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INDEX FOR 2CORINTHIANS
2Corinthians 3:12-14
<>
2Corinthians 3:18
See other commentaries on:
2 Corinthians 5:9
2 Corinthians 5:10
2 Corinthians 5:17
2 Corinthians 7:1;
2 Corinthians 12:9; 2
Corinthians 12:10
2 Corinthians 10:3;
2 Corinthians 10:4;
2 Corinthians 10:5
2 Corinthians 12:9
2 Corinthians 12:10
2
Corinthians 13:5
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COLLECTIONS
Commentaries,
Word Studies, Devotionals, Sermons, Illustrations
Old and New Testament. |
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2
Corinthians 3:15 Commentary |
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2 Corinthians 3:15
But to
this
day
whenever
*
Moses is
read, a
veil
lies
over their
heart;
(NASB:
Lockman) |
|
Greek:
all'
eos
semeron
enika
an
anaginosketai (3SPPS)
Mouses
kalumma
epi
ten
kardian
auton
keitai (3SPMI);
Amplified: Yes, down to this [very] day whenever Moses is read,
a veil lies upon their minds and hearts.
(Lockman)
ESV: Yes,
to this day whenever Moses is read a veil lies over their hearts. (ESV)
KJV: But even
unto this day, when Moses is read, the veil is upon their heart.
NET:
But until this very day whenever Moses is read, a veil lies over their
minds, (NET
Bible)
NIV: Even to this day when Moses is read, a veil covers
their hearts.
(NIV
- IBS)
NLT: Yes, even today when they read Moses’ writings, their
hearts are covered with that veil, and they do not understand. (NLT
- Tyndale House)
Phillips: Yes, alas, even to this day there is still a
veil over their hearts when the writings of Moses are read. (Phillips:
Touchstone)
Wuest: But even today, whenever Moses is being read, a
covering lies upon their heart.. (Eerdmans)
Young's Literal: but till to-day, when Moses is read, a vail
upon their heart doth lie, |
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BUT TO THIS DAY WHENEVER MOSES IS
READ, A VEIL LIES OVER THEIR HEART: all' eos semeron enika an anaginosketai
(3SPPS) Mouses kalumma epi ten kardian auton keitai (3SPMI): (Ac
13:27, 28, 29)
ISRAEL'S PERSISTENT
SPIRITUAL BLINDNESS
But (alla) introduces a
contrast. Paul has just
stated that the only way the "veil" of spiritual stupor and incomprehension
is removed is by believing in the Messiah (2Co 3:14b-note).
So the contrast is that instead of believing in their Messiah and instead of
understanding that the Old Covenant pointed to their Messiah, they continue
in their unbelief to this very day. Remember that in
context
the overarching purpose of Paul's
discussion of the Old Covenant in this chapter is to emphasize the fading
glory and inferiority of the Old (to produce salvation) when compared to the
lasting glory and superiority of the New (Better) Covenant.
Moses is read - Clearly a figure
of speech referring to the public reading of the Old Covenant (2Co 3:14-note cp
"reading of the Law and the Prophets" Acts 13:15) as was (is
still) carried out
"zealously" by the Jews (especially the orthodox to whom keeping the
Sabbath holy is a mitzvah or duty - see
Shabbat from Jewish perspective) every
Sabbath (theological significance)
(Acts 13:14, 15 27). The tragedy is that most of our Jewish friends who keep
Shabbat, have a veil...over their heart and fail to recognize that
the "Sabbath rest" was always meant to point them to the "Lord of the
Rest" (cp His gracious invitation in Mt 11:28, 29, 30). When one accepts
the Messiah's invitation to "Come"
and receives by grace through faith the spiritual rest that only be
found by belief in Christ, they rest (cease) from their works of self-effort
(and self-deception) performed in vain (Ro 3:20-note)
in an attempt to please God and attain righteousness (Is 64:6). The writer
of Hebrews is quite clear that the Shabbat although a literal day ordained
by the Old Covenant Law, was always intended to point to spiritual rest in
Christ...
There remains therefore a Sabbath rest
for the people of God. For the one who has entered His rest has himself also
rested from his works, as God did from His. Let us therefore be
diligent to enter that rest (not by works but only by
faith), lest anyone fall through following the same example of
disobedience (Referring to Israel in the OT - see relationship between and
consequence of Israel's being "disobedient" and their "unbelief"
in He 3:18, 19-note).
(He 4:9, 10-see
note by John Piper, He 4:11-note)
Read (314)
(anaginosko
from aná = emphatic, again
+ ginosko = know <> know again) literally to know again or to
recognize again. It came to mean to distinguish between, to know accurately
and then to read. In the NT anaginosko is used only with the meaning
of "to read", and especially refers to reading aloud and to public
reading.
One of the most dramatic Sabbath readings was by Jesus Himself as
recorded by Luke...
And He came to Nazareth, where He had been brought up; and as was His
custom, He entered the synagogue on the Sabbath, and stood up to read
(anaginosko).
And the book of the prophet Isaiah was handed to Him. And He opened the
book, and found the place where it was written,
THE SPIRIT OF THE LORD IS UPON ME, BECAUSE HE ANOINTED ME TO PREACH THE
GOSPEL TO THE POOR. HE HAS SENT ME TO PROCLAIM RELEASE TO THE CAPTIVES, AND
RECOVERY OF SIGHT TO THE BLIND, TO SET FREE THOSE WHO ARE DOWNTRODDEN, TO
PROCLAIM THE FAVORABLE YEAR OF THE LORD.
Comment: Jesus reads from Isa
61:1, 2 but stops in mid-sentence in verse 2, not reading "And the day of
vengeance of our God" for that terrifying day was yet future [and
still is future as of 2011] for it describes
Daniel's Seventieth Week, which
culminates [and consummates] in the last 3.5 years which Jesus
identified as the
Great Tribulation
[compare Mt 24:15 and Mt 24:31 and Da 9:27-note]
which is synonymous with the "time of Jacob's distress"
[clearly a future prophecy = read Jer 30:7, 8, 9] when the nation of Israel
will be purged of unbelieving Jews, those who persist in having a veil over
their heart! As an aside, Isa 61:2 is one of many examples of a "prophetic
time gap", in this case indicating almost 2000 years or more between
fulfillments! (See also
Jesus' Teaching on "Time Gap" in
fulfillment of prophecy)
And He closed the book, and gave it back to the attendant, and sat down; and
the eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed (intently) upon (same verb
atenizo
used in 2Co 3:7- note
and 2Co 3:13-note)
Him. And He began to say to them, "Today
this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing."
(Lk 4:16 17 18 19 20 21)
Comment: The bitter irony of this
passage is that the very One to Whom the Old Testament pointed was in their
very midst reading a specific passage that He Himself fulfilled at that very
moment! Please, do not EVER
accuse God of not being fair!
Notice that even as Paul discusses in this section of 2Corinthians 3, their
hearts were "veiled" so that even though they "looked intently", their
hearts were spiritually blind and sadly unable to see their Savior standing
in their Synagogue!
Dear "religious friend" (Jew or
Gentile), have you (like those observant, very "religious" but unregenerate
[See
New Birth] Jews in the Synagogue) heard Jesus Christ speak the
truth in His Word and yet have failed to recognize Him as your Savior and
Lord by grace through faith?
(cp Ep 2:8, 9-note,
Ro 10:9, 10-note).
May our Father send the wind of
His Spirit to soften your stony heart so that today might become "THE DAY OF
SALVATION", the day you really recognize and receive Jesus as Savior of your
soul. Amen (Ezek 36:26, 27,
2Co 6:2, Jn 1:11, 12, 13)
Veil (2571)
(kaluma from
kalupto [word study]
= cause something to be covered over and
hence not visible) is literally a covering or veil but is used figuratively
in this verse to indicate unbelief which functions as an impediment to
the "spiritual vision" of the sons of Israel. This fact helps us
understand why our Jewish friends have such difficulty when we present the
good news of the New Covenant to them -- they didn't even comprehend God's
purpose in the Old Covenant! But beloved, "Is anything too difficult for
Jehovah?" (Ge 18:14a, Lk 1:37ASV). So keep praying for your Jewish friends.
And keep speaking the Word of Life to them for as our Lord Jesus Christ told
His disciples "With men it is impossible, but not with God; for all things
are possible with God" (Mk 10:27, context = Mk 10:25, 26) and He alone can
open their hard hearts even as He opened Lydia's (Gentile) heart to believe
the words spoken by a Jewish believer named Paul! (Acts 16:13, 14)
Kaluma - 4x in 4v - 2 Cor 3:13,
14, 15, 16
Veil lies over their heart - Paul
in playing off of the previous discussion regarding the veil on Moses' face
preventing the Israelites from seeing the fading of God's glory, now
introduces a figurative veil to depict the inability of the sons of Israel
to see and understand God's purpose in the Old Covenant readings heard every
Sabbath. Those readings were meant to shut them up to sin (Ga 3:22NLT), to
show them the sinfulness of sin (Ro 7:7-note,
Ro 3:20-note),
to be a tutor to lead them to Christ (Ga 3:24NLT). What was to be a "means"
(in the sense of pointing to Christ) to an end (salvation in Christ) became
the "end" in itself.
John MacArthur reminds us that
even though the glory of the Old Covenant was fading there was
Nothing wrong with the covenant.
The problem is with their heart. The (sons of Israel continually
manifest an) unwillingness to be broken, the unwillingness to confess sin
and repent...(this) is the whole point of the hardness of the hearts
of the people of Israel that they would not be broken. And where there is a
broken and a contrite heart (Ps 51:17), there is therefore a proper
apprehension of the meaning of the Old Covenant and a casting of oneself on
the mercy and grace of a forgiving God Whom even the Old Testament believers
knew was forgiving. The prophet asked "Who is a God like Thee, Who pardons
iniquity And passes over the rebellious act of the remnant of His
possession?" (Micah 7:18 - see how complete is God's forgiveness - Mic 7:19,
cp Is 38:17, Is 44:22, Ps 103:12, cp Lv 16:20, 21 the New Covenant = Je
31:34)
Heart (2588)
(kardia
[word study])
does is never used in the New Testament with the literal meaning of the
physical organ that pumps blood. Instead kardia is always used
figuratively to refer to our "inner person" from which thoughts, emotions
and affections flow and which functions in a sense as a person's "control
center". The heart is often equated with the mind as Paul is doing in this
chapter (cp 2Co 3:14)
Vine writes that kardia...
came to denote man’s entire mental and
moral activities, and to stand figuratively for the hidden springs of the
personal life. (Vine,
W. Collected writings of W. E. Vine. Nashville: Thomas Nelson
)
The KJV Bible Commentary notes
that...
Unfortunately, as far as the Jews are
concerned, Christ is still a stumbling block they cannot see (cf. 1Co 1:23).
For the apostle this is no light matter but a concern which caused him great
anxiety (cf. Ro 9:1, 2, 3, 4, 5). But now the veil is not so much
upon the revelation of the glory but upon their own hearts (cf Lk 24:25;
Acts 13:27 28 29).
