielding of the Lord to man, the beneficent desire of the Lord for the
good of man, and the hunger of the Lord for the response of love from
man—all these things are affirmed when we affirm that God is Love.
Our Apostle would concur heartily in the great text which was the theme of
a recent sermon. Paul said, ‘God establishes His love towards us, in that
while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.’ John says, ‘Herein is
love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent His Son to be
the propitiation for our sins.’
So the Cross of Christ is the one demonstration that God loved us. Looking
to it we can say, with a great modern teacher:—
“So the All-great were the All-loving too,
So through the thunder comes a human
voice,
Saying “Oh! heart I made; a heart beats
here,
Face, My hands fashioned, see it in
Myself;
Thou hast no power, nor mayest conceive
of Mine
But love I gave thee, with Myself to
love,
And thou must love Me, who have died
for thee.”
II. Here We Have The Ultimate Word As To Our Religion.
‘We love Him, because He first loved us.’ There is a bridge wanted between
these two, and the bridge is supplied abundantly in this letter, in entire
harmony with the teaching of the rest of the New Testament. Much has been
said, and profitably said, with reference to the modification of the
general type of Christian teaching in the writings respectively of Paul,
Peter, James, and John. I thankfully recognise the diversities. They are
not divergences; they are perfectly complementary, and may all be made to
harmonise. This Apostle of love has also declared to us how it comes that
the love which burns at the centre of things, where there is a heart,
kindles a responding love away out on the circumference of things, where
there are men with hearts; and the bridge is—‘We have known and believed
the love that God hath to us.’ So says John. And Paul, the Apostle of
faith, who sometimes seems as if his only conception of the link of union
between God and man was, on the part of man, faith, responds when he
speaks of a faith which worketh, comes to energetic operation, through the
love which it has kindled.
So we come to this, that a simple trust in the love of God, as manifested
in Jesus Christ, our Lord, is the only thing which will so deal with man’s
natural self-regard and desire to make himself his own object and centre,
as to substitute for that the victorious love to God. You cannot love God,
unless you believe that He loves you. You will never be absolutely sure of
that, unless you have learned it from the Cross of Christ. You will not
respond with the love that He desires, but there will be a film between
your ice and the fire that could melt it, until that is swept away by the
simple act of confidence in God manifested to you in Jesus Christ. This is
Christianity; this, nothing less, is religion—to love God, because I
believe that in Jesus Christ God has loved me.
And that is the only thing that He desires or accepts. The Religion of
Fear; what is it? ‘Thou wert an austere man and I was afraid.’ Yes! and
what did you do when you were afraid? ‘I hid my talent in the ground,’ and
was utterly idle. Here rise, on either side of the valley, two
mountains—Ebal and Geranium. From the one were thundered the curses, from
the other broke the benediction of the blessings; the one is barren, the
other is verdant—‘which thing is an allegory.’ The Religion of Fear does
nothing, the Religion of Love does all. The Religion of Self-interest is
narrow, poor, mostly inoperative of any lofty enthusiasm or high nobleness
of character. The Religion of Duty; ‘I ought to worship, I am bidden to do
this, that, or the other thing, which I do not a bit like to do. I am
forbidden to do this, that, and the other thing which I should very much
like to do, if I durst’—that religion is the religion of a slave; and
there are hosts of us that know nothing better. And so our Christianity is
a feeble and an uncomfortable thing; and there are little joy, and little
subjugation of the will, and little leaping up of the heart in glad
obedience in it. I was talking to a good, aged man, not long ago, whose
religion was of a very gloomy type. He said to me, ‘As to love, I know
next to nothing about it.’ Ah! brethren, I am afraid that is true about a
good many of us who call ourselves Christians.
Then let me say, too, that if we love Him, it will be the motive power and
spring of all manner of obedience’s and glad services. Love is the
mother-tincture, so to speak, which you can colour, and to which you can
add in various ways, and produce variously tinted and tasted and perfumed
commixtures. Love lies at the foundation of all Christian goodness. It
will lead to the subjugation of the will; and that is the thing that is
most of all needed to make a man righteous and pure. So St. Augustine’s
paradox, rightly understood, is a magnificent truth, ‘Love! and do what
you will.’ For then you will be sure to will what God wills, and you
ought.
If this be the summing-up of all religion, a practical conclusion follows.
When we feel ourselves defective in the glow and operative driving power
of love to God, what is the right thing to do? When a man is cold, he will
not warm himself by putting a clinical thermometer into his mouth, and
taking his temperature, will he? Let him go into the sunshine and he will
be warmed up. You can pound ice in a mortar, and except for the little
heat generated by the impact of the pestle, it will keep ice still. But
float the iceberg south into the tropics, and what has become of it? It
has all run down into sweet, warm water, and mingled with the warm ocean
that has dissolved it. So do not think about yourselves and your own
loveless hearts so much, but think about God, and the infinite welling up
of love in His heart to you, a great deal more. ‘We love Him, because He
first loved us’; therefore, to love Him more, we must feel more that He
does love us.
III. Lastly, Hero Is The Ultimate Word About Our Conduct To Men.
I said that John, by leaving out any specification of the object of love,
as well as by the verses that immediately follow, shows that he regards
the emotion as one, though its direction is two-fold. That just comes to
the plain truth, that the only victorious antagonist to the self-regarding
temperament of average men, and the only power which will change
philanthropy from a sentiment into a self-denying and active principle of
conduct, is to be found in the belief of the love of God in Jesus Christ,
and in answering love to Him.
That is a lesson for many sorts of people to-day. What they call altruism
is no discovery of Christianity, but its practice is. I freely admit that
there is much honest and self-sacrificing beneficence and benevolence
which are not connected, in the men who practice them, with faith in Jesus
Christ. But I question very much whether these would have existed if the
story of the Cross had been unknown. And sure I am that the history of
non-Christian attempts to promote the brotherhood of man, and to diffuse a
wide and operative love of mankind, teaches us, on the one side, that the
emotion is not strong enough to last, and to work, unless it is based on
God’s love in Jesus Christ. And the history of Christianity, on the other
side, though with many defects and things to be ashamed of, teaches us,
conversely, that wherever there is a genuine love of God, its exterior
form, so to say, the outside of it which is presented to the world, will
be true love to man.
Christian people, lay this to heart; you are to be mirrors of the love to
which you turn for all blessedness and peace. It is of no use to say, ‘My
religion is the love of God’ unless the love of God is manifested in the
love of man. If you love God, you will love those that God loves, those
for whom Christ died, those who are just like what you were when you
learned that God loved you. The service of God is the service of man.
One last word, ‘We love Him, because He first loved us.’ Do you? Or is it
rather true of you: ‘I do not love God, though He has loved me’? I saw not
long since, up on the flank of a mountain, an obstinate patch of snow,
that had fronted, in unbelted cold, months of the summer sun. There are
some of us who lift a broad shield of thick-ribbed ice between ourselves
and the radiance of the warm heart of God. Oh! brother; do not shut that
love out of your heart; for if you do, you shut out peace and goodness,
and shut in all manner of poisonous creatures and doleful shapes, whose
companionship will be misery and death.
1 John 5:4
Faith
Conquering The World
‘This is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith.’—1 John
5:4.
No New Testament writer makes such frequent use of the metaphors of combat
and victory as this gentle Apostle John. None of them seem to have
conceived so habitually of the Christian life as being a conflict, and in
none of their writings does the clear note of victory in the use of that
word ‘overcometh’ ring out so constantly as it does in those of the very
Apostle of Love. Equally characteristic of John’s writings is the
prominence which he gives to the still contemplation of, and abiding in,
Christ. These two conceptions of the Christian life appear to be
discordant, but are really harmonious.
There is no doubt where John learned the phrase. Once he had heard it at a
time and in a place which stamped it on his memory for ever. ‘Be of good
cheer, I have overcome the world,’ said Christ, an hour before Gethsemane.
Long years since then had taught John something of its meaning, and had
made him to understand how the Master’s victory might belong to the
servants. Hence in this letter he has much to say about ‘overcoming the
wicked one,’ and the like; and in the Apocalypse we never get far away
from hearing the shout of victory, whether we consider the sevenfold
promises of the letters that stand at the beginning of the visions, or
whether we listen to such sayings as this:—‘They overcame by the blood of
the Lamb,’ or the last promise of all:—‘He that overcometh shall inherit
all things.’
Thus bound together by that link, as well as by a great many more, are all
the writings which the tradition of the Church has attributed to this
great Apostle.
But to come to the words of my text. They appear in a very remarkable
context here. If you read a verse or two before, you will get the full
singularity of their introduction. ‘This is the love of God,’ says he,
‘that we keep His commandments: and His commandments are not grievous.’
They are very heavy and hard in themselves; it is very difficult to do
right, and to walk in the ways of God, and to please Him. His commandments
are grievous, per se; a heavy burden, a difficult thing to do—but let us
read on:—‘They are not grievous, for whatsoever is born of God’—keepeth
the commandments? No! ‘Whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world:
That, thinks John, is the same thing as keeping God’s commandments. ‘This
is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith.’ Notice, then,
first, What is the true notion of conquering the world? secondly, How that
victory may be ours.
