
GIVING AND ASKING
‘Moreover, brethren, we do you to wit
of the grace of God Bestowed on the churches of Macedonia...’ — 2
Corinthians 8:1-12.
A COLLECTION from Gentile churches
for their poor brethren in Jerusalem occupied much of Paul’s time and
efforts before his last visit to that city. Many events, which have filled
the world with noise and been written at length in histories, were less
significant than that first outcome of the unifying spirit of common
faith. It was a making visible of the grand thought, ‘Ye are all one in
Christ Jesus.’ Practical help, prompted by a deep-lying sense of unity
which overleaped gulfs of separation in race, language, and social
conditions, was a unique novelty. It was the first pulsation of that
spirit of Christian liberality which has steadily grown in force and
.sweep ever since. Foolish people gibe at some of its manifestations.
Wiser ones regard its existence as not the least of the marks of the
divine origin of Christianity.
This passage is a striking example
of the inimitable delicacy of the Apostle. His words are full of what we
should call tact, if it were not manifestly the spontaneous utterance of
right feeling. They are a perfect model of the true
way to appeal for money, and set forth also the true spirit in which such
appeals should be made.
In verses 1 to 5, Paul seeks to
stimulate the liberality of the Corinthians by recounting that of the
Macedonian churches. His sketch draws in outline the picture of what all
Christian money-giving should be. .We note first the designation of the
Macedonian Christians’ beneficence as ‘a grace’ given by God to them. It
is twice called so (vers. 1, 4), and the same name is applied in regard to
the Corinthians’ giving (vers. 6, 7). That is the right way to look at
money contributions. The opportunity to give them, and the inclination to
do so, are God’s gifts. How many of us think that calls for service or
money are troublesome obligations, to be got out of as easily as possible!
A true Christian will be thankful, as for a love token from God, for every
occasion of giving to Him. It would be a sharp test for many of us to ask
ourselves whether we can say, ‘To me... is this grace given,’ that I
should part with my money for Christ’s sake.
Note, further, the lovely picture of
these Macedonian givers. They were plunged in sorrows and troubles, but
these did not dry their fountains of sympathy. Nothing is apt to be more
selfish than grief; and if we have tears to spare for others, when they
are flowing bitterly for ourselves, we have graduated well in Christ’s
school. Paul calls the Macedonians’ troubles ‘proof of their affliction,’
meaning that it constituted a proof of their Christian character; that is,
by the manner in which it was borne; and in it they had still ‘abundance
of joy,’ for the paradox of the Christian life is that it admits of the
co-existence of grief and gladness.
Again, Christian giving gives from
scanty stores. ‘Deep poverty’ is no excuse for not giving, and will Be no
hindrance to a willing heart. ‘I cannot afford it’ is sometimes a genuine
valid reason, But oftener an insincere plea. Why are subscriptions for
religious purposes the first expenditure to Be reduced in Bad times?
Further, Christian giving gives up
to the very edge of ability, and sometimes goes Beyond the limits of
so-called prudence. In all regions ‘power to its last particle is duty,’
and unless power is strained it is not fully exercised. It is in trying to
do what we cannot do that we do Best what we can do. He who keeps well
within the limits of his supposed ability will probably not do half as
much as he could. While there is a limit behind which generosity even for
Christ may Become dishonesty or disregard of other equally sacred claims,
there is little danger of modern
Christians transgressing that limit, and they need the stimulus to do a
little more than they think they can do, rather than to listen to
cold-Blooded prudence.
Further, Christian giving does not
wait to be asked, but takes the opportunity to give as itself ‘grace,’ and
presses its benefactions. It is an unwonted experience for a collector of
subscriptions to be besought to take them ‘with much entreaty,’ but it
would not Be so anomalous if Christian people understood their privileges.
Further, Christian giving begins
with the surrender of self to Christ, from which necessarily follows the
glad offering of wealth. These Macedonians did more than Paul had hoped,
and the explanation of the unexpected largeness of their contributions was
their yielding of themselves to Jesus. That is the deepest source of all
true liberality. If a man feels that he does not own himself, much less
will he feel that his goods are his own. A slave’s owner possesses the
slave’s bit of garden ground, his hut, and its furniture. If I belong to
Christ, to whom does my money Belong? But the consciousness that my goods
are not mine, But Christ’s, is not to remain a mere sentiment. It can
receive practical embodiment By my giving them to Christ’s
representatives. The way for the Macedonians to show that they regarded
their goods as Christ’s, was to give them to Paul for Christ’s poor
saints. Jesus has His representatives still, and it is useless for people
to talk or sing about Belonging to Him, unless they verify their words by
deeds.
Verse 6 tells the Corinthians that
the success of the collection in Macedonia had induced Paul to send Titus
to Corinth to promote it there. He ‘had previously visited it on the same
errand (chap. 12:14), and now is coming to complete ‘this grace.’ The rest
of the passage is Paul’s appeal to the Corinthians for their help in the
matter, and certainly never was such an appeal made in a more dignified,
noble, and lofty tone. He has been dilating on the liberality of others,
and thereby sanctioning the stimulating of Christian liberality, in the
same way as other graces may legitimately Be stimulated, By example. That
is delicate ground to tread on, and needs caution if it is not to
degenerate into an appeal to rivalry, as it too often does, But in itself
is perfectly legitimate and wholesome. But, passing from that incitement,
Paul rests his plea on deeper grounds.
First, Christian liberality is
essential to the completeness of Christian character. Paul’s praise in
verse? is not mere flattery, nor meant to put the
Corinthians into good humour. He will have enough to say hereafter about
scandals and faults, but now he gives them credit for all the good he knew
to be in them. Faith comes first, as always. It is the root of every
Christian excellence. Then follow two graces, eminently characteristic of
a Greek church, and apt to run to seed in it — utterance and knowledge.
Then two more, both of a more emotional character, earnestness and love,
especially to Paul as Christ’s servant. But all these fair attributes
lacked completeness without the crowning grace of liberality’. It is the
crowning grace, because it is the practical manifestation of the highest
excellences. It is the result of sympathy, of unselfishness, of contact
with Christ, of drinking in of His spirit, Love is best. Utterance and
knowledge and earnestness are poor beside it. This grace is like the
diamond which clasps a necklace of jewels.
Christian giving does not need to be
commanded. ‘I speak not by way of commandment.’ That is poor virtue which
only obeys a precept. Gifts given because it is duty to give them are not
really gifts, but taxes. They leave no sweet savour on the hand that
bestows, and bring none to that which receives. ‘I call you not servants,
but friends.’ The region in which Christian liberality moves is high above
the realm of law and its correlative, obligation.
Further, Christian liberality
springs spontaneously from conscious possession of Christ’s riches. We
cannot here enter on the mysteries of Christ’s emptying Himself of His
riches of glory. We can but touch the stupendous fact, remembering that
the place whereon we stand is holy ground. Who can measure the nature and
depth of that self-denuding of the glory which He had with the Father
before the world was? But, thank God, we do not need to measure it, in
order to feel the solemn, blessed force of the appeal which it makes to
us. Adoring wonder and gratitude, unfaltering trust and absolute
self-surrender to a love so self-sacrificing, must ever follow the belief
of that mystery of Divine mercy, the incarnation and sacrifice of the
eternal Son.
But Paul would have us remember that
the same mighty act of stooping love, which is the foundation of all our
hope, is to be the pattern for all our conduct. Even in His divinest and
most mysterious act, Christ is our example. A dewdrop is rounded by the
same laws which shape the planetary spheres or the sun himself; and
Christians but half trust Christ if they do not imitate Him. What
selfishness in enjoyment of our ‘own things’ could live in us if we duly
brought ourselves under the influence of that
example? How miserably poor and vulgar the appeals by which money is
sometimes drawn from grudging owners and tight-buttoned pockets, sound
beside that heart-searching and heart-moving one, ‘Ye know the grace of
our Lord Jesus Christ!’
Further, Christian liberality will
not go off in good intentions and benevolent sentiments. The Corinthians
were ready with their ‘willing’ on Titus’s previous visit. Now Paul
desires them to put their good feelings into concrete shape. There is
plenty of benevolence that never gets to be beneficence. The advice here
has a very wide application: ‘As there was the readiness to will, so there
may be the completion also.’ We all know where the road leads that is
paved with good intentions.