(Dobson,
E G, Charles Feinberg, E Hindson, Woodrow Kroll, H L. Wilmington: KJV Bible
Commentary: Nelson
or
Logos)
A T Robertson
adds that a veil lies over their heart is a...
Vivid and distressing picture, a fact
that caused Paul agony of heart (Ro 9:1-5). With wilful blindness the rabbis
set aside the word of God by their tradition in the time of Jesus (Mark 7:8,
9)
In Ephesians Paul explains that our
"spiritual heart" has "eyes" (Eph 1:18). In 2Co 4:4 Paul says their
"spiritual vision" has been blinded by Satan because they have refused to
believe the Gospel. And so in the present passage Paul is saying that the
eyes of the heart of the Jews cannot see because they have been blinded (the
veil obstructs their vision). Paul was sent by Jesus to preach the gospel to
open their
eyes ("spiritual eyes" of their heart and mind) so that they may turn from
darkness to light and from the dominion of Satan to God, in order that they
may receive forgiveness of sins (one of the great promises of the New
Covenant Mt 26:28) and an inheritance among those who have been
sanctified by faith in" Christ (Acts 26:18).
Guzik
writes that...
Many Christians with a heart to preach
their Jewish friends have wondered why it is rarely so simple as just
showing them that Jesus is the Messiah. This is because a veil lies on
their heart. Unless God does a work in them, so they turn to the Lord
and have the veil taken away (2Co 3:16) (opening the eyes of their heart to
"the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ."
2Co 4:6, cp Jn 11:40), they will never see...the surpassing glory of Jesus
and the New Covenant.
Of course, it could be said that the Jews are not the only ones for whom a
veil lies over their heart. Gentiles also have “veils” that prevent them
from seeing Jesus and His work for us (on the Cross). But Jesus is more than
able to take the veils away! This points to the essential need of prayer in
evangelism. It has been rightly said that it is more important to talk to
God about men than it is to talk to men about God. But we can do both!
ILLUSTRATION OF SPIRITUAL BLINDNESS -
The Global Prayer Digest 3/29/01 has
an example of a "veil" and the resulting spiritual blindness of men to the Truth
(2Co 4:4): The Negere son was honored that he could wear the mask during the
funeral ceremony for his deceased father. He knew that this mask was
intended to keep the spirit of his father from tormenting the living. The
150,000 Negere people of Côte d'Ivoire are well known in African art circles
because of their masks. The 14-inch mask has an angular face shape with an
open mouth, a triangular nose, and tubular eyes. Often they are covered with
bird feathers, braided fibers, protruding horns, and a bell. Only selected
male members of the tribe are allowed to wear the mask. The mask is
ceremonially important to appease the evil spirits and to plead with the
high god for the needs of the people. During a funeral they talk with the
deceased on behalf of the family. The bell serves to awaken the spirits if
they go to sleep. |
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2
Corinthians 3:16 Commentary |
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2 Corinthians
3:16
but
whenever
* a person
turns to the
Lord, the
veil is
taken
away.
(NASB:
Lockman) |
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Greek:
enika
de
ean
epistrepse
pros
kurion,
periaireitai
to
kalumma.
Amplified: But whenever a person turns [in repentance] to
the Lord, the veil is stripped off and taken away.
(Lockman)
ESV:
But when one turns to the Lord, the veil is removed. (ESV)
KJV:
Nevertheless when it shall turn to the Lord, the veil shall be taken
away.
NET: but
when one turns to the Lord, the veil is removed. (NET
Bible)
NIV: But whenever anyone turns to the Lord, the
veil is taken away.
(NIV
- IBS)
NLT: But whenever someone turns to the Lord, the veil is
taken away. (NLT
- Tyndale House)
Phillips: Yet if they "turned to the Lord" the veil would
disappear. (Phillips:
Touchstone)
Wuest: However, whenever it [Israel] shall turn to the
Lord, the covering is being taken away [by the one who turns to the
Lord]. (Eerdmans)
Young's Literal: and whenever they may turn unto the
Lord, the veil is taken away. |
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BUT WHENEVER A PERSON TURNS TO THE
LORD, THE VEIL IS TAKEN AWAY: enika de ean epistrepse (3SAAS) pros kurion,
periaireitai (3SPPI) to kalumma: (Ex 34:34 Dt 4:30 30:10 La 3:40
Ho 3:4,5 Ro 11:25, 26, 27) (Veil: Isa 25:7 29:18 54:13 Jer 31:34 Jn
6:45,46)
IS THERE ANY HOPE FOR ISRAEL?
YES!
AT ANY & EVERY "TURN"!
PRAISE THE LORD!
But (de) indicates that in
contrast to the spiritual death (Jn 8:24) that results from a hard
("spiritually uncircumcised") heart ("spiritual atherosclerosis"), there is
a supernatural "miracle cure" available for a person who expresses genuine
repentance and belief in Christ (cp Ro 10:9, 10, Acts 16:31, Acts
4:12).
Whenever - At any or every time
that one turn to Christ. Any time is the right time to turn to the Lord.
John MacArthur explains that Paul
is saying......
Like Moses, when a man goes into the
presence of the Lord, i.e., when he turns to Christ, God takes away the veil
and he sees the direct glory (of Christ). When sinners turn to the glory of
God in the face of Jesus Christ, the veil is removed...When we come (in
belief) to the Lord Jesus, the veil is off, the glory is clear, the
knowledge of the glory of God shines in our hearts in the face of Jesus
Christ. (Read 2Co 4:6)...So Paul says whenever a man turns to the Lord, the
veil is taken away at once by God. True understanding floods the soul. The
Gospel becomes clear, the veil is removed. So Paul in this most intricate
argument once again makes reference to the illustration from Exodus (Ed:
by using the phrase "the veil is taken away" just as it was in the OT
story of Moses when he went into the presence of the LORD [Ex 34:34]).. (The
Glory of the New Covenant, Part 5)
Phillip Hughes relates the
surpassing glory of the New Covenant to the transfiguration glory of Christ
in the presence of Moses who himself was not glorified (Read Mt 17:1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8, compare Peter's testimony when they saw His glory [Lk 9:32] in 2Pe
1:16, 17-note.
John refers to the same experience - Jn 1:14, 18). God had removed the veil
from the hearts of Peter, James and John to be able to see the glory of the
Messiah (so don't give up hoping, praying and sharing with your unbelieving,
unregenerate Jewish friends!).
On that mountain height, Moses and Elijah
appeared with Christ but it was Christ alone Who was
transfigured with heavenly radiance before the eyes of Peter, James and
John. It was His face that shone as the sun and His
garments that became white and dazzling. It was of Him alone
that the voice from the cloud said, `This is My beloved Son in whom I am
well pleased, hear ye Him.' And thereafter the disciples saw no one,
save Jesus only. It is He Who abides.
The glory in which Moses and Elijah
appeared was not their own but Christ's glory––the glory which He had with
the Father before the world was (Jn 17:5). Just as in the wilderness the
glory, which shone from Moses’ face, was the reflected glory of Yahweh, so
too on the mount of transfiguration the glory with which he was surrounded
was the glory of the same Yahweh. Christ alone is the full, the abiding, the
evangelical glory. To turn to Him is to turn to the Light of the world. To
follow Him is not to walk in darkness, but to have the light of life (Jn.
8:12). (Paul's
Second Epistle to the Corinthians)(Logos
Software)
Jamieson comments on whenever a
person turns to the Lord explaining that...
Whenever the Israelites turn to the Lord,
Who is the Spirit of the law, the (figurative) veil is taken off their
hearts in the presence of the Lord just as the literal veil was taken off by
Moses in going before God. No longer resting on the dead letter (of the Old
Covenant of Law),...they by
the Spirit commune with God (Ed: i.e., The Holy Spirit gives the
believer unfettered freedom
of access into the very presence of the Holy One of Israel even as Moses had
access to His Glorious Presence.).
Turns
(1994)(epistrepho
[word study]
from epí = motion
toward + strepho = twist, turn quite around or reverse) means to
revert, to turn about, to turn around, to turn toward, to return and
figuratively to convert. The idea is a definite turn to God in conduct as
well as in one's mind.
The meaning of the verb epistrepho
gives us an excellent picture of true repentance (see
metanoia) = An unsaved person lives solely
for self but when he or she turns to the Lord, the Spirit of Christ (see
note below)
turns their life around so that they now begin to live for their Savior (not
perfection but direction - instead of one's face
fixed like flint "hell-ward", they have (been) turned around
(by the Spirit) and are marching
"heaven-ward"! If not, they need to heed 2Co 13:5-note.
The
aorist tense
in this context indicates that the "turning" is performed at a moment in
time (when a person believes in Christ) and it is done once and for
all (completed action). The
active voice
indicates it is a choice of
the individual's will.
One of the best illustrations of turning
to the Lord (and the meaning of repentance) is found in Paul's use of
epistrepho in first Thessalonians...
they themselves (see 1Th 1:8) report
about us what kind of a reception we had with you, and how you turned
to (epistrepho) God
from
idols (a beautiful description of repentance) to serve a living and true God
(a beautiful description of the fruit of repentance) (1Th 1:9-note)
Luke uses epistrepho in his
description of John the Baptist
whose ministry was to prepare the way of the Lord writing that...
he (John the Baptist) will turn back
(epistrepho) many of the sons of Israel to the Lord their God.
And it is he who will go as a forerunner before Him in the spirit and power
of Elijah, TO TURN THE HEARTS OF THE FATHERS BACK (epistrepho)
TO THE CHILDREN, and the disobedient to the attitude of the righteous; so as
to make ready a people prepared for the Lord." (Lk
1:16, see Mt 3:2, 5, 6, 7, 8 - notice
his proclamation included repentance. See his message in Acts 19:4)
Peter speaking to
the sons of Israel on Pentecost called them to turn to the Lord...
Repent
(aorist
imperative =
Command to do this now. It is urgent!) therefore and
return
(epistrepho also in the
aorist imperative)
that your sins may be wiped away, in order that times of refreshing may come
from the presence of the Lord and that He may send Jesus, the Christ
appointed for you (Acts 3:19, 20)
Peter used epistrepho again
in his first epistle...
He Himself bore our sins in His body on
the Cross, that we might die to
Sin (Sin
as a slavemaster - no longer in bondage but liberated) and live to
righteousness; for by His wounds you were healed (refers to spiritual not
physical healing as context clearly teaches). For you were continually
straying like sheep (cp Is 53:6), but now you have returned (epistrepho
- been turned toward or converted) to the Shepherd and Guardian of your
souls. (1Pe 2:25-note)
The
Septuagint (LXX)
uses epistrepho occasionally to
describe conversion. For example, David alludes to the converting
power of
the Word of God in the Old Testament that...
The law of the LORD is perfect,
converting (Lxx = epistrepho) the soul; The testimony of the LORD
is sure, making wise the simple; (Psalm 19:7NKJV-note)
David again speaks of conversion
in Psalm 51...