I. What Is The True Notion Of Conquering The World?
Let us go back to what I have already said. Where did John learn the
expression? Who was it that first used it? It comes from that
never-to-be-forgotten night in that upper room; where, with His life’s
purpose apparently crushed into nothing, and the world just ready to
exercise its last power over Him by killing Him, Jesus Christ breaks out
into such a strange strain of triumph, and in the midst of apparent defeat
lifts up that clarion note of victory:—‘I have overcome the world!’
He had not made much of it, according to usual standards, had He? His life
had been the life of a poor man. Neither fame nor influence, nor what
people call success, had He won, judged from the ordinary points of view,
and at three-and-thirty is about to be murdered; and yet He says, ‘I have
beaten it all, and here I stand a conqueror!’ That threw a flood of light
for John, and for all that had listened to Christ, on the whole conditions
of human life, and on what victory and defeat, success and failure in this
world mean. Not so do men usually estimate what conquering the world is.
Not so do you and I estimate it when we are left to our own folly and our
own weakness. Our notion of being victorious in life is when each man,
according to his own ideal of what is best, manages to wring that ideal
out of a reluctant world. Or, to put it into plainer words, a man desires,
say, conspicuous notoriety and fame. He accounts that he has conquered
when he scrambles over all his fellows, and writes his name, as boys do,
upon a wall, higher than anybody else’s name, with a bit of chalk, in
writing that the next winter’s storm will obliterate! That is victory! The
ultra-commercial ideal says, ‘Found a big business and make it pay.’ That
is to conquer! Other notions, higher and nobler than that, all partake of
the same fallacy that if a man can get the world, the sum of external
things, into his grip, and squeeze it as one does a grape, and get the
last drop of sweetness out of it into his thirsty lips, he is a conqueror.
Well! and you may get all that, whatever it is, that seems to you best,
sweetest, most needful, most toothsome and delightsome—you may get it all;
and in a sense you may have conquered the world, and yet you may be
utterly beaten and enslaved by it. Do you remember the old story—I make no
apology for the plainness of it—of the man that said to his commanding
officer, ‘I have taken a prisoner.’ ‘Bring him along with you.’ ‘He won’t
let me.’ ‘Come yourself, then.’ ‘I can’t’? So you think you have conquered
the world when it yields you the things you want, and all the while it has
conquered and captivated you.
You say ‘Mine ‘! It would be a great deal nearer the truth if the
possessions, or the love, or the wealth, or the culture, or whatever else
it may he, that you have set your desire upon, were to rise up and say you
are theirs! Utterly beaten and enslaved many a man is by the things that
he vainly fancies he has mastered and conquered. If you think of how in
the process of getting, you narrow yourselves; of how much you throw away;
of how eyes become blind to beauty or goodness or graciousness; of how you
become the slaves of the thing that you have won; of how the gold gets
into a man’s blood and makes his complexion as yellow as jaundice—if you
think of all that, and how desperate and wretched you would he if in a
minute it was all swept away, and how it absorbs your thoughts in keeping
it and looking after it, say, is it you that are its master, or it that is
yours?
Now let us turn for a moment to the teaching of this Epistle. Following in
the footsteps of Jesus Christ Himself, the poor man, the beaten man, the
unsuccessful man, may yet say,’ I have overcome the world.’ What does that
mean? Well, it is built upon this—the world, meaning thereby the sum total
of outward things, considered as apart from God—the world and God we make
to be antagonists to one another. And the world woos me to trust to it, to
love it; crowds in upon my eye and shuts out the greater things beyond;
absorbs my attention, so that if I let it have its own way I have no
leisure to think about anything but itself. And the world conquers me when
it succeeds in hindering me from seeing, loving, holding communion with
and serving my Father, God.
On the other hand, I conquer it when I lay my hand upon it and force it to
help me to get nearer Him, to get liker Him, to think more often of Him,
to do His will more gladly and more constantly. The one victory over the
world is to bend it to serve me in the highest things—the attainment of a
clearer vision of the Divine nature, the attainment of a deeper love to
God Himself, and of a more glad consecration and service to Him. That is
the victory—when you can make the world a ladder to lift you to God. That
is its right use, that is victory, when all its tempting voices do not
draw you away from listening to the Supreme Voice that bids you keep His
commandments. When the world comes between you and God as an obscuring
screen, it has conquered you. When the world comes between you and God as
a transparent medium, you have conquered it. To win victory is to get it
beneath your feet and stand upon it, and reach up thereby to God.
Now, dear brethren, that is the plain teaching of all this context, and I
would lay it upon your hearts and upon my own. Do not let us be deceived
by the false estimates of the men around us. Do not let us forget that the
one thing we have to live for is to know God, and to love and to please
Him, and that every life is a disastrous failure, whatsoever outward
artificial apparent success it may be enriched and beautified with, that
has not accomplished that.
You rule Nature, you coerce winds and lightnings and flames to your
purposes. Rule the world! Rule the world by making it help you to be
wiser, gentler, nobler, more gracious, more Christ-like, more
Christ-conscious, more full of God, and more like to Him, and then you
will get the deepest delight out of it. If a man wanted to find a
wine-press that should squeeze out of the vintage of this world its last
drop of sweetest sweetness, he would find it in constant recognition of
the love of God, and in the coercing of all the outward and the visible to
be his help thereto.
There are the two theories; the one that we are all apt to fall into, of
what success and victory is; the other the Christian theory. Ah! many a
poor, battered Lazarus, full of sores, a pauper and a mendicant at Dives’
gate; many a poor old cottager; many a lonely woman in her garret; many a
man that has gone away from Manchester, for instance, unable to get on in
business, and obliged to creep into some corner and hide himself, not
having succeeded in making a fortune, is the victor! And many a Dives,
fettered by his own possessions, and the bond-slave of his own successes,
is beaten by the world shamefully and disastrously! Pray and strive for
the purged eyesight which shall teach you what it is to conquer the world,
and what it is to be conquered by it.
II. This Victory Over The World.
And now let me turn for a moment to the second of the points that I have
desired to put before you, viz., the method by which this victory over the
world, of making it help us to keep the commandments of God, is to be
accomplished. We find, according to John’s fashion, a threefold statement
in this context upon this matter, each member of which corresponds to and
heightens the preceding. We read thus:—‘Whatsoever is born of God
overcometh the world.’ ‘This is the victory that overcometh the world,’ or
more accurately, ‘hath overcome the world, even our faith.’ Who is he that
overcometh the world? He that believeth that Jesus Christ is ‘the Son of
God.’ Wherein there are, speaking roughly, these three statements, that
the true victory over the world is won by a new life, born of and kindred
with God; that that life is kindled in men’s souls through their faith;
that the faith which kindles that supernatural life, the victorious
antagonist of the world, is the definite, specific faith in Jesus as the
Son of God. These are the three points which the Apostle puts as the means
of conquest of the world.
The first consideration, then, suggested by these statements is that the
one victorious antagonist of all the powers of the world which seek to
draw us away from God, is a life in our hearts kindred with God, and
derived from God.
Now I know that a great many people turn away from this central
representation of Christianity as if it were mystical and intangible. I
desire to lay it upon your hearts, dear brethren, that every Christian man
has received and possesses through the open door of his faith, a life
supernatural, born of God, kindred with God, therefore having nothing
kindred with evil, and therefore capable of meeting and mastering all the
temptations of the world.
It is a plain piece of common-sense, that God is stronger than this
material universe, and that what is born of God partakes of the Divine
strength. But there would be no comfort in that, nor would it be anything
germane and relevant to the Apostle’s purpose, unless there was implied in
the statement what in fact is distinctly asserted more than once in this
Epistle, that every Christian man and woman may claim to be thus born of
God. Hearken to the words that almost immediately precede our text,
‘Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God.’ Hearken to
other words which proclaim the same truth, ‘To as many as received Him, to
them gave He power to become the sons of God, which were born, not of the
will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.’ He does come with
all the might of His regenerating power into our poor natures, if and when
we turn ourselves with humble faith to that dear Lord; and breathes into
our deadness a new life, with now tastes, new desires, new motives, new
powers, making us able to wrestle with and to overcome the temptations
that were too strong for us.
Mystical and deep as this thought may be, God’s nature is breathed into
the spirits of men that will trust Him! and if you will put your
confidence in that dear Lord, and live near Him, into your weakness will
come an energy born of the Divine, and you will be able to do all things
in the might of the Christ that strengthens you from within, and is the
life of your life, and the soul of your soul. To the little beleaguered
garrison surrounded by strong enemies through whom they cannot cut their
way, the king sends reliefs, who force their passage into the fortress,
and hold it against all the power of the foe. You are not left to fight by
yourselves, you can conquer the world if you will trust to that Christ,
trusting in whom God’s own power will come to your aid, and God’s own
Spirit will he the strength of your spirit.
And then there is the other way of looking at this same thing, viz., you
can conquer the world if you will trust in Jesus Christ, because such
trust will bring you into constant, living, loving contact with the Great
Conqueror. There is a beautiful accuracy and refinement in the language of
these three clauses which is not represented in our Authorised Version.