Further, Christian liberality is
accepted and rewarded according to willingness, if that is carried into
act according to ability. While the mere wish to help is not enough, it is
the vital element in the act which flows from it; and there may be more of
it in the widow’s mite than in the rich man’s large donation — or there
may be less. The conditions of acceptable offerings are twofold — first,
readiness, glad willingness to give, as opposed to closed hearts or
grudging bestowals; and, second, that willingness embodied in the largest
gift possible. The absence of either vitiates all The presence of both
gives trifles a place in God’s storehouse of precious things. A father is
glad when his child brings him some utterly valueless present, not because
he must, but because he loves; and many a parent has such laid away in
sacred repositories. God knows how to take gifts from His children, not
less well than we who are evil know how to do it.
But the gracious saying of our
passage has a solemn side; for if only gifts ‘according as a man hath’ are
accepted, what becomes of the many which fall far short of our ability,
and are really given, not because we have the willing mind, but because we
could not get out of the unwelcome necessity to part with a miserably
inadequate percentage of our possessions. Is God likely to be satisfied
with the small dividends which we offer as composition for our great debt?

RICH YET POOR
‘For ye know the grace of our Lord
Jesus Christ, that, though He was rich yet for your sakes He became poor,
that ye through His poverty might be rich.’ —2 Corinthians 8:9.
THE Apostle has been speaking about
a matter which, to us, seems very small, but to him was very great, viz.,
a gathering of pecuniary help from the Gentile churches for the poor
church in Jerusalem. Large issues, in his estimation, attended that
exhibition of Christian unity, and, be it great or small, he applies the
highest of all motives to this matter. ‘For ye know the grace of the Lord
Jesus Christ, that though He was rich yet for your sakes He became poor.’
The trivial things of life are to be guided and shaped by reference to the
highest of all things, the example of Jesus Christ; and that in the whole
depth of His humiliation, and even in regard to His cross and passion. We
have here set forth, as the pattern to which the Christian life is to be
conformed, the deepest conception of what our Lord’s career on earth was.
The whole Christian Church is about
to celebrate the nativity of our Lord at this time. This text gives us the
true point of view from which to regard it. We have here the work of
Christ in its deepest motive, ‘The grace of our Lord Jesus.’ We have it in
its transcendent self-impoverishment, ‘Though He was rich, yet for our
sakes He became poor.’ We have it in its highest issue, ‘That ye through
His poverty might become rich, Let us look at those points.
I. Here we have the deepest motive
which underlies the whole work of Christ, unveiled to us.
‘Ye know the grace of our Lord.
Jesus Christ.’ Every word here is significant. It is very unusual in the
New Testament to find that expression ‘grace’ applied to Jesus Christ.
Except in the familiar benediction, I think there are only one or two
instances of such a collocation of words. It is ‘the grace of God’ which,
throughout the New Testament, is the prevailing expression. But here
‘grace is attributed to Jesus’; that is to say, the love of the Divine
heart is, without qualification or hesitation, ascribed to Him. And what
do we mean by grace? We mean love in exercise to inferiors. It is infinite
condescension in Jesus to love. His love stoops when it embraces us. Very
significant, therefore, is the employment here of the solemn full
title, ‘the Lord Jesus Christ,’ which enhances the condescension by making
prominent the height from which it bent. The ‘grace’ is all the more
wonderful because of the majesty and sovereignty, to say the least of it,
which are expressed in that title, the Lord. The highest stoops and stands
upon the level of the lowest. ‘Grace’ is love that expresses itself to
those who deserve something else. And the deepest motive, which is the
very key to the whole phenomena of the life of Jesus Christ, is that it is
all the exhibition, as it is the consequence, of a love that, stooping,
forgives. ‘Grace’ is love that, stooping and forgiving, communicates its
whole self to unworthy and transgressing recipients. And the key to the
life of Jesus is that we have set forth in its operation a love which is
not content to speak only the ordinary language of human affection, or to
do its ordinary deeds, but is self-impelled to impart what transcends all
other gifts of human tenderness, and to give its very self. And so a love
that condescends, a love that passes by unworthiness, is turned away by no
sin, is unmoved to any kind of anger, and never allows its cheek to flush.
or its heart to beat faster, because of any provocation. and a love that
is content with nothing short of entire surrender and self-impartation
underlies all that precious life from Bethlehem to Calvary.
But there is another word in our
text that may well be here taken into consideration. ‘For your sakes’ says
the Apostle to that Corinthian church, made up of people, not one of whom
had ever seen or been seen by Jesus. And yet the regard to them was part
of the motive that moved the Lord to His life, and His death. That is to
say, to generalise the thought, this grace, thus stooping and forgiving
and self-imparting, is a love that gathers into its embrace and to its
heart all mankind; and is universal because it is individualising. Just as
each planet in the heavens, and each tiny plant upon the earth, are
embraced by, and separately receive, the benediction of that
all-encompassing arch of the heaven, so that grace enfolds all, Because it
takes account of each, Whilst it is love for a sinful world, every soul of
us may say: ‘He loved me, and’ — therefore — ‘gave Himself for me.’ Unless
we see beneath the sweet story of the earthly life this deep-lying source
of it all, we fail to understand that life itself. We may bring criticism
to bear upon it; we may apprehend it in diverse affecting, elevating,
educating aspects; but, oh ! brethren, we miss the blazing centre of the
light, the warm heart of the fire, unless we see pulsating through all the
individual facts of the life this one, all-shaping, all-vitalising motive;
the grace — the stooping, the pardoning, the self-communicating, the
individualising, and the universal love of Jesus Christ.
So then, we have here set before us the work of Christ in its —
II. Most mysterious and unique
self-impoverishment.
‘He was... He became,’ there is one
strange contrast. ‘He was rich... He became poor,’ there is another. ‘He
was... He became.’ What does that say? Well, it says that if you want to
understand Bethlehem, you must go back to a time Before Bethlehem. The
meaning of Christ’s birth is only understood when we turn to that
Evangelist who does not narrate it. For the meaning of it is here; ‘the
Word Became flesh, and dwelt among us.’ The surface of the fact is the
smallest part of the fact. They say that there is seven times as much of
an iceberg under water as there is above the surface. And the deepest and
most important fact about the nativity of our Lord is that it was not only
the birth of an Infant, but the Incarnation of the Word. ‘He was... He
became’. We have to travel back and recognise that that life did not Begin
in the manger. We have to travel back and recognise the mystery of
godliness, God manifest in the flesh.
And these two Words ‘He was... He
became,’ imply another thing, and that is, that Jesus Christ who died
because He chose, was not passive in His being born, But as at the end of
His earthly life, so at its beginning exercised His volition, and was born
because He willed, and willed because of ‘the grace of our Lord Jesus.’
Now in this connection it is very
remarkable, and well worth our pondering, that throughout the whole of the
Gospels, when Jesus speaks of His coming into the world, He never uses the
word ‘born’ but once, and that was before the Roman governor, who would
not have understood or cared for anything further, to whom He did say, ‘To
this end was I born.’ But even when speaking to him His consciousness that
that word did not express the whole truth was so strong that He could not
help adding — though He knew that the hard Roman procurator would pay no
attention to the apparent tautology — the expression which more truly
corresponded to the fact, ‘and for this cause came I into the world.’ The
two phrases are not parallel They are by no means synonymous. One
expresses the outward fact; the other expresses that which underlay it.
‘To this end was I born.’ Yes! ‘And for this cause came I.’ He Himself put
it still more definitely when He said, ‘I came forth from the Father, and
am come into the world. Again, I leave the world and go unto the Father.’
So the two extremities of
the earthly manifestation are neither of them ends; but before the one,
and behind the other, there stretches an identity or oneness of Being and
condition. The one as the other, the birth and the death, may be regarded
as, in deepest reality, not only what He passively endured, but what He
actively did. He was born, and He died, that in all points He might be
‘like unto His brethren.’ He ‘came’ into the world, and He ‘went’ to the
Father. The end circled round to the beginning, and in both He acted
because He chose, and chose because He loved.
So much, then, lies in the one of
these two antitheses of my text; and the other is no less profound and
significant. ‘He was rich; He became poor.’ In this connection ‘rich’ can
only mean possessed of the Divine fulness and independence; and ‘poor’ can
only mean possessed of human infirmity, dependence, and emptiness. And so
to Jesus of Nazareth, to be born was impoverishment. If there is nothing
more in His birth than in the birth of each of us, the words are
grotesquely inappropriate to the facts of the ease. For as between
nothingness, which is the alternative, and the possession of conscious
being, there is surely a contrast the very reverse of that expressed here.