Then I will teach transgressors Your
ways, and sinners will be converted (Lxx = epistrepho) to You.
(Psalm 51:13-note)
Lord
(2962)
(kurios
from kuros = might or power) refers to the Lord Jesus Christ, the One
Who has sovereign power and supreme authority. Beloved, this is the Glorious
One to Whom we turn for there is salvation in no other Name but Jesus (Acts
4:12, Mt 1:21).
I am reminded of Charles Haddon Spurgeon's turning to the Lord and
the veil being removed when he heard a simple laymen preaching the most
profound of messages based on one verse, Isaiah 45:22 (See
Spurgeon's Personal Testimony)
in which the LORD (see Is 45:21) declared (Red
= commands)...
Look
unto me, and be ye saved,
all the ends of the earth:
for I am God, and there is none else.
Isaiah 45:22KJV
Spurgeon responded to the Lord's
command to Turn
and Look
and God immediately
removed the veil of unbelief from his heart.
Have you turned
to look at the Lord?
MacArthur refers to Ro 10:4 which
says
Christ is the end of the Law for
righteousness
to everyone who believes.
Christ is the purpose of the Law for
righteousness to the one who believes. The New Covenant is a superior
covenant. It's a better covenant...a far-better covenant. It's
an incomparable covenant. For all of the reasons that Paul has given us --
(1) It gives life...the other was a killer. (2) It provides
righteousness, the other one simply exacerbated our sinfulness.
(3) It is permanent, the other one was fading. (4) It brings
hope, the other one was hopeless. (5) It is clear,
the other one was shaded and veiled in pictures and types. (6) And the New
Covenant is Christ-centered. The veil in 2Co
3:14 is removed in Christ...and in 2Co 3:16, "Whenever a man turns to the
Lord, the veil is taken away." (The
Glory of the New Covenant)
Alan Redpath gives wonderful
personal testimony to the glory a person sees when he turns
to the Lord and the veil is taken away...
I have a clear view of Jesus. I have seen
Him, felt Him, and I have known Him in a far deeper way than simply by the
outward physical appearance; I have felt the reality of His life begin to
burn in my heart. I have seen in Christ the glory of a life that is totally
submitted to the sovereignty of God. That glory has begun to take hold of
me, and I have begun to see that this is the one life that God expects of
any man He made in His own image. I have seen the marks of the cross upon
Him, and by His grace the marks of the cross have been put upon me and I am
no longer my own; I am bought with a price, redeemed by His precious blood.
Yes, I have seen Him--not in the outward physical sense only, but in the
inward sense of a deep spiritual reality. I have had a clear view of Jesus
and my life will never be the same again. (Blessings
Out of Buffetings by Alan Redpath Page 44)
Spurgeon offers a similar
testimony writing that...
Simply by looking to Jesus,
I had been delivered from despair, and I was brought into such a joyous
state of mind that, when they saw me at home, they said to me, ''Something
wonderful has happened to you;'' (Ed: The veil had been taken away in
Christ!) and I was eager to tell them all about it….I have always
considered, with Luther and Calvin, that the sum and substance of the gospel
lies in that word Substitution, --Christ standing in the stead of man. If I
understand the gospel, it is this: I deserve to be lost for ever; the only
reason why I should not be damned is, that Christ was punished in my stead,
and there is no need to execute a sentence twice for sin. On the other hand,
I know I cannot enter Heaven unless I have a perfect righteousness; I am
absolutely certain I shall never have one of my own, for I find I sin every
day; but then Christ had a perfect righteousness, and He said, ''There, poor
sinner, take My garment, and put it on; you shall stand before God as if you
were Christ, and I will stand before God as if I had been the sinner; I will
suffer in the sinner's stead, and you shall be rewarded for works which you
did not do, but which I did for you.'' I find it very convenient every day
to come to Christ as a sinner, as I came as the first. ''You are no saint,''
says the devil. Well, if I am not, I am a sinner, and Jesus Christ came into
the world to save sinners. Sink or swim, I go to Him; other hope I have
none. By looking to Him, I received all the faith which inspired me with
confidence in His grace; and the word that first drew my soul--''Look
unto Me,''--still rings its
clarion note in my ears. There I once found conversion, and there I shall
ever find refreshing and renewal. (HALLELUJAH!
AMEN!)
(Spurgeon's
Personal Testimony)
Have you simply
looked at Jesus?
Taken away (4014)
(periaireo
[word study]
from perí = around, suggests
completeness + haireo = in sense of take, seize, grasp) means to take
away from around something (picture it binding and constricting movement)
and so to remove that which envelops. In secular Greek it was a nautical
term meaning to cast lose by taking up the anchors from both sides of the
ship in preparation for departing. To take away altogether or entirely. In a
secular Greek writing it was used of taking off from oneself, as taking off
one's helmet and of taking off the cover of a letter (and thus opening it).
Metaphorically as used
in this verse periaireo means to take away completely that with which
one is, as it were, enveloped. In other words
Paul describes the taking away of the
veil from surrounding the hearts of those (Jews and Gentiles) who believe.
Warren Wiersbe
comments that...
In each of the three churches I have
pastored, it has been my joy to baptize Jewish people who have trusted Jesus
Christ. It is amazing how their minds open to the Scriptures after they have
been born again. One man told me, “It’s like scales falling from your eyes.
You wonder why everybody doesn’t see what you see!” The veil is removed by
the Spirit of God and they receive spiritual vision....As a nation, Israel
today is spiritually blind; but this does not mean that individual Jews
cannot be saved. The church today needs to recover its lost burden for
Israel. We are their debtors, because all the spiritual blessings we have
came through Israel. “Salvation is of the Jews” (Jn 4:22). The only way we
can “pay off” this debt is by sharing the Gospel with them and praying that
they might be saved (Ro 10:1).
(Wiersbe,
W: Bible Exposition Commentary - New Testament. 1989. Victor
or
Logos
or
Wordsearch)
An illustration of a "veil"
that was "taken away" - On the road to Emmaus Jesus encountered two
men (Cleopas and another unnamed) whose hearts were to some degree veiled
to the meaning of the Old Testament passages that prophesied of the
Messiah...
And He said to them, "O foolish men and
slow of heart to believe in all that the prophets have spoken! "Was
it not necessary for the Christ to suffer these things and to enter into His
glory?" And beginning with Moses (Old Covenant) and with all the
prophets (Lk 24:44 adds "the Psalms"), He explained to them the things
concerning Himself in all the Scriptures. (Lk 24:24, 25, 26, 27)
MacArthur comments: the gist of
what He expounded would have undoubtedly included an explanation of the OT
sacrificial system, which was full of types and symbols that spoke of His
sufferings and death.
Comment: From the context these
two men were among the believing Jewish remnant who had "their
eyes...opened " (Lk 24:31 where "opened" = same verb describing Lydia's
conversion Acts 16:14; compare "the veil is taken away" 2Co 3:16), so
that they able to recognize Jesus (which indicates that they were believers
for Jesus' post-resurrection appearances were only to believers).
Vincent...
The verb (taken away) occurs twice in
Acts 27:20, 40 of the taking away of hope, and of the unfastening of the
anchors in Paul’s shipwreck; and in He 10:11, of the taking away of sins.
There is an allusion here to the removal of the veil from Moses’ face
whenever he returned to commune with God. See Ex 34:34.
Richards concludes that...
The Old Covenant administered by Moses
offered no inner transformation. This is illustrated by Moses
himself, for after leaving God’s presence he put a veil over his face so the
people would not see the splendor, which God’s presence had imparted, fade
away. In contrast, because God’s Spirit now lives within the believer a
process of transformation is taking place. That transformation, marked by
increasingly clear reflection through the believer’s life of the splendor of
Christ Himself, is the mark of New Covenant ministry. (Richards, Lawrence. The
Bible Reader's Companion)
A PRAYER OF
PRAISE AND THANKSGIVING
FOR GOD REMOVING THE VEIL
I love Dr MacArthur's prayer which is a good way to sum up this
passage...
We're so grateful, our God, that You have lifted the veil and that You've
let us see the glory of Christ. Oh we thank You that You've given us life,
that You've provided righteousness that what You've done for us is permanent
and forever, that You've filled us with hope, that You've drawn us into the
very vision of Christ and we gaze at His glory. Nothing is veiled anymore.
We with unveiled face behold the glory. Father, we're not many noble and not
many mighty and we're certainly not the profound, we're the common and the
base, but we understand what the religious elite of the world don't
understand and we see the glory that is veiled to them. Such mercy
overwhelms us and we thank You and praise You for it in Christ's name. Amen.
( The
Glory of the New Covenant, Part 5) |
|
The Veil Taken Away
Preached at Zoar Chapel, London,
on July 28, 1844
J. C. Philpot
"But whenever anyone turns to the
Lord, the veil is taken away!" 2 Cor. 3:16
In looking at this portion of Holy Writ, I shall endeavor, with God's
blessing, to show—
1. What the veil is.
2. What it is to turn to the Lord.
3. What it is to have the veil taken away.
And may God the Spirit own his word with power to our consciences.
I. What the veil is.
There is, then a veil upon the human
heart. And what is meant by the expression? We are not to understand by the
word "veil" such as are now worn by women, which do not hide, so much as
show off the features. The ancient veil worn by the Eastern women (and the
same, I believe, is worn to this day), completely obscured the countenance.
It was a thick covering which they wore over their face when they went
abroad; it being considered to this day in the East highly indelicate that a
single feature of a female's countenance should be seen. Thus Judah did not
know Tamar, though she was his own daughter-in-law, and of course he had
often seen her, because "she covered herself with a veil." (Ge 38:14, 15.)
Thus also, we find, that the veil of the tabernacle, which separated the
holy of holies from the holy place, was very thick; for it consisted of four
distinct coverings, as we read (Exod. 36:35), "And he made a veil of blue,
and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen." These four distinct pieces
seem to have been quilted together with needlework, which we know was the
case with the hanging for the tabernacle door (v. 37); and all these put
together into one piece formed a thick, dense, impenetrable covering. The
veil of the tabernacle was then more a curtain, or rather four curtains
sewed one over the other, than what we understand by the word veil. And
thus, by the veil upon the heart, we are to understand a covering, or
curtain, so dense, thick, and closely-knit, as to exclude all light from
penetrating through it; not merely shutting out the person from seeing, but
also shutting out the person from being seen.
In looking, then, at the veil upon the heart of man by nature, we must take
with us this idea of a dense, impenetrable covering, to understand what the
Spirit of God means by the expression.