The central one which I have read as my text this morning might be
translated as it is translated in the Revised Version—‘This is the victory
that hath overcome the world, even our faith.’ By which I suppose the
Apostle means very much what I am saying now, viz., that my faith brings
me into contact with that one great victory over the world which for all
time was won by Jesus Christ. I can appropriate Christ’s conquest to
myself if I trust Him. The might of it and some portion of the reality of
it passes into my nature in the measure in which I rely upon Him. He
conquered once for all, and the very remembrance of His conquest by faith
will make me strong—will ‘teach my hands to war and my fingers to fight.’
He conquered once for all, and His victory will pass, with electric power,
into my life if I trust Him. I am brought into living fellowship with Him.
All the stimulation of example, and all that lives lofty and pure can do
for us, is done for us in transcendent fashion by the life of Jesus
Christ. And all that lives lofty and pure can never do for us is done in
unique fashion by the life and death of Him whose life and death are alike
the victory over the world and the pattern for us.
So if we join ourselves to Him by faith, and bring into our daily life, in
all its ignoble effort, in all its little duties, in all its wearisome
monotonies, in all its triviality, the thought, the illuminating thought,
the ennobling thought, of the victorious Christ our companion and our
Friend—in hoc signo vinces—in this sign thou shalt conquer! They that keep
hold of His hand see over the world and all its falsenesses and
fleeting-nesses. They that trust in Jesus are more than conquerors by the
might of His victory.
And then there is the last thought, which, though it be not directly
expressed in .the words before us, is yet closely connected with them. You
can conquer the world if you will trust Jesus Christ, because your faith
will bring into the midst of your lives the grandest and most solemn and
blessed realities. Faith is the true anaesthesia of the soul;—the thing
that deadens it to the pains and the pleasures that come from this
fleeting life. As for the pleasures, I remember reading lately of some
thinker of our own land who was gazing through a telescope at the stars,
and turned away from the solemn vision with one remark, ‘I don’t think
much of our county families!’ And if you will look up at Christ through
the telescope of your faith, it is wonderful what Lilliputians the
Brobdingnagians round about you will dwindle into, and how small the world
will look, and how coarse the pleasures.
If a man goes to Italy, and lives in the presence of the pictures there,
it is marvellous what daubs the works of art, that he used to admire, look
when he comes back to England again. And if he has been in communion with
Jesus Christ, and has found out what real sweetness is, he will not be
over-tempted by the coarse dainties that people eat here. Children spoil
their appetites for wholesome food by sweetmeats; we very often do the
same in regard to the bread of God, but if we have once really tasted it,
we shall not care very much for the vulgar dainties on the world’s stall.
Dear brethren, set your faith upon that great Lord, and the world’s
pleasures will have less power over you, and as for its pains—
‘There’s nothing either good or bad,
But thinking makes it so.’
If a man does not think that the world’s pains are of much account, they
are not of much account. He who sees athwart the smoke of the fire of
Smithfield, the face of the Captain of his warfare, who has conquered,
will dare to burn and will not dare to deny his Master or his Master’s
truth. The world may threaten in hope of winning you to its service, but
if its threats, turned into realities, fail to move you, it is the world
which inflicts, and not you who suffer, that is beaten. In the extremest
case they ‘kill the body and after that have no more that they can do,’
and if they have done all they can, and have not succeeded in wringing the
incantation from the locked lips, they are beaten, and the poor dead
martyr that they could only kill has conquered them and their torments. So
fear not all that the world can do against you. If you have got a little
spark of the light of Christ’s presence in your heart, the darkness will
not be very terrible, and you will not be alone.
So, brethren, two questions:—Does your faith do anything like that for
you? If it does not, what do you think is the worth of it? Does it deaden
the world’s delights? Does it lift you above them? Does it make you
conqueror? If it does not, do you think it is worth calling faith?
And the other question is: Do you want to beat, or to be beaten? When you
consult your true self, does your conscience not tell you that it were
better for you to keep God’s commandments than to obey the world? Surely
there are many young men and women in this place to-day who have some
desires high, and true, and pure, though often stifled, and overcome, and
crushed down; and many older folk who have glimpses, in the midst of
predominant regard for the things that are seen and temporal, of a great
calm, pure region away up there that they know very little about.
Dear friends, my one word to you all is: Get near Jesus Christ by thought,
and love, and trust. Trust to Him and to the great love that gave itself
for you. And then bring Him into your life, by daily reference to Him of
it all: and by cultivating the habit of thinking about Him as being
present with you in the midst of it all, and so holding His hand, you will
share in His victory; and at the last, according to the climax of His
sevenfold promises, ‘To Him that overcometh will I give to sit down with
Me on My throne, even as I also overcame, and am sat down with My Father
on His Throne.’
1
John 5:18
Triumphant Certainties - 1
‘We know that whosoever is born of God sinneth not; but he that is
begotten of God keepeth himself, and that wicked one toucheth him not.’—1
John 5:18.
JOHN closes his letter with a series of triumphant certainties, which he
considers as certified to every Christian by his own experience. ‘We know
that whosoever is born of God sinneth not, we know that we are of God, and
we know that the Son of God is come.’ Now, that knowledge which he thus
follows out on these three lines is not merely an intellectual conviction,
but it is the outcome of life, and the broad seal of experimental
possession is stamped upon it. Yet the average Christian reads this text,
and shrugs his shoulders and says, ‘Well! perhaps I do not understand it,
but, so far as I do, it seems to me to say a thing which is contradicted
by the whole experience of life.’ ‘We know that whosoever is born of God
sinneth not’; and some of us are driven by such words, and parallel ones
which occur in other places, to a presumptuous over-confidence, and some
of us to an equally unscriptural despondency; and a great many of us to
laying John’s triumphant certainty up upon the shelf where the
unintelligible things are getting covered over with dust.
So I wish, in this sermon, to try, if I can, to come to the understanding,
that in some measure I may help you to come to the joyful possession, of
the truth which lies here, and which the Apostle conceives to belong to
the very elements of the Christian character.
I. First, Then, I Ask The Question—Of Whom Is The Apostle Speaking
Here?
‘We know that whosoever is born of God’—or, as the Revised Version reads
it, ‘begotten of God’—‘sinneth not.’ Now we must go back a little—and
sometimes to go a long way from a subject is the best way to get at it.
Let me recall to you the Master’s words with which He all but began His
public ministry, when He said to Nicodemus, ‘Except a man be born again he
cannot see the kingdom of God.’ There is the root of all that this epistle
is so full of, the conception of a regeneration, a being born again, which
makes men, by a new birth, sons of God, in a fashion and in a sphere of
their nature in which they were not the sons of the Heavenly Father before
that experience. Jesus Christ laid down, as the very first principle which
He would insist upon, to a man who was groping in the midst of mere legal
conceptions of righteousness as the work of his own hands, this
principle,—there must be a radical change, and there must be the entrance
into every human nature of a new life-principle before there is any
vision, any possession of, or any entrance into, that region in which the
will of God is supreme, and where He reigns and rules as King. John is
only echoing his Master when he here, and in other places of this letter,
lays all the stress, in regard to practical righteousness and to noble
character, upon being born again, subjected to that change which is fairly
paralleled with the physical fact of birth, and has, as its result, the
possession by the man who passes through it of a new nature, sphered in
and destined to dominate and cleanse his old self.
Then there is a further step to be taken, and that is that this sonship of
God, which is the result of being born again, is mediated and received by
us through our faith. Remember the prologue of John’s Gospel, where, as a
great musician will hint all his subsequent themes in his overture, he
gathers up in one all the main threads and points of his teaching. There
he says, ‘To as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the
sons of God.’ Long years afterwards, when an old man in Ephesus, he writes
down in this last chapter of his first epistle the same truth which he
there set blazing in the forefront of his Gospel when he says, in the
first verse of this chapter, ‘Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ
is born of God.’ On condition, then, of a man’s faith in Jesus Christ,
there is communicated to him a new life direct from God, kindred with the
Divine, and which dwells in him, and works in him precisely in the measure
of his personal faith. That is the first point that I desire to establish.
You will remember, I suppose, that this same conception of the deepest
result of the Christian faith being no mere external forgiveness of sins,
nor alteration of a man’s position in reference to the Divine judgments,
but the communication of a new life-power and principle to him, is not the
property of the mystic John only, but it is the property likewise of the
legal James, who says, ‘Of His own will begat He us by the word of truth,
that we should be a kind of first-fruits of His creatures’; and it is set
forth with great emphasis and abundance in all the writings of the Apostle
Paul, who insists that we are sons through the Son, who insists that the
gift of God is a new nature, formed in righteousness’ after the image of
Him that created Him,’ and who is ever dwelling upon the necessity that
this new nature should be cultivated and increased by the faith and effort
of its recipient.
Keeping these things in mind, I take the second step, and that is that
this new birth, and the new Divine life which is its result, co-exist
along with the old nature in which it is planted, and which it has to
coerce and subdue, sometimes to crucify, and always to govern. For I need
not remind you that if the analogy of birth is to be followed, we have to
recognise that that Divine life, too, like the physical life, which is
also God’s gift, has to pass through stages; and that just as the perfect
man, God manifest in the flesh,’ increased in wisdom and stature, and in
favour with God and man,’ so the Divine life in a soul comes to it in
germ, and has its period of infancy and growth up into youth and manhood.
This Apostle puts great emphasis upon that idea of advancement in the
Divine life. For you remember the long passage in which he twice
reiterates the notion of the stages of children and young men and fathers.