For us, to be born is to be endowed with capacities, with the wealth of
intelligent, responsible, voluntary being; but to Jesus Christ, if we
accept the New Testament teaching, to be born was a step, an infinite
step, downwards, and He, alone of all men, might have been ‘ashamed to
call men brethren.’ But this denudation of Himself, into the particulars
of which I do not care to enter now, was the result of that stooping grace
which’ counted it not a thing to be clutched hold of, to be equal with
God; but He made Himself of no reputation, and was found in fashion as a
man, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the Cross.’
And so, dear friends, we know the
measure of the stooping love of Jesus only when we read the history by the
light of this thought, that ‘though He was rich’ with all the fulness of
that eternal Word which was ‘in the beginning with God,’ ‘He Became poor,
’ with the poverty, the infirmity, the liability to temptation, the
weakness, that attach to humanity; ‘and was found in all points like unto
His brethren,’ that
He might be able to help and succour them all The last thing here is —
III. The work of Christ set forth in
its highest issue.
‘That we through His poverty might become rich. Of course, the
antithetical expressions must be taken to be used in the same sense, and
with the same width of application, in both of the clauses. And if so,
just think reverently, wonderingly, thankfully, of the infinite vista of
glorious possibility that is open to us here. Christ was rich in the
possession of that Divine glory which He had with the Father before the
world was. ‘He became poor,’ in assuming the weakness of the manhood that
you and I carry, that we, in the human poverty which is like His poverty,
may become rich with wealth that is like His riches, and that as He
stooped to earth veiling the Divine with the human, we may rise to heaven,
clothing the human with the Divine.
For surely there is nothing more
plainly taught in Scripture, and I am bold to say nothing to which any
deep and vital Christian experience even here gives more surely an
anticipatory confirmation, than the fact that Christ became like unto us,
that each of us may become like unto Him. The divine and the human natures
are similar, and the fact of the Incarnation, on the one hand, and of
man’s glorification by possession of the divine nature on the other,
equally rest upon that fundamental resemblance between the divine nature
and the human nature which God has made in His own image. If that which in
each of us is unlike God is cleared away, as it can be cleared away,
through faith in that dear Lord, then the likeness, as a matter of course,
comes into force.
The law of all elevation is that
whosoever desires to lift must stoop; and the end of all stooping is to
lift the lowly to the place from which the love hath bent itself. And this
is at once the law for the Incarnation of the Christ, and for the
elevation of the Christian. ‘We shall be like Him for we shall see Him as
He is.’ And the great love, the stooping, forgiving, self-communicating
love, doth not reach its ultimate issue, nor effect fully the purposes to
which it ever is tending, unless and until all who have received it are
‘changed from glory to glory even into the image of the Lord.’ We do not
understand Jesus, His cradle, or His Cross, unless on the one hand we see
in them His emptying Himself that He might fill us, and, on the other
hand, see, as the only result which warrants them and satisfies Him, our
complete conformity to His image, and our participation in that glory
which He has at the right hand of God. That is the prospect for humanity,
and it is possible for each of us.
I do not dwell upon other aspects of this great self-emptying of our
Lord’s, such as the revelation in it to us of the very heart of God, and
of the divinest thing in the divine nature, which is love, or such as the
sympathy which is made possible thereby to Him, and which is not only the
pity of a God, but the compassion of a Brother. Nor do I touch upon many
other aspects which are full of strengthening and teaching. That grand
thought that Jesus has shared our human poverty that we may share His
divine riches is the very apex of the New Testament teaching, and of the
Christian hope. We have within us, notwithstanding all our transgressions,
what the old divines used to call a ‘deiform nature,’ capable of being
lifted up into the participation of divinity, capable of being cleansed
from all the spots and stains which make us so unlike Him in whose
likeness we were made.
Brethren, let us not forget that
this stooping, and pardoning, and self-imparting love, has for its main
instrument to appeal to our hearts, not the cradle hut the Cross. We are
being told by many people to-day that the centre of Christianity lies in
the thought of an Incarnation. Yes. But our Lord Himself has told us what
that was for.
‘The Son of Man came not to be
ministered unto, but to minister, and to give His life a ransom for many.’
It is only when we look to that Lord in His death, and see there the very
lowest point to which He stooped, and the supreme manifestation of His
grace, that we shall be drawn to yield our hearts and lives to Him in
thankfulness, in trust, and in imitation: and shall set Him before us as
the pattern for our conduct, as well as the Object of our trust.
Brethren, my text was spoken
originally as presenting the motive and the example for a little piece of
pecuniary liability. Do you take the cradle and the Cross as the law of
your lives? For depend upon it, the same necessity which obliged Jesus to
come down to our level, if He would lift us to His; to live our life and
die our death, if He would make us partakers of His immortal life, and
deliver us from death; makes it absolutely necessary that if we are to
live for anything nobler than our own poor, transitory self-aggrandisement,
we too must learn to stoop to forgive, to impart ourselves, and must die
by self-surrender and sacrifice, if we are ever to communicate any life,
or good of life, to others. He has loved us, and given Himself for us. He
has set us therein an example which He commends to us By His own word when
He tells us that ‘if a corn of wheat’ is to bring forth ‘much fruit’ it
must die, else it ‘abideth alone.’ Unless we die, we
never truly live; unless we die to ourselves for others, and like Jesus,
we live alone in the solitude of a self-enclosed self-regard. So living,
we are dead whilst we live.

WILLING AND NOT
DOING
‘Now therefore perform the doing of it;
that as there was a readiness to win so there may be a performance also.’
— 2 Corinthians 8:11.
THE Revised Version reads: ‘But now
complete the doing also; that as there was the readiness to will, so there
may be the completion also out of your ability.’ A collection of money for
the almost pauper church at Jerusalem bulked very largely in the Apostle’s
mind at the date of the writing of the two letters to the Corinthian
church. We learn that that church had been the first to agree to the
project, and then had very distinctly hung back from implementing its
promises and fulfilling its good intentions. So the Apostle, in the
chapter from which my text is taken, with wonderful delicacy, dignity, and
profundity, sets forth the true principle, not only of Christian giving,
but of Christian asking. The text advises that the gushing sentiments of
brotherly sympathy and liberality which had inspired the Corinthians a
year ago should now bear some fruit in action. So Paul is going to send
Titus, his right-hand man at the time, to hurry up and finish off the
collection and have done with it. The text is in effect the message which
Titus was to carry; but it has a far wider application than that. It is a
needful advice for us all about a great many other things: ‘As there was a
readiness to will, so let there be a performance also.’
Resolutions, noble and good and
Christlike, have a strange knack of cheating the people who make them. So
we all need the exhortation not to be befooled by fancying that we have
done, when we have only willed. Of course we shall not do unless we will
But there is a wide gap, as our experience witnesses, between the two
things. We all know what place it is to which, according to the old
proverb, the road is paved with good intentions; and the only way to pull
up that paving is to take Paul’s advice here and always, and immediately
to put into action the resolves of our hearts. Now I desire to say two or
three very plain and simple things about this matter.
I. I would have you consider the
necessity of this commandment.
Consider that the fault here warned
against is a universal one. What different men we should be if our
resolutions had fruited in conduct! In all regions of life that is true,
but most emphatically is it true in regard to religion. The damning
tragedy of many lives, and I dare say of those of
some of my hearers, is that men have over and over again determined that
they would be Christians, and they are not Christians yet; just because
they have let ‘the native hue of resolution be sicklied over’ by some
paleness or other, and so have resolved and resolved and resolved till
every nerve of action is rotted away, and they will die unchristian. I
dare say that there are men or women listening to me now, perhaps with
grey hairs upon them, who can remember times, in the springtide of their
youth, when they said, ‘I will give my heart to Jesus Christ, and set my
faith upon Him’; and they have not done it yet. Now, therefore, ‘as there
was a readiness to will, let there be also the performance.’
But it is not only in regard to that
most important of all resolves that I wish to say a word. All Christians,
I am sure, know what it is, over and over again, to have had stirrings in
their hearts which they have been able to consolidate into determination,
but have not been able to carry into act. ‘The children have come to the
birth, and there is not strength to bring them forth.’ That is true about
all of us, more or less, and it is very solemnly true of a great many of
us professing Christians. We have tried to cure — we have determined that
we will cure — manifest and flagrant defects or faults in our Christian
life. We have resolved, and some nipping frost has come, and the blossoms
have dropped on the grass before they have ever set into fruit. I know
that is so about you, because I know that it is so about myself. And
therefore, dear brethren, I appeal to you, and ask you whether the
exhortation of my text has not a sharp point for every one of us — whether
the universality of this defect does not demand that we all should gravely
consider the exhortation here before us?