If we look, then, at the veil over man's heart by nature, we shall find it
to consist of covering upon covering. For instance:
1. There is the veil of IGNORANCE.
What a thick, dense, impenetrable
covering is that! If we look back to the days of darkness and unregeneracy,
in what dense ignorance did we walk. The very doctrines of grace, and the
whole scheme of salvation, were hidden from our eyes, and we understood not
a single truth of the gospel aright. Our minds were wrapped up in such thick
clouds of ignorance, that we knew neither God nor ourselves, neither our
state here or hereafter. This veil of ignorance spread over the heart seems
spoken of, Isaiah 25:7, "He will destroy in this mountain the face of the
covering cast over all people, and the veil that is spread over all
nations." And again, "Darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the
people." (Isaiah 60:2.) And thus Paul testifies that the Gentiles walk,
"Having the understanding darkened, being alienated from the life of God
through the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their
heart." (Eph. 4:18.)
2. But this is not the only covering that goes to make up this thick,
dense, impenetrable veil. There is the veil of UNBELIEF.
So that could man by the dint of his
natural faculties overcome his ignorance, and thus strip off one part of the
veil, the other part, that of unbelief, would still remain. Look at the
scribes and Pharisees; the Lord wrought such amazing and undeniable
miracles, as we should think must have convinced them that he was the
Messiah—as, for instance, the raising up of Lazarus from the dead. They saw
him come out of the sepulcher with their bodily eyes at the word of Jesus;
but it had no effect on their minds. They saw the blind restored to sight,
the lame walk, and the deaf receive hearing; but it never wrought faith in
their consciences. They were, as the Apostle says, "shut up in unbelief."
(Rom. 11:32, margin.) This is just our state by nature; unbelief has such
possession of our hearts that we cannot believe the things of God until they
are made known to us by divine revelation.
3. But again; there is the covering of SELF-RIGHTEOUSNESS.
What a motley monster is man in his
natural state! Full of evil, continually committing sin, daring God to his
face by a thousand crimes, and yet setting up his own righteousness! We
might just as well expect that a felon in prison, who is there awaiting in
the condemned cell the merited punishment of his aggravated crimes, of his
murders, robberies, and continued outrage against all human laws, should
hope to come out of prison by his good deeds and obedience to the laws of
his country, as expect such a vile wretch as man to hope to climb up to
heaven by the ladder of his good words, good thoughts, good works, and good
intentions. But the veil upon his heart prevents him from seeing that by
anything he can do he cannot please God. Self-righteousness in all its forms
is so interlaced with every thought of our heart, so intertwined with every
fiber of our natural mind, that though we know ourselves to be sinners, yet
self-applause and self-complacency bid us do something to gain God's favor.
4. But again; there is the veil of SUPERSTITION.
What a hold has superstition over the
minds of men! If we go into any country parish, what superstition
universally reigns over the minds of those dead in sin! How church and
churchyard, ecclesiastical vestments and gown, font and altar, are well near
worshiped! And in town, as well as country, in dissenter as well as in
churchman, what superstitious feeling prevails; and how much passes off for
religion and piety that was never wrought in the heart and conscience by God
the Spirit! I believe there are many people who cannot sin comfortably until
they have said their prayers, and cannot launch out with an easy conscience
into the pleasures of the world, until they have gone to church or chapel.
They must needs attend upon the ceremonies and forms of religion to get a
license for sin, as a school-boy learns his task to obtain a holiday.
5. And then, there is the veil of PREJUDICE.
How deeply prejudiced are men's minds
against the truth, and against all who profess or preach it! Have we
ourselves not in time past walked in this path? What deep prejudice have our
minds been steeped in against the truths of God's word! And have we not
looked upon the people who held and preached them rather as monsters than
men! When I walk through the streets of the town in which I live, I can see
sometimes prejudice staring out from the very eyes of the people, especially
the well-dressed and respectable, whom I meet; and though they cannot,
through mercy, bring anything against my life and conduct, so great is their
prejudice because I hold and preach the truth, that I believe they look upon
me as a worse character than an adulterer, a swearer, or a drunkard. The
prejudice painted in their very features sometimes almost amuses, and
sometimes annoys me; sometimes stirs up my pride, and sometimes makes me
thankful that I differ from them, and suffer reproach for the Lord's sake.
6. And then, there is the veil of ENMITY.
"The carnal mind is enmity against
God." What bitter enmity there is in man against the humbling truths of the
gospel, against all who live godly in Christ Jesus, and against everything
spiritual and heavenly, or that breathes the Spirit of the Lord!
7. Then, there is the covering of PRIDE.
And O, what a dense veil is that,
which, like an unclean bird, spreads its baneful wings over a man's heart,
that he will not submit to the humbling truths of the gospel!
8. And then, there is the veil of HYPOCRISY, in which man is so
deeply sunk, prompting him to every hypocritical word and action.
All these coverings, one upon another, are so spread over the heart of man
by nature, that the truth of God, of itself, cannot reach him; so that he
has no eyes to see, no ears to hear, no heart to feel, no conscience to
submit to the power of truth. O, in what a sunken state man is! We never can
abase man too much. O the gulf of misery and ruin into which he has fallen
through the transgressions of our first parents! O the depths of depravity
into which he has been hurled! O the bottomless abyss of destruction and
guilt into which, when Adam fell, he cast himself and all his race! But
though so awful is man's state, yet, "the veil" upon his heart prevents him
from seeing the depths of his own fall. This is one of the worst features of
man's ruin, that it is hidden from him, and that he knows nothing of it
until, through a miracle of grace, he is plucked out of the pit of horror,
and saved from going down to the abyss of hell, with all his sins and crimes
upon his head. Ministers, therefore, can never abase man too much, nor point
out too clearly the awful abyss of ruin and degradation into which he has
fallen; and the more they point it out, the more witness have they in the
consciences of those who know something of these things by painful
experience. But the veil on man's heart hides from him his own ruin; and
until the veil in a measure is removed, he never knows, never sees, never
feels one truth aright.
II. What it is to turn to the Lord?
Now the first work, (and this leads me
to the second branch of the subject) of the Spirit of God on the heart, is,
not to remove the veil, (that is a second work), but to discover the veil.
If I may use such an expression, the Spirit of God breathing on a man's
heart, blows away a little corner of the veil spread over it; and then we
begin for the first time to see and feel that there is a veil there. The
beginning of knowledge is to learn our foolishness; the beginning of mercy
is to feel our misery; the beginning of salvation is to know our
condemnation; and the beginning of eternal life is to pass under the
sentence of everlasting death.
It is thus that the Lord, in his overflowing love to the objects of his
choice, begins to deal with their consciences. The conscience is the place
where God always begins, as the Apostle says in his own ministry,
"Commending ourselves to every man's conscience in the sight of God:" He
begins to deal with a man's conscience, when, by the secret light and life
of his Spirit, he makes him see and feel something of his lost and undone
state before God. Eternal realities thus are made to lie upon his
conscience; the truths of God to come into his soul; and the entrance of
God's word to give light to his heart.
Now where did your religion begin? It is a grand point to know where your
religion began; for if the beginning be all right, all is right; and if the
beginning be wrong, is it not to be feared that all the rest is wrong? Did
your religion begin with conscience, for that is the place where God begins?
Were eternal realities laid upon your mind? Did a sense of your sinfulness
come upon your soul? Did you feel what a ruined wretch you were in the sight
of a holy God? Did you see what a veil by nature there was upon your heart?
As a man begins to see these things, the veil is in a measure beginning to
be removed; he begins to see eternal things in a clearer light, and as the
veil thins away, to feel them with a more powerful life.
Now this leads him to "turn to the Lord." When God's truth comes into the
conscience, and eternal realities lie close upon the mind, and we thus see
and feel that there is a veil upon our hearts, we begin to turn to the Lord
that the veil may be taken away. And there is no true turning to the Lord
until these things are spiritually and experimentally felt.
But what does turning to the Lord imply? It implies a turning away from
everything else. We never knew our need of a Savior until conviction of sin
was brought into the conscience; we thought we could be saved by our works
until we knew something of the purity and spirituality of God's law. We
thought ourselves wise in our own generation, yes, that "wisdom would almost
die with us," until we felt our ignorance and blindness, and that there was
a thick veil spread over our hearts.
Now, as the Lord the Spirit enables a poor sinner to turn to the Lord (for
it is the Spirit's work to turn to the stronghold the "prisoners of hope,")
he begins to unfold to him who the Lord is. This is the grand turning point,
the Spirit fulfilling his covenant office in showing a condemned sinner who
the Lord is. This is the first discovery that there is a refuge; the first
ray of gospel light whereby the way of escape is made known; the first dawn
of hope in the soul; the first setting the feet in the way of peace. After
the Lord has quickened our souls, for a time we often go, shall I say,
blundering on, not knowing there is a Jesus. We think that the way of life
is to keep God's commandments, obey the law, cleanse ourselves from sin,
reform our lives, and cultivate universal holiness in thought, word, and
action and so we go, blundering and stumbling on in darkness; and all the
while never get a single step forward.
But when the Lord has allowed us to weary ourselves to find the door, and
let us sink lower and lower into the pit of guilt and ruin, from feeling
that all our attempts to extricate ourselves have only plunged us deeper and
deeper, and the Spirit of God opens up to the understanding and brings in
the soul some spiritual discovery of Jesus, and thus makes known that there
is a Savior, a Mediator, and a way of escape—this is the grand turning point
in our lives, the first opening in the 'valley of Achor' of the 'door of
hope'. And when the soul has once seen that there is a Jesus, and once felt
a measure of the power of his resurrection, it never goes to any other
quarter for pardon, justification, and salvation.
We may compare the soul in this state to a mariner shipwrecked by night an a
reef of rocks, and seeing the first dawn of light in the horizon. Does he
not instinctively turn to the point where the sun is to rise? Are not his
eyes anxiously fixed upon the dawning day? He does not look to the North for
the sun to appear; he does not turn to the South, or to the West, but to the
East, for there the dawn breaks, and there he keeps his eyes fixed until the
sun rises. So with the poor shipwrecked soul cast away upon the shoals of
despondency, and washed up on those rocks, where he fears he must starve or
die. When the Spirit of God begins to open up with power in his conscience
that there is a Jesus, that he is the only Mediator, that the Son of God has
come down and taken a holy human nature into union with himself, and is now
at the right hand of the Father, it is the first break of day, the first
dawn of hope; and upon that bright spot does the shipwrecked soul fix his
longing eyes until the Sun of Righteousness arises upon it, with healing in
his wings.
It is a great step in a man's experience to turn wholly and solely to the
Lord, and renounce all creature righteousness, all forms and ceremonies as a
way of salvation. It is a great mercy to turn away from them, as the
shipwrecked mariner turns away from his sinking ship, and looks to the
rising sun to show him some way of escape, and thus afford him some gleam of
hope.
But, as the soul turns to the Lord, it is with earnest prayer and
supplication. As we read, Jer. 31:9, "They shall come with weeping, and with
supplications will I lead them." This is the way in which the Lord always
leads the 'people of his choice'—he creates the desire, raises up the power
to ask in prayer, and then graciously answers the request. "I will yet, for
this," he says, "be enquired of by the house of Israel to do it for them."