So the new life has to grow, grow in its own strength, grow in its sphere
of influence, grow in the power with which it purges and hallows the old
nature in the midst of which it is implanted. But growth is not the only
word for its development. That now nature has to fight for its life. There
must be effort, in order that it may rule; there must be strenuous and
continuous diligence, directed not only to strengthen it, but to weaken
its antagonist, in order that it may spread and permeate the whole nature.
Thus we have the necessary foundation laid for that which characterises
the Christian life, from the beginning to the end, that it is a working
out of that which is implanted, a working out, with ever widening area of
influence, and a working in with ever deeper and more thorough power of
transforming the character. There may be indefinite approximation to the
entire suppression and sanctification of the old man; and whatsoever is
born of God manifests its Divine kindred in this, that sooner or later it
overcomes the world.
Now, if all that which I have been saying is true—and to me it is
undeniably so—I come to a very plain answer to the first question that I
raised: Who is it that John is speaking about? ‘Whosoever is born of God’
is the Christian man, in so far as the Divine life which he has from God
by fellowship with His Son, through His own personal faith, has attained
the supremacy in Him. The Divine nature that is in a man is that which is
born of God. And that the Apostle does not mean the man in whom that
nature is implanted, whether he is true to the nature or no, is obvious
from the fact that, in another part of this same chapter, he substitutes
‘whatsoever’ for ‘whosoever,’ as if he Would have us mark that the thing
which he declares to be victorious and sinless is not so much the person
as the power that is lodged in the person. That is my answer to the first
question.
II. What Is Asserted About This Divine Life?
‘Whosoever is born of God sinneth not.’ That is by no means a unique
expression in this letter. For, to say nothing about the general drift of
it, we have a precisely similar statement in a previous chapter, twice
uttered. ‘Whosoever abideth in Him sinneth not’; ‘whosoever is born of God
doth not commit sin, for His seed remaineth in him, and he cannot sin,
because he is born of God.’ Nothing can be stronger than that. Yes, and
nothing can be more obvious. I think, then, that the Apostle does not
thereby mean to declare that, unless a man is absolutely sinless in regard
of his individual acts, he has not that Divine life in him. For look at
what precedes our text. Just before he has said, and it is the saying
which leads him to my text, ‘If any man seeth his brother sin a sin which
is not unto death, he shall ask, and he shall give him life.’ So, then, he
contemplated that within the circle of sons of God, who were each other’s
brethren because they were all possessors of that Divine birth, there
would exist ‘sin not unto death,’ which demanded a brother’s brotherly
intercession and help. And do you suppose that any man, in the very same
breath in which he thus declared that brotherhood was to be manifested by
the way in which we help a brother to get rid of his sins, would have
stultified himself by a blank, staring contradiction such as has been
extracted from the words of my text? I say nothing about inspiration; I
only say common-sense forbids it. The fact of the matter is that John, in
his simple, childlike way, does not wait to concatenate his ideas, or to
show how the one limits and explains the other, but he lays them down
before us, and the fact of their juxtaposition limits, and he does not
expect that his readers are quite fools. So he says in the one breath, ‘If
any man see his brother sin a sin,’ and in the next breath, ‘Whosoever is
born of God sinneth not.’ Surely there is a way to bring these two sayings
into harmony. And it seems to me to be the way that I have been suggesting
to you—viz., to take the text to mean—not that a Christian is, or must be,
in order to vindicate his right to be called a Christian, sinless, but
that there is a power in him, a life-principle in him which is sinless,
and whatsoever in him is born of God overcometh the world and ‘sinneth
not.’
Now, then, that seems to me to be the extent of the Apostle’s affirmation
here; and I desire to draw two plain, practical conclusions. One is, that
this notion of a Divine life-power, lodged in, and growing through, and
fighting with the old nature, makes the hideousness and the criminality of
a Christian man’s transgressions more hideous and more criminal. The
teaching of my text has sometimes been used in the very opposite
direction. I do not need to say anything about that. There have been
people that have said ‘It is no more I, but sin, that dwelleth in me; I am
not responsible.’ There have been types of so-called Christianity which
have used this loftiest and purest thought of my text as a minister of
sin. I do not suppose that there are any representatives of that
caricature and travesty here, so I need not say a word about it. The
opposite inference is what I urge now. In addition to all the other
foulnesses which attach to any man’s lust, or lechery, or drunkenness, or
ambition, or covetousness, this super-eminent brand and stigma is burned
in upon yours and mine, Christian men and women, that it is dead against,
absolutely inconsistent with, the principle of life that is bedded within
us. And whilst all men, by every transgression, flout God and degrade
themselves, the Christian man who comes down to the level of living for
flesh and sense and time and self, has laid the additional and heaviest of
all weights of guilt upon his back in that he has done despite to the
Spirit of grace, and grieved and contradicted and thwarted the life of God
that is within him. The deepest guilt and the darkest condemnation attach
to the sins of the man who, with a Divine life in his spirit, obeys the
flesh. ‘To whomsoever much is given, of him shall much be required.’
Another consideration may fairly be urged as drawn from this text, and
that is that the one task of Christians ought to be to deepen and to
strengthen the life of God, which is in their souls, by faith. There is no
limit, except one of my own making, to the extent to which my whole being
may be penetrated through and through and ruled absolutely by that new
life which God has given.
‘Tis life, whereof our nerves are scant,
Oh life, not death, for which we pant!
More life, and better, that I want.’
It is all very well to cultivate specific and sporadic virtues and graces.
Get a firmer hold and a fuller possession of the life of Christ in your
own souls, and all graces and virtues will come.
III. Now, I Have One Last Question—What Is The Ground Of John’s
Assertion About Him ‘That Is Born Of God’?
My text runs on, ‘but he that is begotten of God keepeth himself.’ If any
of you are using the Revised Version, you will see a change there, small
in extent, but large in significance. It reads,’ He that is begotten of
God keepeth him.’ And although at this stage of my sermon it would be
absurd in me to enter upon exegetical considerations, let me just say in a
sentence that the original has considerable variation in expression in
these two clauses, which variation makes it impossible, I think, to adopt
the idea contained in the Authorised Version, that the same person is
referred to in both clauses. The difference is this. In the first clause,
‘He that is begotten of God’ is the Christian man; in the second, ‘He that
is begotten of God’ is Christ the Saviour.
There is the guarantee that’ Whosoever is begotten of God sinneth not,’
because round his weakness is cast the strong defence of the Elder
Brother’s hand; and the Son of God keeps all the sons who, through Him,
have derived into their natures the life of God. If, then, they are kept
by the only begotten Son of the Father, who, that ‘He might bring many
sons unto glory,’ has Himself worn the likeness of our flesh apart from
sin, then the one thing for us to do, in order to nourish and deepen and
strengthen, and bring to sovereign power in our poor natures that previous
and enduring principle of life, is to take care that we do not run away
from the keeping hand nor wander far from the only safety. When a little
child is seat out for a walk by the parent with an elder brother, if it
goes staring into shop windows, and gaping at anything that it sees upon
the road, and loses hold of the brother’s hand, it is lost, and breaks
into tears, and can only be consoled and secured by being brought back.
Then the little fingers clasp round the larger hand, and there is a sense
of relief and of safety.
Dear brethren, if we stray away from Christ we lose ourselves in muddy
ways. If we keep near Him, as merchantmen in time of war keep near the
men-of-war convoy, or as pilgrims across a dangerous desert keep close to
the heels of the horses of their escort, ‘that wicked one toucheth us
not.’ And so we may be sure that ‘that which is born of God’ will come to
the sovereign power within us, and He that was born of the Spirit will
cast out him that was born of the flesh.
1 John
5:19 Triumphant Certainties - 2
‘We know that we are of God, and the whole world lieth in wickedness.’—1
John 5:19.
THIS is the second of the triumphant certainties which John supposes to be
the property of every Christian. I spoke about the first of them in my
last sermon. It reads,’ We know that whosoever is born of God sinneth
not.’ Now, there is a distinct connection and advance, as between these
two statements. The former of them is entirely general. It is
particularised in my text; the ‘whosoever’ there is pointed into ‘we’
here. The individuals who have the right to claim these prerogatives are
none other than the body of Christian people.
Then there is another connection and advance. ‘Born of God’ refers to an
act; ‘of God’ to a state. The point is produced into a line. There is
still another connection and advance. ‘Whosoever is born of God sinneth
not,” and that wicked one toucheth him not.’ That glance at a dark
surrounding, from which he that is born of God is protected, is deepened
in my text into a vision of the whole world as ‘lying in the wicked one.’
Now, I know that sayings like this of my text, which put into the
forefront the Christian prerogative, and which regard mankind, apart from
the members of Christ’s body, as in a dark condition of subjection under
an alien power, have often been spoken of as if they were presumptuous, on
the one hand, and narrow, uncharitable, and gloomy on the other. I am not
concerned to deny that, on the lips of some professing Christian, they
have had a very ugly sound, and have ministered to distinctly
un-Christlike sentiments. But, on the other hand, I do believe that there
are few things which the average Christianity of to-day wants more than a
participation in that joyous confidence and buoyant energy which throb in
the Apostle’s words; and that for lack of this triumphant certitude many a
soul has been lamed, its joy clouded, its power trammelled, and its work
in the world thwarted. So I wish to try to catch some of that solemn and
joyous confidence which the Apostle peals forth in these triumphant words.
