1 John
1:5-2:6 The Message and Its Practical Results
‘This then is the message which we have
heard of Him, and declare unto you, that God is light, and in Him is no
darkness at all. 6. If we say that we have fellowship with Him and walk in
darkness, we lie, and do not the truth: 7. But if we walk in the light, as
He is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of
Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin. 8. If we say that we have
no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. 9. If we confess
our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse
us from all unrighteousness. 10. If we say that we have not sinned, we
make Him a liar, and His word is not in us.’
My little children, these things write I unto you, that ye sin not. And if
any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous: 2. And He is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours
only, hut also for the sins of the whole world. 3. And hereby we do know
that we know Him, if we keep His commandments. 4. He that saith, I know
Him, and keepeth not His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in
him. 5. But whoso keepeth his word, in him verily is the love of God
perfected: hereby know we that we are in Him. 6. He that saith he abideth
in Him ought himself also so to walk, even as He walked.’ — 1 John
1:5-2:6.
JOHN is the mystic among the New Testament writers He dwells much on the
immediate union of the soul with God, and he has little to say about
institutions and rites His method is not to argue, but to utter deep,
simple propositions which convince by their own light. But he is also
intensely eager for plain, practical morality, and in that respect sets
the example which, unfortunately too many of the more mystical types of
Christian teach ing have failed to follow. To him the outcome and test of
all deep hidden union with God is righteousness in life.
The blending of these two elements, which is the very keynote of this
letter, is wonderfully set forth in this passage. They would require much
more space than we command for their treatment, for every clause is
weighty as gold. We can but skim the surface, and try to bring out the
salient points.
I. We have, first, a wonderful gathering up of the whole gospel message
into one utterance as to the essential nature of God.
Light is in all languages the symbol of
knowledge, of joy, of purity. It is the source of life. Its very nature is
to ray itself out into and conquer darkness. Its splendor dazzles every
eye; all things rejoice in its beams. Darkness is the type of ignorance,
of sorrow, of sin. But, whilst the symbol is thus rich in manifold
revelations, probably purity and self-communication are the predominating
ideas here.
John has been honoured to give the world the three great revelations that
God is spirit, is light, is love. And this profound saying in some sense
includes both the others, inasmuch as light, which to the popular mind is
most widely apart from matter, may well stand for the emblem of spirit,
and, since to radiate is its inseparable quality, does represent in symbol
the delight in imparting Himself, which is the very heart of the
declaration that God is love. If, then, we grasp these two thoughts of
absolute purity and of self-impartation as the very nature and property of
God, John tells us that we grasp the kernel of the Gospel.
And he thinks that men never will grasp them certainly unless a ‘message’
from God, a definite revelation in historical fact, certifies them. We may
hope or doubt, or desire, but we cannot be sure that God is light unless
he tells us so by unmistakable act. John knew what act that was — the
sending of His only-begotten Son. To the positive statement John, in his
usual manner, appends an emphatic negative one: ‘Darkness is not in him,
no, not in any way.’ He is light, all light, only light.
II. With characteristic moral earnestness, John passes at once to the
practical effects which the message is meant to have.
We are not told what God is simply that
we may know, but that, knowing, we may do and be. If He is light, two
things will follow in those who are in union with Him — they will walk in
light, and they will in His light see their own evil. John deals with
these two consequences in verses 6-10 — the former in verses 6 and 7; the
latter in verses 8-10. The parallelism in the construction of these two
sets of verses is striking:
VERSES 6, 7.
If we say that we have fellowship with Him, and walk in darkness, we lie,
and do not the truth. But if we walk in the light, as He is in the light,
we have fellowship one with another and the blood of Jesus His Son
cleanseth us from all sin.
VERSES 8, 9.
If we say that we have no sin we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not
in us. If we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous forgive us our
sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
As to the former of these two paragraphs, the underlying thought is that
fellowship with God necessarily involves moral likeness to Him. Worship is
always aspiration after, and conformity to, the character of the god
worshipped, and there can be no true communion with a God who is light
unless the worshipper walks in light. In plain language, all high-flying
pretensions to communion with God must verify themselves by practical
righteousness. That cuts deep into an emotional religion, which has much
to say about raptures and the like, but produces little purifying effect
on the humble details of daily life.