Then, again, let me remind you how
this injunction is borne in upon us by the consideration of the strength
of the opposition with which we have always to contend, in every honest
attempt to bring to act Our best resolutions. Did you ever try to cure
some little habit, some mere trifle, a trick of manner or twist of the
finger, or some attitude or tone that might be ugly and awkward, and that
people told you that it would be better to get rid of? You know how hard
it is. There is always a tremendous gulf between the ideal and its
realisation in life. As long as we are moving in vacuo we move without any
friction or difficulty; but as soon as we come out into a world where
there are an atmosphere and opposing forces, then friction comes in, and
speed diminishes: and we never become what we aim to be. We begin with
grand purposes, and we end with very poor results. We all start, in our
early days, with the notion that our lives are going to be
radiant and beautiful, and an unlike what the limitations of power and the
antagonisms that we have to meet make of them at last. The tree of our
life’s doings has to grow, like those contorted pines on the slopes of the
Alps, in many storms, with heavy weights of snow on its branches, and
beaten about by tempests from every quarter of the heavens; and so it gets
gnarled and knotted and very unlike the symmetrical Beauty that we dreamed
would adorn it, We begin with saying: ‘Come! Let us build a tower whose
top shall reach to heaven’; and we are contented at last, if we have put
up some little tumble-down shed where we can get shelter for our heads
from the blast.
And the difficulty in bringing into
action our best selves besets us in the matter of translating our
resolutions into practice. What are arrayed against it? A feeble will,
enslaved too often by passions and flesh and habits, and all about us lie
obstacles to our carrying into action our conscientious convictions, our
deepest resolutions; obstacles to our being true to our true selves; to
which obstacles, alas, far too many of us habitually, and all of us
occasionally, succumb. That being the case, do not we all need to ponder
in our deepest hearts, and to pray for grace to make the motto of our
lives, ‘As there was a readiness to will, let there be a performance’?
II. Consider the importance of this
counsel
That is borne in upon mind and
conscience by looking at the disastrous effects of letting resolutions
remain sterile. Consider how apt we are to deceive ourselves with
unfulfilled purposes. The quick response which an easily-moved nature may
make to some appeal of noble thought or lofty principle is mistaken for
action, and we are tempted to think that willing is almost as good as if
we had done what we half resolved on. And there is a kind of glow of
satisfaction that comes when such a man thinks, ‘I have done well in that
I have determined.’ The Devil will let you resolve as much as you like-the
more the better; only the more easily you resolve, the more certainly he
will block the realisation. Let us take care of that seducing temptation
which is apt to lead us all to plume ourselves on good resolutions, and to
fancy that they are almost equivalent to their own fulfilment. Cheques are
all very well if there be bullion in the bank cellars to pay them with
when they fall due, but if that be not so, then the issuing of them is
crime and fraud. Our resolutions, made and forgotten as so many of our
good resolutions are, are very little better.
Note, too, how rapidly the habit of substituting lightly-made resolutions
for seriously-endeavoured acts grows.
And mark, further, how miserable and
debilitating it is to carry the dead weight of such unaccomplished
intentions.
Nothing so certainly weakens a man
as a multitude of resolves that he knows he has never fulfilled. They
,weaken his will, burden his conscience, stand in the way of his hopes,
make him feel as if the entail of evil was too firm and strong to be ever
broken. ‘O wretched man that I am!’ said one who had made experience of
what it was to will what was good, and not to find how to perform,’ who
shall deliver me from the body of this death?’ It is an awful thing to
have to carry a corpse about on your back. And that was what Paul thought
the man did who loaded his own shoulders with abortive resolutions, that
perished in the birth, and never grew up to maturity. Weak and miserable
is always the man who is swift to resolve and slow to carry out his
resolutions.
III. And now let me say a word
before I close about how this universal and grave disease is to be coped
with.
Well, I should say to begin with,
let us take very soberly and continually into our consciousness the
recognition of the fact that the disease is there. And then may I say, let
us be rather slower to resolve than we often are. ‘ Better is it that thou
shouldest not vow than that thou shouldest vow and not pay.’ The man who
has never had the determination to give up some criminal indulgence-say,
drink — is possibly less criminal, and certainly less weak, than the man
who, when his head aches, and the consequences of his self-indulgence are
vividly realised by him, makes up his mind to be a teetotaller, and soon
stumbles into the first dram-shop that is open, and then reels out a
drunkard. Do not vow until you have made up your minds to pay. Remember
that it is a solemn act to determine anything, especially anything bearing
on moral and religious life; and that you had far better keep your will in
suspense than spring to the resolution with thoughtless levity and leave
it with the same.
Further, the habit of promptly
carrying out our resolves is one that, like all other habits, can be
cultivated. And we can cultivate it in little things, in the smallest
trifles of daily life, which by their myriads make up life itself, in
order that it may be a fixed custom of our minds when great resolves have
to be made. The man who has trained himself day in and day out, in regard
to the insignificances of daily life, to let act follow resolve as the
thunder peal succeeds the lightning flash, is the man who, if he is moved
to make a great resolve about his religion, or about his conduct, will be
most likely to carry it out, Get the magical influence of habit on your
side, and you will have done much to conquer the evil of abortive
resolutions.
But then there is something a great
deal more than that to be said. The Apostle did not content himself, in
the passage already referred to, with bewailing the wretchedness of the
condition in which to will was present, but how to perform he found not.
He asked, and he triumphantly answered, the question, ‘Who shall deliver
me?’ with the great words, ‘I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord.’
There is the secret; keep near Him, trust Him, open your hearts to the
influences of that Divine Spirit who makes us free from the law of sin and
death. And if thus, knowing our weakness, recognising our danger, humbly
trying to cultivate the habit of prompt discharge of all discerned duty,
we leave ourselves in Jesus Christ’s hands, and wait, and ask, and believe
that we possess, His cleansing Spirit, then we shall not ask and wait in
vain. ‘Work out your own salvation,... for it is God that worketh in you,
both the willing and the doing.’

ALL GRACE ABOUNDING
‘God is able to make all grace abound
toward you; that ye, always having all. sufficiency in all things, may
abound to every good work.’ — 2 Corinthians 9:8.
IN addition to all his other
qualities the Apostle was an extremely good man of business; and he had a
field for the exercise of that quality in the collection for the poor
saints of Judea, which takes up so much of this letter, and occupied for
so long a period so much of his thoughts and efforts. It was for the sake
of showing by actual demonstration that would ‘touch the hearts’ of the
Jewish brethren, the absolute unity of the two halves of the Church, the
Gentile and the Jewish, that the Apostle took so much trouble in this
matter. The words which I have read for my text come in the midst of a
very earnest appeal to the Corinthian Christians for their pecuniary help.
He is dwelling upon the same thought which is expressed in the well-known
words: ‘What I gave I kept; what I kept I lost.’
But whilst the words of my text
primarily applied to money matters, you see that they are studiously
general, universal. The Apostle, after his fashion, is lifting up a little
‘ secular’ affair into a high spiritual region; and he lays down in my
text a broad general law, which goes to the very depths of the Christian
life.
Now, notice, we have here in three clauses three stages which we may
venture to distinguish as the fountain, the basin, the stream. ‘God is
able to make all grace abound toward you’; — there is the fountain. ‘That
ye always, having all-sufficiency in all things’; — there is the basin
that receives the gush from the fountain. ‘May abound in every good work’;
— there is the stream that comes from the basin. The fountain pours into
the basin, that the flow from the basin may feed the stream.
Now this thought of Paul’s goes to
the heart of things. So let us look at it. I. The Fountain.
The Christian life in all its
aspects and experiences is an outflow from ‘ the Fountain of Life,’ the
giving God. Observe how emphatically the Apostle, in the context,
accumulates words that express universality: ‘all grace.., all-sufficiency
for all things... every good work.’ But even these expressions do not
satisfy Paul, and he has to repeat the word ‘abound,’ in order to give
some faint idea of his conception of the full tide which gushes from the
fountain. It is ‘all grace,’ and it is abounding grace.
Now what does he mean by ‘grace’?
That word is a kind of shorthand for the whole sum of the unmerited
blessings which come to men through Jesus Christ. Primarily, it describes
what we, for want of a better expression, have to call a ‘disposition’ in
the divine nature; and it means, then, if so looked at, the unconditioned,
undeserved, spontaneous, eternal, stooping, pardoning love of God. That is
grace, in the primary New Testament use of the phrase.