I. I Ask You, Then, To Look First At The Christian Certainty Of
Belonging To God.
‘We know that we are of God.’ Where did John get that form of expression,
which crops up over and over again in his letter? He got it where he got
most of his terminology, from the lips of the Master. For, if you
remember, our Lord Himself speaks more than once of men being ‘of God.’
As, for instance, when He says, ‘He that is of God heareth God’s words. Ye
therefore hear them not because ye are not of God.’ And then He goes on to
give the primary idea that is conveyed in the phrase when He says, in
strong contrast to that expression, ‘Ye are of your father, and the lusts
of your father ye will do.’ So, then, plainly, as I said, what was a point
in the previous certitude, is here prolonged into a line, and expresses a
permanent state.
The first conception in the phrase is that of life derived, communicated
from God Himself. Fathers of the flesh communicate life, and it is
thenceforth independent. But the life of the Spirit, which we draw from
God, is only sustained by the continual repetition of the same gift by
which it was originated. So the second idea that lies in the expression is
that of a life dependent upon Him from whom it originally comes. The
better life in the Christian soul is as certain to fade and die if the
supply from Heaven is cut off or dammed back, as is the bed of a stream to
become parched and glistering in the fierce sunshine, if the head-waters
flow into it no more. You can no more have the life of the Spirit in the
spirit of a man without continual communication from Him than a sunbeam
can subsist if it be cut off from the central source. Therefore, the
second of the ideas in this expression is, the continual dependence of
that derived life upon God. Christian people are’ of God,’ in so far as
they partake of that new life, in an altogether special sense, which has a
feeble analogy in the dependence of all Creation upon the continual
effluence of the Divine power. Preservation is a continual creation, and
unless God operated in all physical phenomena and change there would
neither be phenomena, nor change, nor substance, which could show them
forth. But high above all that is the dependence of the renewed soul upon
Him for the continual communication of His gifts and life.
If that life is thus derived and dependent, there follows the last idea in
our pregnant phrase, viz., that it is correspondent with its source. ‘Ye
are of God,’ kindred with Him and developing a life which, in its measure,
being derived and dependent, is cognate with, and assimilated to, His own.
This is the prerogative of every Christian soul.
Then there is another step to be taken. The man that has that life knows
it. ‘We know,’ says the Apostle, ‘that we are of God.’ That word ‘know’
has been usurped, or at all events illegitimately monopolised by certain
forms of knowledge. But surely the inward facts of my own consciousness
are as much facts, and are certified to me as validly and reliably as are
facts in other regions which are attested by the senses, or arrived at by
reasoning. Christian people have the same right to lay hold of that great
word, ‘we know,’ and to apply it to the facts of their spiritual
experience, as any scientist in the world has to apply it to the facts of
his science. I do not for a moment forget the differences between the two
kinds of knowledge, but I do feel that in regard of certitude the
advantage is at least shared, and some of us would say that we are surer
of ourselves than we are of anything besides. How do you know that you are
at all? The only answer is, ‘I feel that I am.’ And precisely the same
evidence applies in regard to these lofty thoughts of a Divine kindred and
a spiritual life. I know that I am of God. I have passed through
experiences, and I am aware of consciousness which certify that to me.
But that is not all For, as I tried to show in my last sermon, the
condition of being ‘born of God’ is laid plainly down in this very chapter
by the Apostle, as being the simple act of faith in Jesus Christ. So,
then, if any man is sure that he believes, he knows that he is born of
God, and is of God.
But you say, ‘Do you not know that men deceive themselves by a profession
of being Christians, and that many of us estimate their professions at a
very different rate of genuineness from what they estimate them at?’ Yes,
I know that. And this whole letter of John goes to guard us against the
presumption of entertaining inflated thoughts about ourselves as being
kindred with God, unless we verify the consciousness by certain plain
facts. You remember how continually in this epistle there crops up by the
side of the most thorough-going mysticism, as people call it, the
plainest, home-spun practical morality, and how all these lofty, towering
thoughts are brought down to this sharp test, ‘Let no man deceive you; he
that doeth not righteousness is not of God; neither he that loveth not his
brother.’ That is a test which, applied to many a fanatical dream,
shrivels it up.
There is another test which the Master laid down in the words that I have
quoted already for another purpose, when He said, ‘He that is of God
heareth God’s words. Ye, therefore, hear them not because ye are not of
God.’ Christian people, take these two plain tests—first, righteousness of
life, common practical morality, the doing and the loving to do, the
things that all the world recognises to be right and true; and, second, an
ear attuned and attent to catch God’s voice—and control your consciousness
of being God’s son by these, and you will not go far wrong.
And now, before I go further, one word. It is a shame, and a laming and a
weakening of any Christian life, that this triumphant confidence should
not be clear in it. ‘We know that we are of God.’ Can you and I echo that
with calm confidence? ‘I sometimes half hope that I am.’ ‘I am almost
afraid to say it.’ ‘I do not know whether I am or not.’ ‘I trust I may
be.’ That is the kind of creeping attitude in which hosts of Christian
people are contented to live; and they stare at a man as if he was
presumptuous, and soaring up into a region that they do not know anything
about, when he humbly echoes the Apostle, and says,’ We know that we are
God’s.’ Why should our skies be as grey and sunless as those of a northern
winter’s day when all the while, away down on the sunny seas, to which we
may voyage if we will, there are unbroken sunshine, ethereal blue, and a
perpetual blaze of light? Christian men and women! it concerns the power
of your lives, their progress in holiness, and their possession of peace,
that you should be far more able than, alas! many of us are, to say, and
that without presumption, ‘We know that we are of God.’
II. We Have Here The Christian VIew Of The Surrounding World.
I need not, I suppose, remind you that John learned from Jesus to use that
phrase ‘the world,’ not as meaning the aggregate of material things, but
as meaning the aggregate of godless men. If you want a modern translation
of the word, it comes very near a familiar one with us nowadays, and that
is ‘Society’; the mass of people that are not of God.
Now, the more a man is conscious that he himself, by faith in Jesus
Christ, has passed into the family of God, and possesses the life that
comes from Him, the more keen will be his sense of the evil that lies
round him, and of the contrast between the maxims and prevalent practices
and institutions and ways of the world, and those which belong to Christ
and Christ’s people. Just as a native of Central Africa, brought to
England for a while, when he gets back to his kraal, will see its
foulnesses and its sordidnesses as he did not before, or as, according to
old stories, those that were carried away into fairyland for a little
while came back to the work-a-day life of the world, and felt themselves
alien from it, and had visions of what they had seen ever floating before
them; so the measure of our conscious belonging to God is the measure of
our perception of the contrast between us and the ways of the men about
us.
I am not concerned for a moment to deny, rather, I most thankfully
recognise the truth, that a great deal of ‘the world’ has been ransomed by
the Cross, by which its prince has been cast out, and that much of
Christian morality, and of the Christian way of looking at things, has
passed into the general atmosphere in which we live, so as that, between
the true Christian community and the surrounding world in which it is
plunged, there is less antagonism than there was when John in Ephesus
wrote these words beneath the shadow of Diana’s temple. But the world is a
world still, and the antagonism is there; and if a man will live true to
the life of God that is in him, he will find out soon enough that the gulf
is not bridged over. It never will be bridged. The only way by which the
antagonism can be ended is for the kingdoms of this world to become the
kingdoms of our God and of His Christ. Society is not of God, and the
institutions of every nation upon earth have still in them much of the
evil one. Christian people are set down in the midst of these, and the
antagonism is perennial.
III. Lastly, Consider The Consequent Christian Duty.
Let me put two or three plain exhortations. I beseech you, Christian
people, cultivate the sense of belonging to a higher order than that in
which you dwell. A man in a heathen land loses his sense of home, and of
its ways; and it needs a perpetual effort in order that we should not
forget our true affinities. ‘We are of God’ may be so said as to be the
parent of all manner of un-Christlike sentiments, as I have already
remarked. It may be the mother of contempt and self-righteousness, and a
hundred other vices; but, rightly said, it has no such tendency. But
unless we are ever and anon seeking to renew that consciousness, it will
fade and become dim, and we shall forget the imperial palace whence we
came, and be content to live in the barren fields of the citizens of that
country, and even to feed upon the husks that are in the swine’s trough.
So I say, cultivate the sense of belonging to God.
Again, I say, be careful to avoid infection. Go as men do in a
plague-stricken city. Go as our soldiers in that Ashanti expedition had to
go, on your guard against malaria, the ‘pestilence that walketh in
darkness,’ and smites ere we are aware, bringing down our notions, our
views of life, our thoughts of duty, to the low level of the people around
us. Go as these same soldiers did, on the watch for ambuscades and lurking
enemies behind the trees. And remember that the only safety is keeping
hold of Christ’s hand.
Look on the world as Christ looked on it. There must be no contempt; there
must be no self-righteousness; there must be no pluming ourselves on our
own prerogatives. There must be sorrow caught from Him, and tenderness of
pity, like that which forced itself to His eyes as He gazed across the
valley at the city sparkling in the sunshine, or such as wrung His heart
when He looked upon the multitude as sheep without a shepherd.