(Ezek. 36:37.) "Then shall you call upon me, and you shall go and pray unto
me, and I will hearken unto you. And you shall seek me, and find me, when
you shall search for me with all your heart." (Jer. 29:12, 13.)
III. The REMOVAL of the veil.
And this leads us to the third branch
of the subject—the taking away of the veil. There are three steps in
experience connected with the veil upon the heart–
1. The knowledge of the veil being there.
2. The turning to the Lord, that he would take the veil away.
3. The removal of it; as the Apostle speaks in the text, and also intimates
a little lower down—"We all, with open," or, as it is literally, "with
unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord." The veil is
taken away when the soul turns to the Lord. The light of his countenance,
the beams of his grace, and the sheddings abroad of his mercy, dissolve and
melt the veil away, just as the sun thaws away the winter snows.
And what does the soul see when the veil is removed? Until this dense
covering was taken away, it saw nothing aright, heard nothing aright, felt
nothing aright, but stumbled on in thick darkness. But when the soul turned
to the Lord, and gave itself wholly and solely unto him, there was a
discovery to faith of the glorious Person of Jesus, divine realities became
manifested in the Spirit's light, and sealed upon the conscience by a
measure of the Spirit's teaching. And this is what the Apostle speaks of in
the next chapter, where he says, "God, who commanded the light to shine out
of darkness, has shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of
the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ." (2 Cor. 4:6.)
1. Until the veil is taken away, we do not see the glory of GOD shining
forth in the Person of Jesus.
But what is it to see the light of the
knowledge of the glory of God thus shining? It is to see all the perfections
of God shine forth in the glorious Person of Jesus. We cannot know God
outside of knowing Christ. He is "the blessed and only Potentate, the King
of kings, and Lord of lords; who only has immortality, dwelling in the light
which no man can approach unto; whom no man has seen nor can see." (1 Tim.
6:15, 16.) "You can not see my face; for there shall no man see me, and
live." (Exod. 33:20.) But the invisible God having sent his only begotten
Son into the world, who is "the brightness of his glory, and the express
image of his Person;" and he having taken into union with himself a holy
human nature, it is thus, as the Spirit of God gives us light to see by
faith the Person of Immanuel, that we view the glory of God shining forth in
the face of the God-Man Mediator. The Lord, therefore, gently chided Philip,
when he said, "Lord, show us the Father, and it suffices us. Jesus says unto
him, Have I been so long time with you, and yet have you not known me,
Philip? He who has seen me has seen the Father; and how say you then, Show
us the Father?" (John 14:8, 9.)
2. But what do we see in the PERSON of Jesus, when the veil is removed?
We see in him all the perfections of
God harmonize, and specially behold "justice and mercy meeting together,
righteousness and peace kissing each other." And we see in this great truth,
which is all the comfort of a believing soul, how that "God can be just, and
yet the justifier of him that believes in Jesus." We see that God can pardon
the sinner, and yet condemn the sin; that all the attributes of Jehovah
shine forth in the face of Jesus, without clashing, without collision, and
that the love, mercy, and grace of a Three-One God beam forth in the Person
of Christ. We see that a propitiation has been made for sin; that atoning
blood has been shed to satisfy all law-claims, "to make reconciliation for
iniquity, and bring in everlasting righteousness;" that a sacrifice has been
offered up which God has accepted; and a ransom paid which the Father has
received as a complete acquittance of the debt due to divine and inflexible
justice.
When we see and feel this, the veil is removed. We may have been wearying
ourselves, and we should have gone on wearying ourselves to the end of our
lives, trying to make ourselves righteous, to put away our sins, to purge
our consciences, and reconcile our guilty souls to God. We might go on
heaping up prayer upon prayer, tear upon tear, sacrament upon sacrament, and
mass upon mass, and yet after all sink down into a deserved hell. And there
all will sink who are not 'experimentally acquainted' with the propitiation
made for sin through the sacrifice of the only begotten Son of God. Into
that pit of horror will all sink, who put confidence in any other way of
salvation than the meritorious sacrifice offered up on Calvary, or look to
any other way of salvation than that propitiation which the Son of God has
made by his obedience and blood. What virtue and efficacy there is in his
blood to purge the guilty conscience! God the Spirit lead us deeply into it!
There is a great deal of caviling in some men's minds about the expression,
"the blood of God." 'How,' say they, 'could the Godhead bleed? How could the
Godhead suffer?' But if it is not the blood of him who was God, I might just
as well rely for salvation on the blood of one of the thieves that were
crucified with him. What is Christ's human nature? That is the rock on which
many gallant ships have struck. It is not a person having a distinct
existence apart from the Deity of Christ; but it is a nature—what the Holy
Spirit calls that "Holy One," (Luke 1:35); "a body that God had prepared for
him," (Heb. 10:5) taken into intimate, mysterious, and inexplicable union
with the Person of the Son of God. So that, whatever that human nature did
and suffered, from its intimacy and union with the Son of God, the Son of
God did and suffered. Did that nature bleed? It bled as having union with
Deity; it being, so to speak, the instrument that Deity made use of.
To use an illustration—as my soul touches an object through my hand, or
speaks its thoughts by my tongue; so Deity not being itself able to bleed,
bled through the humanity. Did that nature suffer? It was not the mere
suffering of a human person, as a man might suffer; but it was the suffering
of a holy nature in intimate union with the Person of the Son of God. And
did that nature obey? The Son of God obeyed through and with that nature. So
that, to cavil at the expression, "the blood of God," is nothing less than
to strike a blow at a great fundamental truth. We might object, on the same
ground, to the expression, "God our righteousness," as the Prophet speaks,
"And this is the name whereby he shall be called, the Lord our
righteousness," that is "Jehovah our Righteousness." (Jer. 23:6). Who is our
righteousness but the Son of God? And what was that righteousness but the
obedience of his human nature? for Godhead could no more obey than suffer
and bleed; and yet Jehovah is our righteousness. And if we do not object to
the expression, "the righteousness of God," why should we cavil at the
expression, "the blood of God?"
Now this is the grand mystery which faith embraces, and which is dear to the
heart of every God-taught soul. What a power and efficacy, as the veil is
taken off the heart, does faith see in that sacrifice! What a propitiation
does it see made for sin by the blood of the Son of God! Faith does not view
it as the blood of man! Can the blood of man put away sin? But when we see
it as the blood of the Son of God, O what a value, efficacy, power, and
glory shine forth in it! But until the veil is taken off the heart we cannot
see it; nor can we, until the Spirit makes it experimentally known, learn
what a divine reality there is in this blood to purge the guilty conscience.
3. So with respect to Christ's obedience to the law; if his obedience
were merely the obedience of man, it could not justify all the persons of
his elect; but being the obedience of the Son of God, who "being found in
fashion as a man, humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the
death of the cross"—it becomes a justifying robe for every soul to whom it
is imputed, and who, by the removing of the veil, takes a happy and blessed
shelter under it.
4. Again. As the veil is taken off the heart, we begin to see and feel
what a power there is in true religion, what a reality in divine teaching,
and what a sweetness there is in the inward testimonies of God.
Most men's religion is nothing else
but a round of 'forms'. Some have their 'doings', some their 'doctrines',
and others their 'duties'. And when the one has performed his doings, the
other learned his doctrines, and the third discharged his duties, why, he is
as good a Christian, he thinks, as anybody. While all the time, the poor
deceived creature is thoroughly ignorant of the kingdom of God, which stands
not in word, but in power.
But as the veil of ignorance and unbelief is taken off the heart, we begin
to see and feel that there is a power in vital godliness, a reality in the
teachings of the Spirit; that religion is not to be put on and put off as a
man puts on and off his Sunday clothes; but when we come away from chapel we
cannot take off our religion, fold it up, and put it away into the drawer,
and there let it lie safe and quiet all the week. Where vital godliness is
wrought with divine power in a man's heart, and preached by the Holy Spirit
into his conscience, it mingles, daily and often hourly, with his thoughts,
entwines itself with his feelings and becomes the very food and drink of his
soul. But until the veil was taken away, we could put our religion on and
off at pleasure; and were often glad to take off the tight Sunday coat, and
slip on the comfortable week-day clothes.
As then we begin to see and feel the reality and power of vital godliness,
it separates us from those who have only a name to live while they are dead;
it makes us manifest as one of "the peculiar people;" and our friends and
companions, no, the only people whose society we really love, are those who
have felt divine realities by divine teaching. We can no more do with a dead
profession of truth, than with a dead profession of error! We can no more
make friends and companions of presumptuous professors, than of swearers,
adulterers, or drunkards. And feeling, or at least desiring to feel, in our
hearts—light, life, savor, dew, and power for ourselves—we look out for
those who have experienced these things themselves; and in whom we can read,
if we have a discerning eye, the legible lines of God's Spirit written upon
their conscience, or towards whom we can feel a sweet knitting of soul, as
taught by the same Spirit the same realities which we believe the Holy
Spirit has taught us.
Now when a man comes to this spot—to see and feel what a reality there is in
the things of God made manifest in the conscience by the power of the Holy
Spirit, it effectually takes him out of dead churches, cuts him off from
false ministers, winnows the chaff from the wheat, and brings him into close
communion with the broken-hearted family of God.
5. But as the veil is removed, the soul also begins to see and feel the
workings of inward sin that it was previously ignorant of.
The removal of the veil not merely
shows us the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ, but everything
contrary to that glory. The pride of our heart, the power of our unbelief,
the enmity of our carnal mind, the awful hypocrisy, the daring presumption,
the abominable treachery, the fleshy lusts, and all the obscene imaginations
of our depraved nature, that will work in us in spite of all our groans and
cries to the contrary—all this, as the veil is taken off the soul, becomes
more and more manifested, and we have (and O, what a sight it is!) a sight
of ourselves. Did ever a man see so filthy a sight as himself! When he looks
down into the sewer of his own nature, does he not see everything there,
creeping and crawling, like tadpoles in a ditch, to disgust him?
But even this works together for good; for as a man feels a measure of light
and life in his conscience, and sees and feels also, more and more of the
workings of his depraved nature, and the breakings forth of the hypocrisy of
a treacherous heart, he is brought to look more simply and more singly to
the glorious Person of the Son of God, and cast himself more sincerely and
unreservedly upon that blood which cleanses from all sin.
And thus, as the veil is removed from off the heart, he begins to drink more
deeply into the spirit of the gospel, into the mind of Christ, into the
reality of the things of God, into union and communion with Jesus, into the
solemn renunciation of self, into an abhorrence of evil, and separation from
the world, and learns to live a life of faith upon the Son of God.
But the veil is continually (if I may use the expression) "flapping back
again over the heart," it is not so taken away that no more darkness is
felt, no more ignorance known, no more self-righteousness, and no more of
its accompanying fruits perceived. It is removed as long as the Spirit
shines, as long as the soul sees light in God's light. But the veil at times
seems to come back over our hearts as much as if it never had been removed.