There are always professing Christians who talk of their blessed
experiences, and woefully fail in prosaic virtues. It is a pity that a man
should hold his head so high that he does not look to keep his feet out of
the mud. Such a profession is for the most part tainted with more or less
conscious falsehood, and is always a proof that the truth — the sum of
God’s revelation — is not operative in the man; that he is not turning his
belief into act, as all belief should be. On the other hand, the true
relation resulting from the message is that we should walk in the light,
as He is in it. Verse 10 seems to be simply a reiteration of the preceding
idea, with some intensifying, and that chiefly in the description of the
true character of the denial of sin. To make God a liar is worse than to
lie or to deceive ourselves; and all ignoring of sin does that, because
not only has God declared its universality by the words of revelation, but
all His dealings with men are based upon the fact that they are all
sinners, and we fly in the face of all His words and works if we deny that
which we ourselves are. Therefore the Apostle further varies his
expression, and says ‘His word’ instead of ‘the truth,’ thus bringing into
prominence the thought that ‘the truth’ is made accessible to us because
God has spoken.
III. 1 John 2:1-6 is in structure analogous to the preceding section.
As there, so here, the ‘message’ is
summed up in one great fact, — Christ’s work as advocate for believers and
as propitiation for the world. As there, so here, two practical
consequences follow, which are drawn out on corresponding lines. Observe
the repetition, in verses 3 and 5 b, of ‘hereby know we,’ and in verses 4
and 6 of ‘He that saith.’
Note, too, the reappearance of ‘is a liar’ and of ‘the truth is not in
him’ in verse 4. The drift of the section may be briefly put as follows.
John’s heart melts as he thinks of the possibilities of holiness open to
believers, and of the sad actualities of their imperfect lives, and he
addresses them by the tender name, ‘my little children.’ The impelling and
guiding motive of his letter is that they may not sin. Practical
righteousness is the end of revelation, and its complete attainment should
be the aim of every believer. But the sad experience of ‘saints’ is that
they are not yet wholly delivered from its power. Therefore ‘the message’
is not only ‘God is light without blending of darkness,’ but, ‘we
Christians have an Advocate with the Father.’ Jesus is to-day carrying on
His mighty work of prevalent intercession for all His servants, and that
intercession secures forgiveness for their inconsistencies and lapses,
because it rests upon Christ’s finished work of ‘propitiation,’ which is
for the whole world, even though it actually avails only for believers.
Such being the power of Christ’s work in its twofold aspect of
propitiation and of intercession, the same practical issues as in the
preceding section were shown to flow from the revealed nature of God are
here, in somewhat different form, linked with that work. First, keeping
his commandments (which is equivalent to ‘walking in the light’) is the
test to ourselves, as well as to others, of our really knowing Him with a
knowledge which is not mere head work, but the acquaintance of sympathy
and friendship, or, in the words of the previous paragraph, having
fellowship with Him.
Clearly, the scope of this section requires that ‘His commandments’ should
here mean Christ’s, not the Father’s. All professions of knowing Jesus
which are not verified by obedience to Him are false. If we do keep His
word — not merely the individual ‘commandments,’ but the word as one great
whole — our love to God reaches its perfection, for it is no mere emotion
of the heart, but the force which is to mould and actuate all our acts.
Verse 5b should be separated from the preceding words, for it is really
the beginning of the second issue from the work of Christ, and is parallel
with ‘hereby know we,’ etc., in verse 3. Observe the progress in thought
from the assurance that we know (ver. 3) to the assurance that we are in
Him.
The Christian’s relation to Jesus is not only that of acquaintance,
however intimate, loving, and transforming, but that of actual dwelling in
Him. That great truth shines on every page of the New Testament, and is
not to be weakened down into metaphor or rhetoric. It is the very heart of
the Christian life, and the test that we have attained to it, and that not
merely as an occasional, but as a permanent, condition (note that ‘are in
Him’ is strengthened to ‘abideth in Him’) is that our outward life, in its
manifold activities, shall be conformed to the pattern of all holiness in
the life of Jesus. To walk as He walked is to walk in the light.
Profession is nothing, conduct is everything, and we shall only be clear
of sin in the measure in which we have Him who is the light of men for the
very life of our lives.
1 John 1:7
Walking in the Light
If we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship one
with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all
sin.’ —1 John 1:7.
JOHN was the Apostle of love, but he was also a ‘son of thunder.’ His
intense moral earnestness and his very love made him hate evil, and
sternly condemn it; and his words flash and roll as no other words in
Scripture, except the words of the Lord of love. In the immediate context
he has been laying down what is to him the very heart of his message, that
‘God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all.’ There are spots in the
sun, great tracts of blackness on its radiant disc; but in God is
unmingled, perfect purity. That being so, it is clear that no man can be
in sympathy or hold communion with Him, unless he, too, in his measure, is
light.