Work for the deliverance of your brethren from the alien tyrant. Notice
the difference between the two clauses in the text. ‘We are of God’; that
is a permanent relation. ‘The world lieth in the wicked one’; that is not
necessarily a permanent relation. The world is not of the wicked one; it
is ‘in’ him, and that may be altered. It is in the sphere of that dark
influence. As in the old stories, knights hung their dishonoured arms upon
trees, and laid their heads in the lap of an enchantress, so men have
departed from God, and surrendered themselves to the fascinations and the
control of an alien power. But the world may be taken out of the sphere of
influence in which it lies. And that is what you are here for. ‘For this
purpose the Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works of
the devil’; and for that purpose He has called us to be His servants. So
the more we feel the sharp contrast between the blessedness of the Divine
life which we believe ourselves to possess, and the darkness and evils of
the world that lies around us, the more should sorrow, and the more should
sympathy, and the more should succour be ours. Brethren, for ourselves let
us remember that we cannot better help the world to get away from the
alien tyrant that rules it than by walking in the midst of men, with the
aureola of this joyful confidence and certitude around us. The solemn
alternative opens before every one of us—Either I am ‘of God,’ or I am’ in
the wicked one.’ Dear friends, let us lay our hearts and hands in Christ’s
care, and then that will be true of us which this Apostle declares for the
whole body of believers: ‘Ye are of God, little children, and have
overcome, because greater is He that is in you than he that is in the
world.’
1 John
5:20 Triumphant Certainties - 3
‘And we know that the Son of God is come, and hath given us an
understanding. that we may know Him that is true, and we are in Him that
is true, even in His Son Jesus Christ.’—1 John 5:20.
ONCE more John triumphantly proclaims ‘We know.’ Whole-souled conviction
rings in his voice. He is sure of his footing. He does not say ‘We incline
to think,’ or even ‘We believe and firmly hold,’ but he says ‘We know.’ A
very different tone that from that of many of us, who, influenced by
currents of present opinions, feel as if what was rock to our fathers had
become quagmire to us! But John in his simplicity thinks that it is a tone
which is characteristic of every Christian. I wonder what he would say
about some Christians now.
This third of his triumphant certainties is connected closely with the two
preceding ones, which have been occupying us in former sermons. It is so,
as being in one aspect the ground of these, for it is because’ the Son of
God is come’ that men are born of God, and are of Him. It is so in another
way also, for properly the words of our text ought to read not ‘And we
know,’ rather’ But we know.’ They are suggested, that is to say, by the
preceding words, and they present the only thought which makes them
tolerable. ‘The whole world lieth in the wicked one. But we know that the
Son of God is come.’ Falling back on the certainty of the Incarnation and
its present issues, we can look in the face the grave condition of
humanity, and still have hope for the world and for ourselves. The
certainty of the Incarnation and its issues, I say. For in my text John
not only points to the past fact that Christ has come in the flesh, but to
a present fact, the operation of that Christ upon Christian souls—‘He hath
given us an understanding.’ And not only so, but he points, further, to a
dwelling in God and God in us as being the abiding issue of that past
manifestation. So these three things —the coming of Christ, the knowledge
of God which flows into a believing heart through that Incarnate Son, and
the dwelling in God which is the climax of all His gifts to us—these three
things are in John’s estimation certified to a Christian heart, and are
not merely matters of opinion and faith, but matters of knowledge.
Ah! brethren, if our Christianity had that firm strain, and was conscious
of that verification, it would be less at the mercy of every wind of
doctrine; it would be less afraid of every new thought; it would be more
powerful to rule and to calm our own spirits, and it would be more mighty
to utter persuasive words to others. We must know for ourselves, if we
would lead others to believe. So I desire to look now at these three
points which emerge from my text, and,
I. I Would Deal With The Christian’s Knowledge That The Son Of God Is
Come.
Now, our Apostle is writing to Asiatic Christians of the second generation
at the earliest, most of whom had not been born when Jesus Christ was upon
earth, and none of whom had any means of acquaintance with Him except that
which we possess—the testimony of the witnesses who had companied with
Him. And yet, to these men—whose whole contact with Christ and the Gospel
was, like yours and mine, the result of hearsay —he says, ‘We know.’ Was
he misusing words in his eagerness to find a firm foundation for a soul to
rest on? Many would say that he was, and would answer this certainty of
his ‘We know; with, How can he know? You may go on the principle that
probability is the guide of life, and you may be morally certain, but the
only way by which you know a fact is by having seen it; and even if you
have seen Jesus Christ, all that you saw would be the life of a man upon
earth whom you believed to be the Son of God. It is trifling with language
to talk about knowledge when you have only testimony to build on.
Well! there is a great deal to be said on that side, hut there are two or
three considerations which, I think, amply warrant the Apostle’s
declaration here, and our understanding of his words, ‘We know,’ in their
fullest and deepest sense. Let me just mention these briefly. Remember
that when John says ‘The Son of God is come’ he is not speaking—as his
language, if any of you can consult the original, distinctly shows —about
a past fact only, but about a fact which, beginning in a historical past,
is permanent and continuous. In one aspect, no doubt, Jesus Christ had
come and gone, before any of the people to whom this letter was addressed
heard it for the first time, but in another aspect, if I may use a
colloquial expression, when Jesus Christ came, He ‘came to stay.’ And that
thought, of the permanent abiding with men, of the Christ who once was
manifest in the flesh for thirty years, and,
‘Walked the acres of those blessed fields
For our advantage,’
runs through the whole of Scripture. Nor shall we understand the meaning
of Christ’s Incarnation unless we see in it the point of beginning of a
permanent reality. He has come, and He has not gone—‘Lo! I am with you
alway ’—and that thought of the fulness and permanence of our Lord’s
presence with Christian souls is lodged deep and all-pervading, not only
in John’s gospel, but in the whole teaching of the New Testament. So it is
a present fact, and not only a past piece of history, which is asserted
when the Apostle says ‘The Son of God is come.’ And a man who has a
companion knows that he has him, and by many a token not only of flesh but
of spirit, is conscious that he is not alone, but that the dear and strong
one is by his side. Such consciousness belongs to all the maturer and
deeper forms of the Christian life.
Further, we must read on in my text if we are to find all which John
declares to be a matter of knowledge. ‘The Son of God is come, and hath
given us an understanding.’ I shall have a word or two more to say about
that presently, but in the meantime I simply point out that what is here
declared to be known by the Christian soul is a present operation of the
present Christ upon his nature. If a man is aware that, through his faith
in Jesus Christ, new perceptions and powers of discerning solid reality
where he only saw mist before have been granted to him, the Apostle’s
triumphant assertion is vindicated.
And, still further, the words of my text, in their assurance of possessing
something far more solid than an opinion or a creed, in Christ Jesus and
our relation to Him, are warranted, on the consideration that the growth
of the Christian life largely consists in changing belief that rests on
testimony into knowledge grounded in vital experience. At first a man
accepts Jesus Christ because, for one reason or another, he is led to give
credence to the evangelical testimony and to the apostolic teaching: but
as he goes on learning more and more of the realities of the Christian
life, creed changes into consciousness; and we can turn round to apostles
and prophets, and say to them, with thankfulness for all that we have
received from them, ‘Now we believe, not because of your saying, but
because we have seen Him ourselves, and know that this is indeed the
Christ, the Saviour of the world.’ That is the advance which Christian men
should all make, from the infantile, rudimentary days, when they accepted
Christ on the witness of others, to the time when they accepted Him
because, in the depth of their own experience, they have found Him to be
all that they took Him to be. The true test of creed is life. The true way
of knowing that a shelter is adequate is to house in it, and be defended
from the pelting of every pitiless storm. The medicine we know to be
powerful when it has cured us. And every man that truly grasps Jesus
Christ, and is faithful and persevering in his hold, can set his seal to
that which to others is but a thing believed on hearsay, and accepted on
testimony.
‘We know that the Son of God is come.’ Christian people, have you such a
first-hand acquaintance with the articles which constitute your Christian
creed as that? Over and above all the intellectual reasons which may lead
to the acceptance, as a theory, of the truths of Christianity, have you
that living experience of them which warrants you in saying ‘We know’?
Alas! Alas! I am afraid that this supreme ground of certitude is rarely
trodden by multitudes of professing Christians. And so in days of
criticism and upheaval they are frightened out of their wits, and all but
out of their faith, and are nervous and anxious lest from this corner or
that corner or the other corner of the field of honest study and research,
there may come some sudden shock that will blow the whole fabric of their
belief to pieces. ‘He that believeth shall not make haste,’ and a man who
knows what Christ has done for him may calmly welcome the advent of any
new light, sure that nothing that can be established can touch that serene
centre in which his certitude sits enshrined and calm. Brother, do you
seek to be able to say, ‘I know in whom I have believed’?