We have to walk in darkness, and have no light; and frequently have to grope
for the wall like the blind, and grope as if we had no eyes. We can see no
beauty in Jesus, and can scarcely believe there is a Jesus. We can see none
of our evidences; all seem clean swept away, and scarcely a landmark left;
we can find no more cries and groans in our soul than in the emptiest
professor, and can feel no more godly sensations or spiritual movements in
our hearts than if we were deceived altogether.
Now we fear that there has never been a single spark of grace in our hearts;
for the word of God is hid from our view, the promises buried in
impenetrable darkness, and past experiences covered with a thick, black
cloud. This makes a man feel more of the veil on his heart than before. The
feelings of darkness, when light does not shine; the sensation of misery,
when mercy is not manifested; the sense of helplessness, when strength is
not given; the experience of absence, when presence is denied—all these
teach us what the veil is!
But O, what profitable lessons are learned in this dark valley of
humiliation, in these trials, exercises, and temptations! How, by this
experience, we learn more in what vital godliness consists! How the marrow
of religion is more opened up in our conscience! How we learn more to cease
from our own works! How we see more what a barren wilderness there is in our
own heart! And feeling how deceitful and hypocritical it is, we learn to
place less confidence in it.
And when the Lord sees fit to bring the soul out of darkness—will it not
make the light more precious? The gloom that hung over the soul—will it not
make God's countenance more sweet when it comes? And the unbelief, the
coldness, the deadness, the depravity, the hardness, and the apparent
searedness of conscience which the soul has to grapple with—will it not make
it prize more and more the teachings, leadings, and guidings of God the
Spirit? And thus, by these various dispensations of God, we learn more to
cease from man, to cease from ourselves, to cease from our own wisdom, to
look more simply, more singly, more solely and wholly unto the Lord of life
and glory, and to depend more upon the Spirit to work in us that which is
well pleasing in his sight.
Let me just, in a few words, sum up the whole. Look at the three steps. The
veil felt; the turning to the Lord; and the removal of the veil. These are
the three steps in the divine life, commencing when it is first communicated
to the soul.
Now, if you are a child of God, taught by the Spirit, you will know one or
more of these branches. You will have learned, first, what it is to have the
veil over your hearts, under which you will groan and sigh—you will
experience the darkness, hardness, deadness, depravity, hypocrisy, unbelief,
and presumption of your carnal mind; and under it you may groan for months,
and sometimes for years, before light, life, and power manifestly come to
melt the veil away.
The next step is, to turn to the Lord with all our heart and all our soul;
to see and feel that there is a Savior; I do not mean in the judgment—but in
the heart and conscience. This will produce a springing up out of ourselves
to lie at the feet of the Lord; that we may receive divine life out of his
fullness, and feel its powerful operations in the soul. To him will flow our
desires, our supplications, our pantings, and our longings to know him and
him only. This is the grand turning point.
And then comes the third step, the taking off the veil from the heart; a
discovery to the soul, by the Spirit, of the glory of God in the face of
Jesus; the inward reception into the heart and conscience of the Son of God
with power; of his blood to cleanse the guilty conscience, of his
righteousness to justify the naked soul, of his love as balm for every
wound, and of all his attributes as God-Man, as suited to every need, every
misery, and every sense of our wretchedness and ruin.
And this path of the just, as the light, shines more and more unto the
perfect day; so that the soul, as the Lord leads it on, becomes more and
more acquainted with its vileness—and his goodness; its worthlessness—and
his infinite worth; its guiltiness—and his blood as purging from sin, its
nakedness and filthy rags—and his glorious robe of righteousness. And thus,
as we sink into a deeper knowledge of ourselves, we rise higher into a
knowledge of Christ; and as we are brought into the wilderness, God is more
glorified by leading us in it. So that, while we sink to our right spot—a
sinner saved by grace—we learn to put the crown of glory upon the head of
him to whom alone it belongs, yielding the praise and thanksgiving to God
the Father, God the Son, and God the Spirit, as one undivided, glorious, and
ever-living Jehovah, both now and forever! |
|
2
Corinthians 3:17 Commentary |
|
2 Corinthians 3:17
Now the
Lord is the
Spirit, and
where the
Spirit of the
Lord is, there
is
liberty.
(NASB:
Lockman) |
|
Greek:
o
de
kurios
to
pneuma
estin;
ou
de
to
pneuma
kuriou,
eleutheria.
Amplified: Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the
Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty (emancipation from bondage,
freedom). [Is 61:1, 2]
(Lockman)
ESV:
Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there
is freedom. (ESV)
KJV: Now
the Lord is that Spirit: and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is
liberty.
NET:
Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is
present, there is freedom. (NET
Bible)
NIV: Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of
the Lord is, there is freedom.
(NIV
- IBS)
NLT: For the Lord is the Spirit, and wherever the Spirit of
the Lord is, there is freedom. (NLT-Tyndale House)
Phillips: For the Lord to whom they could turn is the
spirit of the new agreement, and wherever the Spirit of the Lord is,
men's souls are set free. (Phillips:
Touchstone)
Wuest: But the Lord is the Spirit and where the Spirit of
the Lord is there is liberty. (Eerdmans)
Young's Literal: And the Lord is the Spirit; and where
the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty; |
|
NOW THE LORD IS THE SPIRIT AND
WHERE THE SPIRIT OF THE LORD IS, THERE IS LIBERTY: o de kurios to pneuma
estin; (3SPAI) ou de to pneuma kuriou, eleutheria: (Lord:
2Co 3:6 Jn 6:63 1Co 15:45) (Where: Ps 51:12 Isa 61:1 Ro 8:2,15,16 Ga
4:6 2Ti 1:7)
THE SPIRIT OF CHRIST IS GOD:
ANIMATING, GLORIFYING,
LIBERATING & TRANSFORMING
Vincent writes that
The
Lord Christ of 2Co 3:16 is the (Holy) Spirit Who pervades and
animates
the New Covenant of which we are ministers (2Co 3:6-note),
and the ministry of the Spirit is with
glory (2Co 3:8-note)
(Ed: And the Spirit
liberates
us [2Co 3:17] and transforms
us from glory to glory - 2Co 3:18-note).
Lord
(2962)
(kurios
from kuros = might or power) has a
variety of meanings/uses in the NT and therefore one must carefully examine
the context in order to discern which sense is intended by the NT author.
The main sense of kurios is that of a supreme one, one who is
sovereign and possesses absolute authority, absolute ownership and
uncontested power.
The Lord is the Spirit...the
Spirit of the Lord - The Lord is Jesus Christ (see previous verse 2Co
3:16) and the Spirit of the Lord is the Holy Spirit (although not everyone
agrees with the interpretation).
Dr Charles Ryrie comments
that the Lord is the Spirit is...
A strong
statement that Christ and the Holy Spirit are one in essence, though Paul
also recognized the distinctions between them (2Co 13:14).
(The
Ryrie Study Bible: New American Standard Translation: 1995. Moody Publishers
or
Wordsearch)
The KJV Bible Commentary
offers a well reasoned explanation that
Paul is
not saying “the Lord is Spirit” (in the same sense that is indicated in Jn
4:24) but “the Lord is the Holy Spirit, the Third Person of the Godhead.” It
is also important to note here that Paul is not confusing the two Persons.
Jesus said earlier, “I and my Father are one” (Jn 10:30). He bears the same
relationship to the Holy Spirit. Here is the ineffable mystery of the
Trinity, one in essence yet three distinct personalities.
(Dobson,
E G, Charles Feinberg, E Hindson, Woodrow Kroll, H L. Wilmington: KJV Bible
Commentary: Nelson
or
Logos)
In a "Trinitarian passage" in
Romans 8 Paul clearly identifies Jesus with the Spirit which
helps us understand the phrase the Spirit of the Lord...
However,
you are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God
(the Father) dwells in you. But if anyone does not have the Spirit of
Christ (the Son), he does not belong to Him. And if Christ is in you,
though the body is dead because of sin, yet the spirit is alive because of
righteousness. But if the Spirit of Him (Father) who raised Jesus from the
dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give
life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who indwells you. (Ro 8:9- note,
Ro 8:10, 11-note,
see also Jn 14:16 and Jn 14:18 which also identifies Jesus Christ with the
Holy Spirit)
There is liberty - The
Spirit of Christ turns a person to the Lord Jesus Christ, taking the veil
from their heart so they can "see" Christ in the New Covenant, at the same
time bringing them into the broad pastures of spiritual liberty in
Christ. The false teachers at Corinth were apparently holding forth the Law
as the way to change one's life, but Paul teaches that it is only the
Spirit of the Lord Who can transfer one from a life of legalistic
bondage and into a life of liberty.
Paul describes this liberty
declaring
For the law of the Spirit of life in
Christ Jesus has set you free (eleutheroo)
from the law (the principle) of sin and of death.
For you have not received a spirit of slavery
leading to fear again (contrast the reaction of the sons of Israel in Ex
34:29), but you have received a spirit of adoption as sons by
which we cry out, “Abba! Father!”
The Spirit Himself bears witness with our spirit that we are
children of God (Ro 8:15, 16).
Because
you are sons, God has sent forth the Spirit of His Son
into our hearts, crying, “Abba! Father!” Therefore you are no longer a
slave (bondage), but a son (liberty); and if a son, then an heir through
God. (Ga 4:6, 7)
Liberty
(freedom) (1657)
(eleutheria
from eleutheros - that
which is capable of movement, freedom to go wherever one likes, unfettered;
see word study on verb
eleutheroo) describes the state of being
free and stands in opposition to slavery or bondage. Liberty describes the
state of being free from restraint. In NT terms, freedom is not the right to
do as you wish, but the power to behave as you should.
Vine writes that...
liberty
is rendered freedom in Gal 5:1 “with freedom did Christ set us free.”
The combination of the noun (freedom) with the verb stresses the
completeness of the act, the aorist (or point) tense indicating both its
momentary and comprehensive character; it was done once for all.
The word is twice rendered “freedom” in the RV of Gal 5:13 (KJV,
“liberty”). The phraseology is that of manumission from slavery, which among
the Greeks was effected by a legal fiction, according to which the
manumitted slave was purchased by a god; as the slave could not provide the
money, the master paid it into the temple treasury in the presence of the
slave, a document being drawn up containing the words “for freedom.” No one
could enslave him again, as he was the property of the god. In 2Co 3:17 the
word denotes “freedom” of access to the presence of God.
(Vine,
W E: Vine's Complete Expository Dictionary of Old and New Testament Words.
1996. Nelson)
Guzik feels that in this context the liberty which Paul is
emphasizing is...
the liberty of access. He is building on his
words from 2Co 3:12 ( note):
we use great boldness of speech. Boldness is a word that belongs with
liberty. Because of the great work of the Holy Spirit in us through
the New Covenant, we have a bold, liberated relationship with God.
Jamieson commenting on there
is liberty writes that...