But there are no idle ‘dispositions’
in God. They are always energising, and so the word glides from meaning
the disposition, to meaning the manifestation and activities of it, and
the ‘grace’ of our Lord is that love in exercise. And then, since the
divine energies are never fruitless, the word passes over, further, to
mean all the blessed and beautiful things in a soul which are the
consequences of the Promethean truth of God’s loving hand, the outcome in
life of the inward bestowment which has its cause, its sole cause, in
God’s ceaseless, unexhausted love, unmerited and free.
That, very superficially and
inadequately set forth, is at least a glimpse into the fulness and
greatness of meaning that lies in that profound New Testament word,
‘grace.’ But the Apostle here puts emphasis on the variety of forms which
the one divine gift assumes. It is ‘all grace’ which God is able to make
abound toward you. So then, you see this one transcendant gift from the
divine heart, when it comes into our human experience, is like a meteor
when it passes into the atmosphere of earth, and catches fire and blazes,
showering out a multitude of radiant points of light. The grace is
many-sided — many-sided to us, but one in its source and in its character.
For at bottom, that which God in His grace gives to us as His grace is
what? Himself; or if you like to put it in another form, which comes to
the same thing — new life through Jesus Christ. That is the
encyclopaediacal gift, which contains within itself all grace. And just as
the physical life in each of us, one in all its manifestations, produces
many results, and shines in the eye, and blushes in the cheek, anti gives
strength to the arm, and flexibility and deftness to the fingers and
swiftness to the foot: so also is that one grace which, being manifold in
its manifestations, is one in its essence. There are many graces, there is
one Grace.
But this grace is not only
many-sided, but abounding. It is not congruous with God’s wealth, nor with
His love, that He should give scantily, or, as it
were, should open but a finger of the hand that is full of His gifts, and
let out a little at a time. There are no sluices on that great stream so
as to regulate its flow, and to give sometimes a painful trickle and
sometimes a full gush, but this fountain is always pouring itself out, and
it ‘abounds!’
But then we are pulled up short by
another word in this first clause: ‘God is able to make.’ Paul does not
say, ‘God will make.’ He puts the whole weight of responsibility for that
ability becoming operative upon us. There are conditions; and although we
may have access to that full fountain, it will not pour on us ‘all grace’
and ‘abundant grace,’ unless we observe these, and so turn God’s ability
to give into actual giving.
And how do we do that? By desire, by expectance, by petition, by faithful
stewardship. If we have these things, if we have tutored ourselves, and
experience has helped in the tuition, to make large our expectancy, God
will smile down upon us and ‘do exceeding abundantly above all ‘that we
‘think’ as well as above all that we ‘ask.’ Brethren, if our supplies are
scant, when the full fountain is gushing at our sides, we are ‘not
straitened in God, we are straitened in ourselves.’ Christian
possibilities are Christian obligations, and what we might have and do not
have, is our condemnation.
I turn, in the next place, to what I
have, perhaps too fancifully, called II. The Basin.
‘God is able to make all grace
abound toward you, that ye, having always all-sufficiency in all things,
may,’... etc.
The result of all this many-sided
and exuberant outpouring of grace from the fountain is that the basin may
be full Considering the infinite source and the small receptacle, we might
have expected something more than ‘sufficiency’ to have resulted.
Divine grace is sufficient. Is it
not more than sufficient? Yes, no doubt. But what Paul wishes us to feel
is this — to put it into very plain English — that the good gifts of the
divine grace will always be proportioned to our work, and to our
sufferings too. We shall feel that we have enough, if we are as we ought
to be. Sufficiency is more than a man gets anywhere else. ‘Enough is as
good as a feast.’ And if we have strength, which we may have, to do the
day’s tasks, and strength to carry the day’s crosses, and strength to
accept the day’s sorrows, and strength to master the day’s
temptations, that is as much as we need wish to have, even out of the
fulness of God. And we shall get it, dear brethren, if we will only fulfil
the conditions. If we exercise expectance, and desire and petition and
faithful stewardship, we shall get what we need. ‘Thy shoes shall be iron
and brass,’ if the road is a steep, and rocky one that would wear out
leather. ‘As thy days so shall thy strength be.’ God does not hurl His
soldiers in a blundering attack on some impregnable mountain, where they
are slain in heaps at the base; but when He lays a commandment on my
shoulders, He infuses strength into me, and according to the good homely
old saying that has brought comfort to many a sad and weighted heart,
makes the back to bear the burden. The heavy task or the crushing sorrow
is often the key that opens the door of God’s treasure-house. You have had
very little experience either of life or of Christian life, if you have
not learnt by this time that the harder your work, and the darker your
sorrows, the mightier have Been God’s supports, and the more starry the
lights that have shone upon your path. ‘That ye, always having
all-sufficiency in all things,’
One more word: this sufficiency
should be more uniform, is uniform in the divine intention, and in so far
as the flow of the fountain is concerned. Always having had I may be sure
that I always shall have. Of course I know that, in so far as our physical
nature conditions our spiritual experience, there will be ups and downs,
moments of emancipation and moments of slavery. There will be times when
the flower opens, and times when it shuts itself up. But I am sure that
the great mass of Christian people might have a far more level temperature
in their Christian experience than they have; that we could, if we would,
have far more experimental knowledge of this ‘always’ of my text. God
means that the basin should be always full right up to the top of the
marble edge, and that the more is drawn off from it, the more should flow
into it. But it is very often like the reservoirs in the hills for some
great city in a drought, where great stretches of the bottom are exposed,
and again, when the drought breaks, are full to the top of the retaining
wall That should not be. Our Christian life should run on the high levels.
Why does it not? Possibilities are duties.
And now, lastly, we have here what, adhering to my metaphor, I call III.
The stream.
‘That ye, always having
all-sufficiency in all things, may abound to every good work.’
That is what God gives us His grace for; and that is a very important
consideration. The end of God’s dealings with us, poor, weak, sinful
creatures, is character and conduct. Of course you can state the end in a
great many other ways; but there have been terrible evils arising from the
way in which Evangelical preachers have too often talked, as if the end of
God’s dealings with us was the vague thing which they call ‘salvation,’
and by which many of their hearers take them to mean neither more nor less
than dodging Hell. But the New Testament, with all its mysticism, even
when it soars highest, and speaks most about the perfection of humanity,
and the end of God’s dealings being that we may be ‘filled with the
fulness of God,’ never loses its wholesome, sane hold of the common
moralities of daily life, and proclaims that we receive all, in order that
we may be able to ‘maintain good works for necessary uses.’ And if we lay
that to heart, and remember that a correct creed, and a living faith, and
precious, select, inward emotions and experiences are all intended to
evolve into lives, filled and radiant with common moralities and ‘good
works’ — not meaning thereby the things which go by that name in popular
phraseology, but’ whatsoever things are lovely ... and of good report’ —
then we shall understand a little better what we are here for and what
Jesus Christ died for, and what His Spirit is given and lives in us for.
So ‘good works’ is the end, in one very important aspect, of all that
avalanche of grace which has been from eternity rushing down upon us from
the heights of God.
There is one more thing to note, and
that is that, in our character and conduct, we should copy the ‘giving
grace.’ Look how eloquently and significantly, in the first and last
clauses of my text, the same words recur. ‘God is able to make all grace
abound, that ye may abound in all good work.’ Copy God in the
many-sidedness and in the copiousness of the good that flows out from your
life and conduct, Because of your possession of that divine grace. And
remember, ‘to him that hath shall be given.’ We pray for more grace; we
need to pray for that, no doubt. Do we use the grace that God has given
us? If we do not, the remainder of that great word which I have just
quoted will be fulfilled in you. God forbid that any of us should receive
the grace of God in vain, and therefore come under the stern and
inevitable sentence, ‘From him that hath not shall be taken away, even
that which he hath!’

GOD’S UNSPEAKABLE
GIFT
‘Thanks be unto God for His unspeakable
gift. — 2 Corinthians 9:15.
IT seems strange that there should
ever have been any doubt as to what gift it is which evokes this burst of
thanksgiving. There is but one of God’s many mercies which is worthy of
being thus singled out. There is one blazing central sun which shines out
amidst all the galaxy of lights which fill the heavens. There is one gift
of God which, beyond all others, merits the designation of ‘unspeakable.’
The gift of Christ draws all other divine gifts after it. ‘How should He
not with Him also freely give us all things.’