II. Note The New Power Of Knowing God Given By The Son Who Is Come.
John says that one issue of that Incarnation and permanent presence of the
Lord Christ with us is that ‘He hath given us an understanding that we may
know Him that is true.’ Now, I do not suppose that he means thereby that
any absolutely new faculty is conferred upon men, but that new direction
is given to old ones, and dormant powers are awakened. Just as in the
miracles of our Lord the blind men had eyes, but it needed the touch of
His finger before the sight came to them, so man, that was made in the
image of God, which he has not altogether lost by any wandering, has
therein lying dormant and oppressed the capacity of knowing Him from whom
he comes, but he needs the couching hand of the Christ Himself, in order
that the blind eyes may be capable of seeing and the slumbering power of
perception be awakened. That gift of a clarified nature, a pure heart,
which is the condition, as the Master Himself said, of seeing God—that
gift is bestowed upon all who, trusting in the Incarnate Son, submit
themselves to His cleansing hand.
In the Incarnation Jesus Christ gave us God to see; by His present work in
our souls He gives us the power to see God. The knowledge of which my text
speaks is the knowledge of’ Him that is true,’ by which pregnant word the
Apostle means to contrast the Father whom Jesus Christ sets before us with
all men’s conceptions of a Divine nature; and to declare that whilst these
conceptions, in one way or another, fall beneath or diverge from reality
and fact, our God manifested to us by Jesus Christ is the only One whose
nature corresponds to the name, and who is essentially that which is
included in it.
But what I would dwell on especially for a moment is that this gift, thus
given by the Incarnate and present Christ, is not an intellectual gift
only, but something far deeper. Inasmuch as the Apostle declares that the
object of this knowledge is not a truth about God but God Himself, it
necessarily follows that the knowledge is such as we have of a person, and
not of a doctrine. Or, to put it into simpler words: to know about God is
one thing, and to know God is quite another. We may know all about the God
that Christ has revealed and yet not know Him in the very slightest
degree. To know about God is theology, to know Him is religion. You are
not a bit better, though you comprehend the whole sweep of Christ’s
revelation of God, if the God whom you in so far comprehend remain a
stranger to you. That we may know Him as a man knows his friend, and that
we may enter into relations of familiar acquaintance with Him, Jesus
Christ has come in the flesh, and this is the blessing that He gives
us—not an accurate theology, but a loving friendship. Has Christ done that
for you, my brother?
That knowledge, if it is real and living, will be progressive. More and
more we shall come to know. As we grow like Him we shall draw closer to
Him; as we draw closer to Him we shall grow like Him. So the Christian
life is destined to an endless progress, like one of those mathematical
spirals which ever climb, ever approximate to, but never reach, the summit
and the centre of the coil. So, if we have Christ for our medium both of
light and of sight, if He both gives us God to see and the power to see
Him, we shall begin a course which eternity itself will not witness
completed. We have landed on the shores of a mighty continent, and for
ever and for ever and ever we shall be pressing deeper and deeper into the
bosom of the land, and learning more and more of its wealth and
loveliness. ‘We know that we know Him that is true.’ If the Son of God has
come to us, we know God, and we know that we know Him. Do you?
III. Lastly, Note Here The Christian Indwelling Of God, Which Is
Possible Through The Son Who Is Come.
Friendship, familiar intercourse, intimate knowledge as of one with whom
we have long dwelt, instinctive sympathy of heart and mind, are not all
which, in John’s estimation, Jesus Christ brings to them that love Him,
and live in Him. For he adds, ‘We are in Him that is true.’ Of old Abraham
was called the Friend of God, but an auguster title belongs to us. ‘Know
ye not that ye are the temples of the living God, and that the Spirit of
God dwelleth in you?’ Oh! brethren, do not be tempted, by any dread of
mysticism, to deprive yourselves of that crown and summit of all the gifts
and blessings of the Gospel, but open your hearts and your minds to expect
and to believe in the actual abiding of the Divine nature in us.
Mysticism? Yes! And I do not know what religion is worth if there is not
mysticism in it, for the very heart of it seems to me to be the possible
interpenetration and union of man and God—not in the sense of obliterating
the personalities, but in the deep, wholesome sense in which Christ
Himself and all His apostles taught it, and in which every man who has had
any profound experience of the Christian life feels it to be true.
But notice the words of my text for a moment, where the Apostle goes on to
explain and define how ‘we are in Him that is true,’ because we are ‘in
His Son Jesus Christ.’ That carries us away back to ‘Abide in Me, and I in
you.’ John caught the whole strain of such thoughts from those sacred
words in the upper room. Christ in us is the deepest truth of
Christianity. And that God is in us, if Christ is in us, is the teaching
not only of my text but of the Lord Himself, when He said, ‘We will come
unto him and make our abode with him.’
And will not a man’ know’ that? Will it not be something deeper and better
than intellectual perception by which he is aware of the presence of the
Christ in his heart? Cannot we all have it if we will? There is only one
way to it, and that is by simple trust in Jesus Christ. Then, as I said,
the trust with which we began will not leave us, but will be glorified
into experience with which the trust will be enriched.
Brethren, the sum and substance of all that I have been trying to say is
just this: lay your poor personalities in Christ’s hands, and lean
yourselves upon Him; and there will come into your hearts a Divine power,
and, if you are faithful to your faith, you will know that it is not in
vain. There is a tremendous alternative, as I have already pointed out,
suggested by the sequence of thoughts in my text, ‘the whole world lieth
in the wicked one’ but ‘we are in Him that is true.’ We have to choose our
dwelling-place, whether we shall dwell in that dark region of evil, or
whether we shall dwell in God, and know that God is in us.
If we are true to the conditions, we shall receive the promises. And then
our Christian faith will not be dashed with hesitations, nor shall we be
afraid lest any new light shall eclipse the Sun of Righteousness, but, in
the midst of the babble of controversy, we may be content to be ignorant
of much, to hold much in suspense, to part with not a little, but yet with
quiet hearts to be sure of the one thing needful, and with unfaltering
tongues to proclaim ‘We know that the Son of God is come, and we are in
Him that is true.’
1 John 5:20–21
The
Last Words Of The Last Apostle
‘This is the true God, and eternal life. 21. Little children, keep
yourselves from idols. Amen.’—1 John 5:20–21.
So the Apostle ends his letter. These words are probably not only the
close of this epistle, but the last words, chronologically, of Scripture.
The old man gathers together his ebbing force to sum up his life’s work in
a sentence, which might be remembered though much else was forgotten. Last
words stick. Perhaps, too, some thought of future generations, to whom his
witness might come, passed across his mind. At all events, some thought
that we are here listening to the last words of the last Apostle may well
be in ours. You will observe that, in this final utterance, the Apostle
drops the triumphant’ we know,’ which we have found in previous sermons
reiterated with such emphasis. He does so, not because he doubted that all
his brethren would gladly attest and confirm what he was about to say, but
because it was fitting that his last words should be his very own; the
utterance of personal experience, and weighty with it, and with apostolic
authority. So he smelts all that he had learned from Christ, and had been
teaching for fifty years, into that one sentence. The feeble voice rings
out clear and strong; and then softens into tremulous tones of earnest
exhortation, and almost of entreaty. The dying light leaps up in one
bright flash: the lamp is broken, but the flash remains. And if we will
let it shine into our lives, we shall not walk in darkness, but have the
light of life.
I. Here We Have The Sum Of All That We Need To Know About God.
‘This is the true God.’ The first question is, What or whom does John mean
by ‘this’?
Grammatically, we may refer the word to the immediately preceding name,
Jesus Christ. But it is extremely improbable that the Apostle should so
suddenly shift his point of view, as he would do if, having just drawn a
clear distinction between ‘Him that is true,’ and the Christ who reveals
Him, he immediately proceeded to apply the former designation to Jesus
Christ Himself. It is far more in accordance with his teaching, and with
the whole scope of the passage, if by’ this’ we understand the Father of
whom he has just been speaking. It is no tautology that he reiterates in
this connection that He is ‘true.’ For he has separated now his own final
attestation from the common consciousness of the Christian community with
which he has previously been dealing. And when he says, ‘This is the true
God’ he means to say,’ This God of whom I have been affirming that Jesus
Christ is His sole Revealer, and of whom I have been declaring that
through Jesus Christ we may know Him and dwell abidingly in Him,’
‘this’—and none else—‘is the true God.’
Then the second question that I have to answer briefly is, What does John
mean by ‘true’? I had occasion, in a previous sermon on the foregoing
words, to point out that by that expression he means, whenever he uses it,
some person or thing whose nature and character correspond to his or its
name, and who is essentially and perfectly that which the name expresses.
If we take that as the signification of the word, we just come to this,
that the final assertion into which the old Apostle flings all his force,
and which he wishes to stand out prominent as his last word to his
brethren and Lo the world, is that the God revealed in Jesus Christ, and
with whom a man through Jesus Christ may have fellowship of knowledge and
friendship—that He and none but He answers to all that men mean when they
speak of a God; that He, if I might use such an expression, fully fills
the part.
Brethren, if we but think that, however it comes (no matter about that),
every man has in him a capacity of conceiving of a perfect Being, of
righteousness, power, purity, and love, and that all through the ages of
the world’s yearnings there has never been presented to it the realisation
of that dim conception, but that all idolatry, all worship, has failed in
bodying out a Person who would answer to the requirements of a man’s
spirit, then we come to the position in which these final words of the old
fisherman go down to a deeper depth than all the world’s wisdom, and carry
a message of consolation and a true gospel to be found nowhere besides.