There and there only. Such
cease to be slaves to the letter, which they were while the veil was on
their heart. They are free to serve God in the Spirit, and rejoice in Christ
Jesus (Php 3:3): they have no longer the spirit of bondage, but of free
sonship (Ro 8:15; Ga 4:7). Liberty is opposed to the letter (of the
legal ordinances), and to the veil, the badge of slavery: also to the fear
which the Israelites felt in beholding Moses’ glory unveiled (Ex 34:30; 1Jn
4:18) (Ed: This removal of fear facilitates the believer's bold
access into the very Throne Room of God!).
Adam Clarke adds that...
Wherever this Gospel is received, there
the Spirit of the Lord is given; and wherever that Spirit lives and works,
there is liberty, not only from Jewish bondage, but from the slavery of
sin-from its power, its guilt, and its pollution.
Jesus expounds on the essence
of true liberty in Himself as addressed Jews who had ostensibly
believed Him (but subsequent verses indicate their believe was not genuine
saving faith - see Jn 8:39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 58, 59)...
If you continue in (stay with, abide
in, dwell in, "stay at home" with, to abide by, continue to live in)
My Word,
then (When?) you are truly (What implication? true vs ___) disciples of
Mine and you will know the truth (Not just "knowledge" but
ultimately a Person - Jn 14:6), and the truth will make you free (eleutheroo
- liberate from slavery to Sin [Ro 6:18-note,
Ro 6:22-note]
and bondage to the Law, cp Gal 5:1). They answered Him, “We are
Abraham’s descendants and have never yet been enslaved to anyone; how is it
that You say, ‘You will become free’?” Jesus answered them, “Truly, truly, I
say to you, everyone who commits sin (continually, as their habitual
practice) is (continually) the slave of sin. The slave does not remain in
the house forever; the son does remain forever. “So if the Son makes you
free (eleutheroo),
you will be free (eleutheros)
indeed. (Jn 8:31-36).
Matthew Henry writes that...
Where the Spirit of the Lord is, and
where He works, as He does under the Gospel-dispensation, there is
liberty (2Co 3:17), freedom from the yoke of the ceremonial law and from
the servitude of corruption (Acts 15:10 Ga 5:1 Mt 11:28, 29, 30); liberty
of access to God (Ro 5:1-note,
Ro 5:2KJV-note),
and freedom of speech in prayer (He 4:16-note,
He 10:19, 20, 21-note,
He 10:22, 23-note).
The heart is set at liberty, and enlarged, to run the ways of God’s
commandments.
Andrew Bonar - Liberty of the
spiritual life...
The heavenly life imparted is liberty and
truth and peace; it is the removal of bondage and darkness and pain. So far
from being a mechanical constraint, as some would represent, it is the
removal of the iron chain with which guilt had bound the sinner. It acts
like an army of liberation to a down-trodden country, like the warm breath
of spring to the frost-fettered tree. For the entrance of true life or
living truth into man’s soul must be liberty, not bondage.
J H Jowett speaks of the
liberty wrought by the Holy Spirit...
IN the Holy Spirit I experience a large
emancipation. “Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty.” I am
delivered from all enslaving bondage—from the bondage of legalism, and
ritualism. I am not hampered by excessive harness, by multitudinous rules.
The harness is fitting and congenial, and I have freedom of movement, and
“my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”
And I am to use my emancipation of spirit in the ministry of contemplation.
I am to “behold, as in a glass, the glory of the Lord.” My thought has been
set free from the cramping distractions devised by men, and I am now to
feast my gaze upon the holy splendors of my Lord. It is like coming out of a
little and belittling tent, to feast upon the sunny amplitude of the open
sky! I can “cease from man,” and commune with God.
And the contemplation will effect a transformation. “We are changed into the
same image from glory to glory.” The serene brightness of the sky gets into
our faces. The Lord becomes “the health of our countenance,” and we shine
with borrowed glory. (Jowett Daily Meditation)
C H Spurgeon on Spiritual
Liberty...
Liberty is the birthright of every man.
But where do you find liberty unaccompanied by religion? This land is the
home of liberty, not so much because of our institutions as because the
Spirit of the Lord is here — the spirit of true and hearty religion. But the
liberty of the text is an infinitely greater and better one, and one which
Christian men alone enjoy. He is the free man whom the truth makes free.
Without the Spirit of the Lord, in a free country, ye may still be bondsmen;
and where there are no serfs in body, ye may be slaves in soul. Note —
I. WHAT WE ARE FREED FROM.
1. The bondage of sin.
Of all slavery there is none more
horrible than this. “O wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me” from
it? But the Christian is free.
2. The penalty of sin — eternal death.
3. The guilt of sin.
4. The dominion of sin.
Profane men glory in free living and free
thinking. Free living! Let the slave hold up his fetters and jingle them,
and say, “This is music, and I am free.” A sinner without grace attempting
to reform himself is like Sisiphus rolling the stone up hill, which always
comes down with greater force. A man without grace attempting to save
himself is engaged in as hopeless a task as the daughters of Danaus, when
they attempted to fill a vast vessel with bottomless buckets. He has a bow
without a string, a sword without a blade, a gun without powder.
5. Slavish fear of law.
Many people are honest because they are
afraid of the policeman. Many are sober because they are afraid of the eye
of the public. If a man be destitute of the grace of God, his works are only
works of slavery; he feels forced to do them. But now, Christian, “Love
makes your willing feet in swift obedience move.” We are free from the law
that we may obey it better.
6. The fear of death.
I recollect a good old woman, who said,
“Afraid to die, sir! I have dipped my foot in Jordan every morning before
breakfast for the last fifty years, and do you think I am afraid to die
now?” A good Welsh lady, when she lay a-dying, was visited by her minister,
who said to her, “Sister, are you sinking?” But, rising a little in the bed,
she said, “Sinking! Sinking! Did you ever know a sinner sink through a rock?
If I had been standing on the sand I might sink; but, thank God! I am on the
Rock of Ages, and there is no sinking there.”
II. WHAT WE ARE FREE TO.
“Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there
is liberty,” and that liberty gives us certain rights and privileges.
1. To heaven’s charter.
Heaven’s Magna Charta is the Bible, and
you are free to it — to all its doctrines, promises, etc. You are free to
all that is in the Bible. It is the bank of heaven: you may draw from it as
much as you please without let or hindrance.
2. To the throne of grace.
It is the privilege of Englishmen that
they can always send a petition to Parliament; and it is the privilege of a
believer that he can always send a petition to the throne of God. It
signifies nothing what, where, or under what circumstances I am.
3. To enter into the city.
I am not a freeman of London, which is
doubtless a great privilege, but I am a freeman of a better city. Now some
of you have obtained the freedom of the city, but you won’t take it up.
Don’t remain outside the Church any longer, for you have a right to come in.
4. To heaven.
When a Christian dies he knows the
password that can make the gates wide open fly; he has the white stone
whereby he shall be known as a ransomed one, and that shall pass him at the
barrier.
Richard Sibbes
speaks about the Signs of spiritual liberty: —
Wheresoever the Spirit of God is, there
is —
I. A LIBERTY OF HOLINESS, TO FREE US
FROM THE DOMINION OF SIN
(Luke 1:75). As children can give a bird
leave to fly so it be in a string to pull it back again, so Satan hath men
in a string if they live in sin. The beast that runs away with a cord about
him is caught by the cord again; so, having Satan’s cords about us, he can
pull us in when he lists. From this we are freed by the Spirit.
II. A BLESSED FREEDOM AND AN
ENLARGEMENT OF HEART TO DUTIES
God’s people are a voluntary people.
Those that are under grace are “anointed by the Spirit” (Ps 89:20), and that
spiritual anointment makes them nimble. Otherwise spiritual duties are as
opposite to flesh and blood as fire and water. When we are drawn, therefore,
to duties, as a bear to a stake, for fear, or out of custom, with extrinsic
motives, and not from a new nature, this is not from. the Spirit. For the
liberty of the Spirit is when actions come off naturally, without any
extrinsic motive. A child needs not extrinsic motives to please his father.
So there is a new nature in those that have the Spirit of God to stir them
up to duty, though God’s motives may help as the sweet encouragements and
rewards. But the principle is to do things naturally. Artificial things move
from a principle without them, therefore they are artificial. Clocks and
such things have weights that stir all the wheels they go by, and that move
them; so it is with an artificial Christian. He moves with weights without
him; he hath not an inward principle of the Spirit to make things natural to
him.
III. COURAGE AGAINST ALL OPPOSITION
WHATSOEVER, JOINED WITH LIGHT
AND STRENGTH OF FAITH, BREAKING THROUGH ALL OPPOSITIONS.
Opposition to a spiritual man adds but
courage and strength to him to resist. In Acts 4:23, seq., when they had the
Spirit of God, they encountered opposition; and the more they were opposed,
the more they grew. They were cast in prison, and rejoiced; and the more
they were imprisoned, the more courageous they were still. There is no
setting against this wind, no quenching of this fire, by any human power.
See how the Spirit triumphed in the martyrs. The Spirit of God is a
victorious Spirit (Ro 8:33, 34; Acts 6:10, 15).
IV. BOLDNESS WITH GOD HIMSELF,
otherwise a “consuming fire?”
For the Spirit of Christ goes through the
mediation of Christ to God. That familiar boldness whereby we cry, “Abba,
Father,” comes from sons. This comes from the Spirit. If we be sons, then we
have the Spirit, whereby we cry, “Abba, Father.”
J A Stowell on liberty of the
Spirit...
The liberty of the Spirit: — How much is
made of earthly liberty — the shadow of true freedom. How true it is that,
whilst many men “profess to give liberty to others, they themselves are the
slaves of corruption.” Men are content to be slaves within who would be very
indignant at any attempt to make them slaves without. The apostle, speaking
of the bondage of the law, said that, when the heart of the Jew shall turn
to the Lord, then, and not till then, shall they come to the true freedom.
Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is —
I. LIBERTY FROM CONDEMNATION.
If a man is under sentence of death
he cannot find liberty. He may forget his imprisonment in mirth and
feasting, but it is not the less real because he forgets it. The morning
will come when he will be dragged off to his fearful doom. We are under the
sentence of God’s broken law. “The soul that sins shall die.” How beautiful,
then, the language of the apostle! (Ro 8:1).
II. LIBERTY FROM LAW.
The law knows nothing of mercy and
forgiveness, nor does it afford the least help to holiness. Its command is,
“Do this, and live; break this in the least, and die.” Therefore, “by the
deeds of the law “ shall no man have peace with God. But “what the law could
not do,” etc. (Ro 8:2, 3, 4).
III. LIBERTY TO OBEY.
Many think they are free, and that they
will do as they like; but they do not like to do what they ought to like,
and therefore they are slaves after all. The way in which a man may convince
himself of his slavery is to try to be what he ought to be. He can do
nothing of himself, and he must be brought to feel that he can do no good
thing without God. But what the flesh cannot do the Spirit will enable him
to do. “It is God which worketh in us, both to will and to do of His good
pleasure”; therefore “work out your own salvation,” etc.