The connection in which this abrupt
jet of praise stands is very remarkable. The Apostle has Been dwelling on
the Christian obligation of giving bountifully and cheerfully, and on the
great law that a glad giver is ‘enriched’ and not impoverished thereby,
whilst the recipients, for their part, are blessed by having thankfulness
evoked towards the givers. And that contemplation of the happy interchange
of benefit and thanks between men leads the fervid Apostle to the thoughts
which were always ready to spring to his lips — of God as the great
pattern of giving and of the gratitude to Him which should fill all our
souls. The expression here ‘unspeakable’ is what I wish chiefly to fix
upon now. It means literally that which cannot be fully declared. Language
fails because thought fails.
I. The gift comes from unspeakable
love.
God so loved the world that He gave
His only gotten Son. The love is the cause of the gift: the gift is the
expression of the love. John’s Gospel says that the Son which is in the
bosom of the Father has declared Him. Paul here uses a related word for
unspeakable which might be rendered ‘that which cannot be fully declared.’
The declaration of the Father partly consists in this, that He is declared
to be undeclarable, the proclamation of His name consists partly in this
that it is proclaimed to be a name that cannot be proclaimed. Language
fails when it is applied to the expression of human emotion; no tongue can
ever fully serve the heart. Whether there be any thoughts too great for
words or no, there are emotions too great. Language is ever ‘weaker than
our grief’ and not seldom weaker than our love. It is but the surface
water that can be run off through the narrow channel of speech: the
central deep remains. If it be so with human affection, how much more must
it be so with God’s love? With lowly
condescension He uses all sweet images drawn from earthly relationships,
to help us in understanding His. Every dear name is pressed into the
service — father, mother, husband, wife, brother, friend, and after all
are exhausted, the love which clothed itself in them all in turn, and used
them all to give some faint hint of its own perfection, remains unspoken.
We know human love, its limitations, its changes, its extravagances, its
shortcomings, and cannot but feel how unworthy it is to mirror for us that
perfection in God which we venture to name by a name so soiled. The
analogies between what we call love in man and love in God must be
supplemented by the differences between them, if we are ever to approach a
worthy conception of the unspeakable love that underlies the unspeakable
gift.
II. The gift involves unspeakable
sacrifice.
Human love desires to give its most
precious treasures to its object and is then most blessed: divine love
cannot come short of human in this most characteristic of its
manifestations. Surely the copy is not to surpass the original, nor the
mirror to flash more brightly than the sun which, at the brightest, it but
reflects. In such a matter we can but stammer when we try to find words.
As our text warns us, we are trying to utter the unutterable when we seek
to speak of God’s giving up for us; but however such a thought may seem to
be forbidden by other aspects of the divine nature, it seems to be
involved in the great truth that ‘God is love.’ Since He is, His
blessedness too, must be in imparting, and in parting with what He gives.
A humble worshipper in Jewish times loved enough to say that he would not
offer unto God an offering that cost him nothing, and that loving height
of self-surrender was at the highest, but a lowly imitation of the love to
which it looked up. When Paul in the Epistle to the Romans says, ‘He that
spared not His own Son but delivered Him up for us all,’ he is obviously
alluding to, and all but quoting, the divine words to Abraham, ‘Seeing
thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only son, from Me,’ and the allusion
permits us to parallel what God did when He sent His Son with what Abraham
did when, with wrung heart, but with submission, he bound and laid Isaac
on the altar and stretched forth his hand with the knife in it to slay
him. Such a representation contradicts the vulgar conceptions of a
passionless, self-sufficing, icy deity, but reflection on the facts of our
own experience and on the blessed secrets of our own love, leads us to
believe that some shadow of loss passed across the infinite and eternal
completeness of the divine nature when ‘God sent forth His Son made of a
woman.’
And may we not go further and say that when Jesus on the Cross cried from
out of the darkness of eclipse, ‘My God! My God! Why hast Thou forsaken
me?’ there was something in the heavens corresponding to the darkness that
covered the earth and something in the Father’s heart that answered the
Son’s. But our text warns us that such matters are not for our handling in
speech, and are Best dealt with, not as matters of possibly erring
speculation, But as materials for lowly thanks unto God for His
unspeakable gift.
But whatever may be true about the
love of the Father who sent, there can be no doubt about the love of the
Son who came. No man helps his fellows in suffering But at the cost of his
own suffering. Sympathy means fellow-feeling, and the one indispensable
condition of all rescue work of any sort is that the rescuer must bear on
his own shoulders the sins or sorrows that he is able to bear away.
Heartless help is no help. It does not matter whether he who ‘stands and
says, "Be ye clothed and fed,"’ gives or does not give ‘the things
necessary,’ he will be but a ‘miserable comforter’ if he has not in heart
and feeling entered into the sorrows and pains which he seeks to
alleviate. We need not dwell on the familiar truths concerning Him who was
a ‘man of sorrows and acquainted with grief.’ All through His life He was
in contact with evil, and for Him the contact was like that of a naked
hand pressed upon hot iron. The sins and woes of the world made His path
through it like that of bare feet on sharp flints. If He had never died it
would still have been true that ‘He was wounded for our transgressions and
bruised for our iniquities.’ On the Cross He completed the libation which
had continued throughout His life and ‘poured out His soul unto death’ as
He had been pouring it out all through His life. We have no measure by
which we can estimate the inevitable sufferings in such a world as ours of
such a spirit as Christ’s. We may know something of the solitude of
uncongenial society; of the pain of seeing miseries that we cannot
comfort, of the horrors of dwelling amidst impurities that we cannot
cleanse, and of longings to escape from them all to some nest in the
wilderness, but all these are but the feeblest shadows of the incarnate
sorrows whose name among men was Jesus. Nothing is more pathetic than the
way in which our Lord kept all these sorrows close locked within His Own
heart, so that scarcely ever did they come to light. Once He did permit a
glimpse into that hidden chamber when He said, ‘O faithless generation,
how long shall I be with you, how long shall I suffer you?’ But for the
most part His sorrow was unspoken because it was ‘unspeakable.’
Once beneath the quivering olives in the moonlight of Gethsemane, He made
a pitiful appeal for the little help which three drowsy men could give
Him, when He cried, ‘My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death.
Tarry ye here and watch with Me,’ but for the most part the silence at
which His judges ‘marvelled greatly,’ and raged as much as they marvelled,
was unbroken, and as ‘a sheep before her shearers is dumb,’ so ‘He opened
not His mouth.’ The sacrifice of His death was, for the most part, silent
like the sacrifice of His life. Should it not call forth from us floods of
praise and thanks to God for His unspeakable gift?
III. The gift brings with it
unspeakable results.
In Christ are hid ‘all the treasures
of wisdom and knowledge.’ When God gave us Him, He gave us a storehouse in
which are contained treasures of truth which can never be fully
comprehended, and which, even if comprehended, can never be exhausted. The
mystery of the Divine Name revealed in Jesus, the mystery of His person,
are themes on which the Christian world has been nourished ever since, and
which are as full of food, not for the understanding only, but far more
for the heart and the will, to-day as ever they were. The world may think
that it has left the teaching of Jesus behind, but in reality the teaching
is far ahead, and the world’s practise is but slowly creeping towards its
imperfect attainment. The Gospel is the guide of the race, and each
generation gathers something more from it, and progresses in the measure
in which it follows Christ,; and as for the race, so for the individual.
Each of Christ’s scholars finds his own gift, and in the measure of his
faithfulness to what he has found makes ever new discoveries in the
unsearchable riches of Christ. After all have fed full there still remain
abundant baskets full to he taken up.
He who has sounded the depths of Jesus most completely is ever the first
to acknowledge that he has been but as a child ‘gathering pebbles on the
beach while the great ocean lies unsounded before him.’ No single soul,
and no multitude of souls, can exhaust Jesus; neither our individual
experiences, nor the experiences of a believing world can fully realise
the endless wealth laid up in Him. He is the Alpha and the Omega of all
our speech, the first letter and the last of our alphabet, between which
lie all the rest.
The gift is completed in
consequences yet unspeakable. Even the first blessings which the humblest
faith receives from the pierced hands have more in them than words can
tell. Who has ever spoken adequately and in full correspondence with
reality what it is to have God’s pardoning love flowing in upon the soul?