Whatsoever embodiments men may have tried to give to their dim conception
of a God, these have been always limitations, and often corruptions, of
it. And to limit or to separate is, in this case, to destroy. No pantheon
can ever satisfy the soul of man who yearns for One Person in whom all
that he can dream of beauty, truth, goodness shall be ensphered. A galaxy
of stars, white as the whitest spot in the Milky Way, can never be a
substitute for the sun. ‘This is the true God’; and all others are
corruptions, or limitations, or divisions, of the indissoluble unity.
Then, are men to go for ever and ever with ‘the blank misgivings of a
creature, moving about in worlds not realised ‘? Is it true that I can
fancy some one far greater than is? Is it true that my imagination can
paint a nobler form than reality acknowledges? It is so, alas! unless we
take John’s swan-song and last testimony as true, and say:—This God,
manifest in Jesus Christ, on whose heart I can lay my head, and into whose
undying and unstained light I can gaze, and in whose righteousness I can
participate, this God is the real God; no dream, no projection from my own
nature, magnified and cleansed, and thrown up first from the earth that it
may come down from heaven, but the reality, of whom all human imaginations
are but the faint transcripts, though they be the faithful prophets.
For, consider what it is that the world owes to Jesus Christ, in its
knowledge of God. Remember that to us orphaned men He has come and said,
as none ever said, and showed as none ever showed: ‘Ye are not fatherless,
there is a Father in the heavens.’ Consider that to the world, sunk in
sense and flesh, and blotting its most radiant imaginations of the Divine
by some veil and hindrance, of corporeity and materialism, He comes, and
has said, ‘God is a Spirit.’ Consider that, taught of Him, this Apostle,
to whom was committed the great distinction of in monosyllables preaching
central truths, and in words that a child can apprehend, setting forth the
depths that eternity and angels cannot comprehend, has said, ‘God is
Light, and in Him is no darkness at all.’ And consider that he has set the
apex on the shining pyramid, and spoken the last word when he has told us,
‘God is Love.’ And put these four revelations together, the Father;
Spirit; unsullied Light; absolutely Love; and then let us bow down and
say, ‘Thou hast said the truth, O aged Seer. This is our God; we have
waited for Him, and He will save us. This—and none beside—is the true
God.’
I know not what the modern world is to do for a God if it drifts away from
Jesus Christ and His revelations. I know that it is always a dangerous way
of arguing to try to force people upon alternatives, one of which is so
repellent as to compel them to cling to the other. But it does seem to me
that the whole progress of modern thought, with the advancement of modern
physical science, and other branches of knowledge which perhaps are not
yet to be called science, are all steadily converging on forcing us to
this choice —will you have God in Christ, or, will you wander about in a
Godless world, and for your highest certitude have to say, ‘Perhaps ‘?
‘This is the true God,’ and if we go away from Him I do not know where we
are to go.
II. Here We Have The Sum Of His Gifts To Us.
‘This is the true God, and eternal life.’ Now, let us distinctly and
emphatically put first that what is here declared is primarily something
about God, and not about His gift to men; and that the two clauses, ‘the
true God,’ and ‘eternal life,’ stand in precisely the same relation to the
preceding words, ‘This is.’ That is to say, the revelation which John
would lay upon our hearts, that from it there may spring up in them a
wondrous hope, is that, in His own essential self, the God revealed in
Jesus Christ, and brought into living fellowship with us by Him, is
‘eternal life.’ By ‘eternal life’ he means something a great deal more
august than endless existence. He means a life which not only is not ended
by time, but which is above time, and not subject to its conditions at
all. Eternity is not time spun out for ever. And so we are not lifted up
into a region where there is little light, but where the very darkness is
light, just as the curtain was the picture, in the old story of the
painter.
That seems to part us utterly from God. He is ‘eternal life’; then, we
poor creatures down here, whose being is all ‘cribbed, cabined, and
confined’ by succession, and duration, and the partitions of time, what
can we have in common with Him? John answers for us. For, remember that in
the earlier part of this epistle he writes that ‘the life was manifested,
and we shew unto you that eternal life which was with the Father, and was
manifested unto us,’ and ‘we declare it unto you; that ye also may have
fellowship with us; and our fellowship is with the Father and with His
Son.’ So, then, strange as it is, and beyond our thoughts as it is, there
may pass into creatures that very eternal life which is in God, and was
manifested in Jesus. We have to think of Him because we know Him to be
love, as in essence self-communicating, and whatsoever a creature can
receive, a loving Father, the true God, will surely give.
But we are not left to wander about in regions of mysticism and darkness.
For we know this, that however strange and difficult the thought of
eternal life as possessed by a creature may be, to give it was the very
purpose for which Jesus Christ came on earth. ‘I am that Bread of Life.’
‘I am come that they might have life, and have it more abundantly.’ And we
are not left to grope in doubt as to what that eternal life consists in;
for He has said: ‘This is life eternal, that they might know Thee, the
only true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent.’ Nor are we left in
any more doubt as to that bond by which the whole fulness of this Divine
gift may flow into a man’s spirit. For over and over again the Master
Himself has declared, ‘He that believeth hath everlasting life,’
Thus, then, there is a life which belongs to God on His throne, a life
lifted above the limitations of time, a life communicated by Jesus Christ,
as the waters of some land-locked lake may flow down through a sparkling
river, a life which consists in fellowship with God, a life which may be,
and is, ours, on the simple condition of trusting Him who gives it, and a
life which, eternal as it is, and destined to a glory all undreamed of, in
that future beyond the grave, is now the possession of every man that puts
forth the faith which is its condition. ‘He that believeth hath’—not shall
have, in some distant future, but has to-day—‘everlasting life,’ verily
here and now. And so John lays this upon our hearts, as the ripe fruit of
all his experience, and the meaning of all his message to the world, that
God revealed in Christ ‘is the true God,’ and as Himself the possessor, is
the source for us all, of life eternal.
III. Lastly, We Have Here The Consequent Sum Of Christian Effort.
‘Little children, keep yourselves from idols,’ seeing that ‘this is the
true God,’ the only One that answers to your requirements, and will
satisfy your desires. Do not go rushing to these shrines of false deities
that crowd every corner of Ephesus—ay! and every corner of Manchester. For
what does John mean by an idol? Does he mean that barbarous figure of
Diana that stood in the great temple, hideous and monstrous? No! he means
anything, or any person, that comes into the heart and takes the place
which ought to be filled by God, and by Him only. What I prize most, what
I trust most utterly, what I should be most forlorn if I lost; what is the
working aim of my life, and the hunger of my heart—that is my idol. We all
know that.
Is the exhortation not needed, my brother? In Ephesus it was hard to have
nothing to do with heathenism. In that ancient world their religion,
though it was a superficial thing, was intertwined with daily life in a
fashion that puts us to shame. Every meal had its libation, and almost
every act was knit by some ceremony or other to a god. So that Christian
men and women had almost to go out of the world, in order to be free from
complicity in the all-pervading idol-worship. Now, although the form has
changed, and the fascinations of old idolatry belong only to a certain
stage in the world’s culture and history, the temptation to idolatry
remains just as subtle, just as all-pervasive, and the yielding to it just
as absurd. You and I call ourselves Christians. We say we believe that
there is nothing else, and nobody else, in the whole sweep of the universe
that can satisfy our hearts, or be what our imagination can conceive, but
God only. Having said that on the Sunday, what about Monday?
They have forsaken Me, the fountain of living water, and hewed to
themselves broken cisterns that can hold no water.’ ‘Little children ’—for
we are scarcely more mature than that—‘little children, keep yourselves
from idols.’
And how is it to be done? ‘Keep yourselves.’ Then you can do it, and you
have to make a dead lift of effort, or be sure of this—that the subtle
seduction will slide into your heart, and before you know it, you will be
out of God’s sanctuary, and grovelling in Diana’s temple. But it is not
only our own effort that is needed, for just a sentence or two before, the
Apostle had said: ‘He that is born of God’—that is, Christ ‘keepeth us.’
So our keeping of ourselves is essentially our letting Him keep us. Stay
inside the walls of the citadel, and you need not be afraid of the
besiegers; go outside by letting your faith flag, and you will be captured
or killed. Keep yourselves by clinging ‘to Him that is able to keep you
from falling, and to present you faultless.’ Make experience by fellowship
with Him who is the only true God, and able to satisfy your whole nature,
mind, heart, will, and these false deities, the whole rabble of them, will
have no power to tempt you to bow the knee.
Brethren! here is the sum of the whole matter. There is one truth on which
we can stay our hearts, one God in whom we can utterly trust, the God
revealed in Jesus Christ. If we do not see Him in Christ, we shall not see
Him at all, but wander about all our days in a world empty of solid
reality. There is one gift which will satisfy all our needs, the gift of
eternal life in Jesus Christ. There is one practical injunction which will
save us from many a heartache, and which our weakness can never afford to
neglect, and that is to keep ourselves from all false worship. These
golden words of my text, in their simplicity, in their depth, in their
certainty, in their comprehensiveness, are worthy to be the last words of
Revelation; and to stand to all the world, through all ages, as the
shining apex, or the solid foundation, or the central core of
Christianity. ‘This ’—this, and none else—‘is the true God and eternal
life. Little children, keep yourselves from idols.’