IV. LIBERTY TO FIGHT THE GOOD FIGHT OF
FAITH.
A man can do battle with his corrupt
nature, he can win the victory over the principalities and powers of
darkness, and his sword is a sword of liberty. The drunkard becomes sober,
the impure chaste, the vindictive forgiving, by the power of the Spirit of
God.
V. LIBERTY OF ACCESS TO GOD.
The one true and living way is open, but
it cannot be discerned except a man has it revealed to him by the Spirit of
God. Through Christ we have access by one Spirit unto the Father.
VI. LIBERTY OF HOLY BOLDNESS AND
FORTITUDE IN THE SERVICE OF GOD.
J C Philpot on liberty of the
gospel (the New Covenant)...
A third feature of the gospel is,
that it is the perfect law of liberty "for "where the Spirit of the Lord is,
there is liberty;" (2Co 3:17) and, therefore, all the precepts of the
gospel, as animated by the Spirit, harmonize with this perfect liberty.
Under the law, all is bondage; under the gospel, all is liberty. Whatever,
therefore, does not breathe liberty, call it what you will, wrap it up and
disguise it how you may, is not the gospel. Here many teachers and preachers
have erred in handling and enforcing the precept. They have read and heard
of the liberty of the gospel, for that is too plainly revealed and insisted
upon in the New Testament to be questioned or denied, but they have been
afraid of extending this liberty to the precept, as if the necessary
consequence was that we were at liberty to obey it or not, just as we
pleased. Now this is a thorough misconception of the nature of the liberty
of the gospel, and of the liberty of the precept as a part of that gospel.
To this timorous though mistaken apprehension we may trace the tenacity with
which so many have held that the Mosaic law is the believer's rule of life.
Their poor, timorous, servile minds, drenched and drowned in legal bondage,
were afraid of the gospel, as if it were a kind of tamed lion, which would
be very quiet and do nobody any harm as long as it was kept in a cage, but
must not be allowed to get out, lest it should work incalculable mischief.
Or, to change the figure, they treated it almost as if it were a ticket of
license. Man, who, though, from his good conduct in prison, he might be set
at a kind of half liberty, yet was to be carefully watched, lest he should
associate himself with thieves, or commit a burglary. And thus the free,
noble, glorious gospel of the grace of God, containing in its bosom and
holding forth the eternal love of the Father, the blood and righteousness of
the Son, and the teaching and testimony of the Holy Spirit—this pure and
precious gospel, which proclaims liberty to the captive and the opening of
the prison to those who are bound, has been shut up, caged, and confined
within all sorts of bars, conditions, and limitations, as if it were a wild
beast which "had three ribs in the mouth of it between the teeth of it;" and
which, if let loose, would "arise and devour much flesh." (Dan. 7:5.) Yes,
this pure and precious gospel has been suspected of all manner of evil
deeds; and if, by its good and excellent behavior it has sometimes been
allowed a half liberty, yet has it been most carefully watched with the
jealous eyes of a whole host of clerical and lay police, lest it should plot
a murder or accomplish a robbery. What so much troubles the clergyman of
some quiet country parish as the appearance in it of a preacher of the
gospel, and the opening of a little cottage where a few poor people meet to
hear it? What an immediate outcry is raised. "O these dreadful, those
dangerous doctrines! Are they come at last into my parish—my domain?" As if
this poor, humble minister were come to burn down the parish rectory; or as
if his few hearers, probably by his own confession the best-living people in
the parish, met together to get drunk, or strengthen each other's hands in
all manner of sin and wickedness.
And this terribly outcry of "dangerous doctrines" is raised by men who see
no danger in the careless profanity of the rich, and the loose
licentiousness of the poor; no danger in, or at least who raise no warning
cry against, the stealthy advance of Popery; no danger in the rapid growth
of infidelity; no danger in bishops and deans denying the verbal inspiration
of the Scriptures. But they are not the first, and will not be the last, who
have spared the thief and arrested the honest man, justified the wicked and
condemned the righteous. But these blind judges are not the only men who
bark at the gospel. How the great bulk of preachers and writers, far and
near, whether they call themselves churchmen or dissenters, are of one mind
either wholly to cast out the precious gospel, or, by abridging it of its
liberty, to stop its vital breath. And to do this wretched work more
effectually, they have constructed a cage for the gospel out of the precepts
of the gospel; and thus not only made it a prisoner, but have found or
fashioned chains and fetters to tie it hand and foot by strips torn from its
own clothes.
But how ignorant are all such men of what the liberty of the gospel is; and
that it is a liberty not to sin—but from sin—a holy, heavenly freedom of
spirit which engages every willing affection of the heart to yield the
obedience of faith. In fact, liberty is the very essence of the gospel—its
vital breath, its animating spirit; for "where the Spirit of the Lord is,
there is liberty." (2Cor. 3:17.) The gospel is "the perfect law of liberty,"
therefore the very perfection of liberty, and thus thoroughly and entirely
free from the least taint of bondage, the slightest tincture of servitude.
It is this perfect freedom which distinguishes it from the law which "works
wrath" (Ro 4:15) and "genders to bondage." (Gal. 4:24.) It is, therefore, a
freedom from sin—(Ro 6:18;) from the guilt of sin, as having "the heart
sprinkled from an evil conscience;" (Heb 10:22;) from the filth of sin, by
"the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Spirit;" (Titus 3:5;)
from the love of sin, through "the love of God, shed abroad in the heart by
the Holy Spirit;" (Ro 5:5;) from the dominion of sin, as "not being under
the law but under grace;" (Ro 6:14;) and from the practice of sin, by
becoming servants to God, so as to have our fruit unto holiness, and the end
everlasting life." (Ro 6:22.)
How, then, can this pure, holy, and precious gospel be condemned as leading
to licentiousness? It is because its power, its preciousness, its happy,
holy, heavenly liberty have never been experimentally known by them that
some, like the Galatians, do all they can to frustrate the grace of God, by
turning again to the weak and beggarly elements whereunto they desire to be
in bondage; (Gal 2:21; 4:9;) while others, like those monsters of wickedness
whom Jude and Peter denounce with such burning words, pervert and abuse the
liberty of the gospel unto licentiousness, "They are blots and blemishes,
reveling in their pleasures," and, "while they promise others liberty, are
themselves the servants of corruption." (2Pe 2:13, 19.)
Now the liberty of the gospel, as revealed in the Scriptures, and made
experimentally known to the soul, steers, so to speak, between the two
extremes, and is as perfectly free from the least intermixture of legal
bondage as from the least taint of Antinomian licentiousness. It is, indeed,
this holy liberty, heavenly power, and gracious influence of the precious
gospel, under the teaching and testimony of the Holy Spirit, which makes it
so suitable to our case and state when first convinced of sin, and cast into
prison under guilt and condemnation. What release but a perfect release
would suit our deplorable case as prisoner—in the pit where there is no
water, shut up under wrath and guilty fear through a condemning law and an
accusing conscience? This pure and precious gospel, therefore, comes down to
us poor miserable captives, shut up in bondage under the law, under a guilty
conscience, under the tormenting accusations of Satan, and the doubts and
fears of our own trembling, misgiving heart. Yes, it comes down to our
pitiable state and condition as a message of pure mercy, as revealing and
proclaiming pardon and peace through a Saviour's blood; and when, by grace,
we can receive, embrace, and entertain it as a word from God to us,
proclaiming liberty as with a jubilee trumpet through every court and ward
of the soul.
And shall we take, or willingly allow any one else to take prisoner this
heavenly messenger and shut her up in the condemned cell? Shall we stand
tamely by and not lift up our voice with indignation when we see this
beauteous visitant, fresh, as it were, from the very courts of heaven, and
radiant with the glory of God, laid hold of by a villainous jailer, as if
she came to rob and murder? What were we before this precious gospel reached
our ears and hearts? Were we not bondslaves to sin, serving diverse lusts
and pleasures, taken and led captive by Satan at his will—and while we
talked about enjoying life, were, through fear of death, subject to bondage?
When we saw the saints of God not daring to do what we did greedily, we
thought that they were the slaves, and we the free men, not knowing that "to
whom we yield ourselves servants to obey, his servants we are, whether of
sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness;" (Ro 6:16;) not knowing
that "whoever commits sin is the servant of sin," and that our boasted
freedom was real servitude, while their apparent bondage was real freedom;
for they had an interest in that precious declaration—"If the Son,
therefore, shall make you free, you shall be free indeed." (Jn 8:36.)
As, then, the spirit of liberty is the spirit of the gospel, it must be the
very spirit of the precept also as an integral part of the gospel. If,
therefore, you have never known the spirit of liberty in the gospel, you
have never known the spirit of the precept, which is a part of that liberty;
and if you have never known the spirit of the precept, you have never once
performed one of the precepts aright. All your obedience has been not in
newness of the spirit, but in the oldness of the letter.
O how pious and religious some of you have been, if not now are! How you
have set the precepts before your eves and tried to keep them—how harshly
you have judged others who were not so strict in keeping the commandments as
you believed you were—how you spied out the liberty of some of the dear
family of God which they had in Christ Jesus, that you might, by your
conversation, or your preaching, your letters of advice, your solemn
warnings, your sharp and angry reproofs, your praying at them, and, as you
thought and said, for them, bring them into bondage. (Gal 2:4) How dangerous
you considered must be the liberty of the gospel if it should set anyone who
professed godliness free from all those shackles and fetters which, the more
self-imposed and the stricter they were, the more closely you hugged them to
your self-righteous bosom! Thus you took the precepts of the gospel out of
their connection with the liberty of the gospel, and turned them into moral
duties to feed your legal, self-righteous spirit. And what was the
consequence? Bondage, guilt, and fear in your own conscience, for you could
never keep the precept even according to your own interpretation of it;
harsh judgment of all who did not partake of your legal spirit, whatever
might be their experience or consistency; close alliance with shallow
professors held fast in the same bonds with yourself; and a gradual
departure from the truths of the gospel, until a miracle of grace put you
into the furnace, there to learn what your own arm could do for you, and
that nothing but the gospel, in its blessed liberty and power, could save
your soul.
We have rather wandered from our point, but we could not show the liberty of
the precept as animated by the spirit of the precept, and its harmony with
the whole tenor and current of the gospel, without entering a little into
the nature of the liberty of the gospel; and, as this is a subject of great
importance, and very dear to us, we have been tempted to stray somewhat from
our due limits. But now observe the connection between the 'spirit of the
precept' and the 'liberty of the gospel'. In order, then, that this liberty
of the gospel should not be abused unto licentiousness, it is guided and
regulated by the precept, and by the spirit of the precept as animating the
letter. The liberty of the gospel is a living, animated principle—not a dead
letter, but a gracious power and influence. This is one of its main
blessings. The precept therefore, in guiding and regulating this liberty,
must be animated, too, with spirit and life, or you would have the strange
anomaly, the gross and palpable inconsistency, of a living body walking with
dead feet, or served by paralyzed hands. (The
Precepts of the Word of God) |
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