Many singers have sung sweet psalms and hymns and spiritual songs on which
generations of devout souls have fed, but none of them has spoken the
deepest blessedness of a Christian life, or the calm raptures of communion
with God. It is easy to utter the words ‘forgiveness, reconciliation,
acceptance, fellowship, eternal life’; the syllables can be spoken, but
who knows or can utter the depths of the meanings? After all human words
the half has not been told us, and as
every soul carries within itself
unrevealable emotions, and is a mystery after all revelation, so the
things which God’s gift brings to a soul are after all speech unspeakable,
and the words ‘cannot be uttered’ which they who are caught up into the
third heavens hear.
Then we may extend our thoughts to
the future form of Christian experience. ‘It doth not yet appear what we
should be.’ All our conceptions of a future existence must necessarily be
inadequate. Nothing but experience can reveal them to us, and our
experience there will be capable of indefinite expansion, and through
eternity there will be endless growth in the appropriation of the
unspeakable gift.
For us the only recompense that we
can make for the unspeakable gift is to receive it with ‘thanks unto God’
and the yielding up of our hearts to Him. God pours this love upon us
freely, without stint. It is unspeakable in the depths of its source, in
the manner of its manifestation, in the glory of its issues. It is like
some great stream, rising in the trackless mountains, broad and deep, and
leading on to a sunlit ocean. We stand on the bank; let us trust ourselves
to its broad bosom. It will bear us safe. And let us take heed that we
receive not the gift of God in vain.

A MILITANT MESSAGE
‘Casting down imaginations, and every
high thing that is exalted against the knowledge of God, and bringing
every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ; and being in
readiness to avenge all disobedience, when your obedience shall be
fulfilled.’ — 2 Corinthians 10:5-6
NONE of Paul’s letters are so full
of personal feeling as this one is. It is written, for the most part, at a
white heat; he had heard from his trusted Titus tidings which on one hand
filled him with a thankfulness of which the first half of the letter is
the expression; but there had also been tidings of a very different kind,
and from this point onwards the letter is seething with the feelings which
these had produced. There was in the Corinthian Church a party, probably
Judaisers, which denied his authority and said bitter things about his
character. They apparently had contrasted the force of his letters and the
feebleness of his ‘bodily presence’ and speech. They insinuated that his
‘bark was worse than his bite.’ Their language put into plain English
would be something like this, ‘Ah! He is very bold at a distance, let him
come and face us and we shall see a difference. Vapouring in his letters,
he will be meek enough when he is here.’
These slanderers seem to have
thought of Paul as if he ‘ warred according to flesh,’ and it is this
charge, that he was actuated in his opposition to the evils in Corinth by
selfish considerations and worldly interests, which seems to have set the
Apostle on fire. In answer he pours out quick, indignant questionings,
sharp irony, vehement self-vindication, passionate remonstrances, flashes
of wrath, sudden jets of tenderness. What a position for him to have to
say, ‘I am not a low schemer; I am not working for myself.’ Yet it is the
common lot of all such men to be misread by little, crawling creatures who
cannot believe in heroic self-forgetfulness. He answers the taunt that he
‘walked according to the flesh’ in the context by saying, ‘Yes, I live in
the flesh, my outward life is like that of other men, but I do not go
a-soldiering according to the flesh. It is not for my own sinful self that
I get the rules of my life’s battle, neither do I get my weapons from the
flesh. They could not do what they do if that were their origin: they are
of God and therefore mighty.’ Then the metaphor as it were catches fire,
and in our text he expands the figure of a warfare and sets before us the
destruction of fortresses, the capture of their garrisons, and the leading
of them away into another land, the stern punishment of the
rebels who still hold out, and the merciful delay in administering it. It
has been suggested that there is an allusion in our text to the
extermination of the pirates in Paul’s native Cilicia which happened some
fifty or sixty years before his birth and ended in destroying their
robber-holds and taking some thousands of prisoners. Whether that be so or
no, the Apostle’s kindled imagination sets forth here great truths as to
the effects which his message is meant to produce and, thank God, has
produced.
I. The opposing fortresses.
The Apostle conceives of himself and
of his brother preachers of Christ as going forth on a merciful warfare.
He thinks of strong rock fortresses, with lofty walls set on high, and
frowning down on any assailants. No doubt he is thinking first of the
opposition which he had to front in Corinth from the Judaisers to whom we
have referred, but the application of the metaphor goes far beyond the
petty strife in Corinth and carries for us the wholesome lesson that one
main cause which keeps men back from Christ is a too high estimate of
themselves. Some of us are enclosed in the fortress of self-sufficiency:
we will not humbly acknowledge our dependence on God, and have turned
self-reliance into the law of our lives. There are many voices, some of
them sweet and powerful, which to-day are preaching that gospel. It finds
eager response in many hearts, and there is something in us all to which
it appeals. We are often tempted to say defiantly,’ Who is Lord over us?’
And the teaching that bids us rely on ourselves is so wholly in accord
with the highest wisdom and the noblest life that what. is good and what
is evil in each of us contribute to reinforce it. Self-dependence is a
great virtue, and the mother of much energy and nobleness, but it is also
a great error and a great sin. To be so self-sufficing as not to need
externals is good; to be so self-sufficing as not to need or to see God is
ruin and death. The title which, as one of our great thinkers tells us, a
humourist put on the back of a volume of heterodox tracts, ‘Every man his
own redeemer,’ makes a claim for self-sufficiency which more or less
unconsciously shuts out many men from the salvation of Christ.
There is the fortress of culture and
the pride of it in which many of us are to-day entrenched against the
Gospel. The attitude of mind into which persons of culture tend to fall is
distinctly adverse to their reception of the Gospel, and that is not
because the Gospel is adverse to culture, but because cultured people do
not care to be put on the same level with publicans and harlots. They
would be less disinclined to go into the feast if
there were in it reserved seats for superior people and a private entrace
to them. If the wise and prudent were more of both, they would be liker
the Babes to whom these things are revealed, and they would be revealed to
them too. Not knowledge but the superciliousness which is the result of
the conceit of knowledge hinders from God, and is one of the strongest
fortresses against which the weapons of our warfare have to be employed.
There is the fortress of ignorance.
Most men who are kept from Christ are so because they know neither
themselves nor God. The most widely prevailing characteristic of the
superficial life of most men is their absolute unconsciousness of the fact
of sin; they neither know it as universal nor as personal. They have never
gone deeply enough down into the depths of their own hearts to have come
up scared at the ugly things that lie sleeping there, nor have they ever
reflected on their own conduct with sufficient gravity to discern its
aberrations from the law of right, hence the average man is quite
unconscious of sin, and is a complete stranger to himself. The cup has
been drunk by and intoxicated the world, and the masses of men are quite
unaware that it has intoxicated them.
They are ignorant of God as they are
of themselves, and if at any time, by some flash of light, they see
themselves as they are, they think of God as if He were altogether such an
one as themselves, and fall back on a vague trust in the vaguer mercy of
their half-believed-in God as their hope for a vague salvation. Men who
thus walk in a vain show will never feel their need of Jesus, and the lazy
ignorance of themselves and the as lazy trust in what they call their God,
are a fortress against which it will task the power of God to make any
weapons of warfare mighty to its pulling down.
II. The casting down of fortresses.
The first effect of any real contact
with Christ and His Gospel is to reveal a man to himself, to shatter his
delusive estimates of what he is, and to pull down. about his ears the
lofty fortress in which he has ensconced himself. It seems strange work
for what calls itself a Gospel to begin by forcing a man to cry out with
sobs and tears, Oh, wretched man that I am! But no man will ever reach the
heights to which Christ can lift him, who does not begin his upward course
by descending to the depths into which Christ’s Gospel begins its work by
plunging him. Unconsciousness of sin is sure to lead to indifference to a
‘Saviour, and unless we know ourselves to be miserable and poor and blind
and naked, the offer of gold refined by fire and white garments that we
may clothe ourselves will make no appeal to us. The fact of sin makes the
need for a Saviour; our individual sense of sin makes us sensible of our
need of a Saviour.
Paul believed that the weapons of
his warfare were mighty enough to cast down the strongest of all
strongholds in which men shut themselves up against the humbling Gospel of
salvation by the mercy of God. The weapons to which he thus trusted were
the same to which Jesus pointed His disciples when, about to leave them,
He said,’ When the Comforter is come He will convict the world of sin
because they Believe not in Me.’ Jesus brought to the world the perfect
revelation of the holiness of God, and set Before us all a divine pattern
of manhood to rebuke and condemn our stained and rebellious lives, and He
turned us away from the superficial estimate of actions to the careful
scrutiny of motives. By all these and many other ways He presented Himself
to the world a perfect man, the incarnation of a holy God and the
revelation and condemnation of sinful humanity. Yet, all that miracle of
loveliness, gentleness, and dignity is beheld by men without a thrill, and
they see in Him no ‘beauty that they should desire Him,’ and no healing to
which they will trust. Paul’s way of kindling penitence in impenitent
spirits was not to brandish over them the whips of law or to seek to shake
souls with terror of any hell, still less was it to discourse with
philosophic calm on the obligations of duty and the wisdom of virtuous
living; his appeal to conscience was primarily the pressing on the heart
of the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. When the heart is melted, the
conscience will not long continue indurated. We cannot look lovingly and
believingly at Jesus and then turn to look complacently on ourselves. Not
to believe on Him is the sin of sins, and to be taught that it is so is
the first step in the work of Him who never merits the name of the
Comforter more truly than when He convicts the world of sin.
For a Christianity that does not
begin with the deep. consciousness of sin has neither depth nor warmth and
has scarcely vitality. The Gospel is no Gospel, and we had almost said,
‘The Christ is no Christ’ to one who does not feel himself, if parted from
Christ, ‘dead in trespasses and sins.’ Our religion depends for all its
force, our gratitude and love for all their devotion, upon our sense that
‘the chastisement of our peace was laid upon Him, and that by His stripes
we are healed.’ Since He gave Himself for us, it is meet that we give
ourselves to Him, but there will be little fervour of devotion or
self-surrender, unless there has been first the consciousness of the death
of sin and then the joyous consciousness of newness of life in Christ
Jesus.
III. The captives led away to
another land.
The Apostle carries on his metaphor
one step further when he goes on to describe what followed the casting
down of the fortresses. The enemy, driven from their strongholds, have
nothing for it but to surrender and are led away in captivity to another
land. The long strings of prisoners on Assyrian and Egyptian monuments
show how familiar an experience this was. It may be noted that perhaps our
text regards the obedience of Christ as being the far country into which
‘every thought was to be brought.’ At all events Paul’s idea here is that
the end of the whole struggle between ‘the flesh’ and the weapons of God
is to make men willing captives of Jesus Christ. We are Christians in the
measure in which we surrender our wills to Christ. That surrender rests
upon, and is our only adequate answer to, His surrender for us. The
‘obedience of Christ’ is perfect freedom; His captives wear no chains and
know nothing of forced service; His yoke is easy, not because it does not
press hard upon the neck but because it is lined with love, and ‘His
burden is light’ not because of its own weight hut because it is laid on
us by love and is carried by kindred love. He only commands himself who
gladly lets Christ command him. Many a hard task becomes easy; crooked
things are straightened out and rough places often made surprisingly plain
for the captives of Christ, whom He leads into the liberty of obedience to
Him.
IV. Fate of the disobedient.
Paul thinks that in Corinth there
will be found some stiff-necked opponents of whom he cannot hope that
their ‘obedience shall be fulfilled,’ and he sees in the double issue of
the small struggle that was being waged in Corinth a parable of the wider
results of the warfare in the world. ‘Some believed and some believed
not’; that has been the brief summary of the experience of all God’s
messengers everywhere, and it is their experience to-day. No doubt when
Paul speaks of ‘being in readiness to avenge all disobedience,’ he is
alluding to the exercise of his apostolic authority against the obdurate
antagonists whom he contemplates as still remaining obdurate, and it is
beautiful to note the long-suffering patience with which he will hold his
hand until all that can be won has been won. But we must not forget that
Paul’s demeanour is but a faint shadow of his Lord’s, and
that the weapons which were ready to avenge all disobedience were the
weapons of God. If a man steels himself against the efforts of divine
love, builds up round himself a fortress of self-righteousness and locks
its gates against the merciful entrance of convictions of sin and the
knowledge of a Saviour, and if he therefore lives, year in, year out, in
disobedience, the weapons which he thinks himself to have resisted will
one day make him feel their edge. We cannot set ourselves against the
salvation of Jesus without bringing upon ourselves consequences which are
wholly evil and harmful. Torpid consciences, hungry hearts, stormy wills,
tyrannous desires, vain hopes and not vain fears come to be, by slow
degrees, the tortures of the man who drops the portcullis and lifts the
bridge against the entrance of Jesus. There are hells enough on earth if
men’s hearts were displayed.
But the love which is obliged to
smite gives warning that it is ready to avenge, long before it lets the
blow fall, and does so in order that it may never need to fail As long as
it is possible that the disobedient shall become obedient to Christ, He
holds back the vengeance that is ready to fall and will one day fall ‘on
all disobedience.’ Not till all other means have been patiently tried will
He let that terrible ending crash down. It hangs over the heads of many of
us who are all unaware that we walk beneath the shadow of a rock that at
any moment may be set in motion and bury us beneath its weight. It is ‘in
readiness,’ but it is still at rest. Let us be wise in time and yield to
the merciful weapons with which Jesus would make His way into our hearts.
Or if the metaphor of our text presents Him in too warlike a guise, let us
listen to His own gentle pleading, ‘Behold, I stand at the door and knock;
if any man hear My voice, and open the door, I will come in to him.’

SIMPLICITY TOWARDS
CHRIST
‘But I fear, lest by any means, as the
serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty, as your minds should be
corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ. — 2 Corinthians 11:2
THE Revised Version, amongst other
alterations, reads, ‘ the simplicity that is towards Christ.’
The inaccurate rendering of the
Authorised Version is responsible for a mistake in the meaning of these
words, which has done much harm. They have been supposed to describe a
quality or characteristic belonging to Christ or the Gospel; and, so
construed, they have sometimes been made the watchword of narrowness and
of intellectual indolence. ‘Give us the simple Gospel’ has been the cry of
people who have thought themselves to be evangelical when they were only
lazy, and the consequence has been that preachers have been expected to
reiterate commonplaces, which have made both them and their hearers
listless, and to sink the educational for the evangelistic aspect of the
Christian teacher’s function.
It is quite true that the Gospel is simple, but it is also true that it is
deep, and they will best appreciate its simplicity who have most honestly
endeavoured to fathom its depth. When we let our little sounding lines
out, and find that they do not reach the bottom, we begin to wonder even
more at the transparency of the clear abyss. It is not simplicity in
Christ, but towards Christ of which the Apostle is speaking; not a quality
in Him, but a quality in us towards Him. I wish, then, to turn to the two
thoughts that these words suggest. First and chiefly, the attitude towards
Christ which befits our relation to Him; and, secondly and briefly, the
solicitude for its maintenance.
I. First, then, look at the attitude
towards Christ which befits the Christian relation to Him.
The word ‘simplicity’ has had a
touch of contempt associated with it. It is a somewhat doubtful compliment
to say of a man that he is ‘simple-minded.’ All noble words which describe
great qualities get oxidised by exposure to the atmosphere, and rust comes
over them, as indeed all good things tend to become deteriorated in time
and by use. But the notion of the word is really a very noble and lofty
one. To be ‘without a fold,’ which is the
meaning of the Greek word and of its equivalent ‘simplicity,’ is, in one
aspect, to be transparently honest and true, and in another to be out and
out of a piece. There is no underside of the cloth, doubled up beneath the
upper which shows, and running in the opposite direction; but all tends in
one way. A man with no under-currents, no by-ends, who is down to the very
roots what he looks, and all whose being is knit together and hurled in
one direction. without reservation or back-drawing, that is the ‘simple’
man whom the Apostle means. Such simplicity is the truest wisdom; such
simplicity of devotion to Jesus Christ is the only attitude of heart and
mind which corresponds to the facts of our relation to Him. That relation
is set forth in the context by a very sweet and tender image, in the true
line of scriptural teaching, which in many a place speaks of the Bride and
Bridegroom, and which on its last page shows us the Lamb’s wife descending
from Heaven to meet her husband. The state of devout souls and of the
community of such here on earth is that of betrothal Their state in heaven
is that of marriage. Very beautiful it is to see how this fiery Paul, like
the ascetic John, who never knew the sacred joys of that state, lays hold
of the thought of the Bridegroom and the Bride, and of his individual
relation to both as indicating the duties of the Church and the solicitude
of the Apostle. He says that he has been the intermediary who, according
to Oriental custom, arranged the preliminaries of the marriage, and
brought the bride to the bridegroom, and, as the friend of the latter,
standing by rejoices greatly to hear the bridegroom’s voice, and is
solicitous mainly that in the tremulous heart of the betrothed there
shoul