So, with fiery indignation, John turns to the people, of whom there were
some, even in the primitive Church, who made claims to a lofty
spirituality and communion with God, and all the while were manifestly
living in the darkness of sin. He will not mince matters with them. He
roundly says that they are lying, and the worst sort of lie — an acted
lie: ‘They do not the truth.’ Then, with a quick turn, he opposes to these
pretenders the men who really are in fellowship with God, and in my text
lays down the principle that walking in the light is essential to
fellowship with God. Only, in his usual fashion, he turns the antithesis
into a somewhat different form, so as to suggest another aspect of the
truth, and instead of saying, as we might expect for the verbal accuracy
of the contrast, ‘If we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have
fellowship with God,’ he says, ‘we have fellowship one with another.’ Then
he adds a still further result of that walk, ‘the blood of Jesus cleanses
from all sin.’
Now there are three things: walking in the light, which is the only
Christian walk; the companions of those who walk in the light; and the
progressive cleansing which is given.
I. Note this ‘Walking in the light,’ which is the only Christian walk.
In all languages, light is the natural symbol for three things: knowledge,
joy, purity. The one ray is broken into its three constituent parts. But
just as there are some surfaces which are sensitive to the violet rays,
say, of the spectrum, and not to the others, so John’s intense moral
earnestness makes him mainly sensitive to the symbolism which makes light
the expression, not so much of knowledge or of joy, as of moral purity.
And although that is not exclusively his use of the emblem, it is
predominately so, and it is so here. To ‘walk in the light’ then, is,
speaking generally, to have purity, righteousness, goodness, as the very
element and atmosphere in which our progressive and changeful life is
carried on.
Note, too, before I go further, that very significant antithesis: we
‘walk’; He is — God is in the light essentially, changelessly,
undisturbedly, eternally; and the light in which He is, His ‘own calm
home, His habitation from eternity,’ is light which has flowed out from
Himself as a halo round the midnight moon. It is all one in substance to
say God is in light, or, as the Psalmist has it, ‘He covered Himself with
light as with a garment,’ and to say, ‘God is light.’
But, side by side with that changeless abiding in the perfect purity,
which is inaccessible, the Apostle ventures to put, not in contrast only,
but in parallel (as He is), our changing, effortful, active, progressive
life in the light (God is); we walk.
So, then, the essential of a Christian character is that the light of
purity and moral goodness shall be as the very orb, in the midst of which
it stands and advances. That implies effort, and it implies activity, and
it implies progress. And we are only Christians in the measure in which
the conscious activities of our daily lives, and the deepest energies of
our inward being, are bathed and saturated with this love of, and effort
after, righteousness. It is vain, says John, to talk about fellowship with
God, unless the fellowship is rooted in sympathy with Him in that which is
the very heart of His Being, the perfect light of perfect holiness. Test
your Christianity by that. Then, still further, there is implied in this
great requirement of walking in the light, not only activity and effort,
and progress in purity, but also that the whole of the life shall be
brought into relation with, and shall be moulded after, the pattern of the
God in whom we profess to believe. Religion, in its deepest meaning, is
the aspiration after likeness to the god. You see it in heathenism. Men
make their gods after their own image, and then the god makes the
worshippers after his image. Mars is the god of the soldier, and Venus
goddess of the profligate, and Apollo god of the musical and the wise,
etc., and in Christianity the deepest thing in it is aspiration and effort
after likeness to God. Love is imitation; admiration, especially when it
is raised to the highest degree and becomes adoration, is imitation. And
the man that lies before God, like a mirror in the sunshine, receives on
the still surface of his soul — but not, like the mirror, on the surface
only, but down into its deepest depths — the reflected image of Him on
Whom he gazes. ‘We all with unveiled face, mirroring glow, are changed
into the same image.’ So to walk in the light is only possible when we are
drawn into it, and our feeble feet made fit to tread upon the radiant
glow, by the thought that He is in the light. To imitate Him is to be
righteous. So do not let us forget that a correct creed, and devout
emotions, ay! and a morality which has no connection with Him, are all
imperfect, and that the end of all our religion, our orthodox creed and
our sweet emotions and inward feelings of acceptance and favour and
fellowship, are meant to converge on, and to produce this — a life and a
character which lives and moves and has its being in a great orb of light
and purity.
But another thing is included in this grand metaphor of my text. Not only
does it enjoin upon us effort and activity and progress in the light and
the linking of all our purity with God, but also, it bids us shroud no
part of our conduct or our character either from ourselves or from Him.
Bring it all out into the light. And although with a penitent heart, and a
face suffused with blushes, we have sometimes to say, ‘See, Father, what I
have done!’ it is far better that the revealing light should shine down
upon us, and like the sunshine on wet linen, melt away the foulness which
it touches, than that we should huddle the ugly thing up in a corner, to
be one day revealed and transfixed by the flash of the light turned into
lightning. ‘He that doeth the truth cometh to the light, that his deeds
may be made manifest.’
II. So much, then, for my first point; the second is: The companions of
the men that walk in the light.
I have already pointed out that the accurate, perhaps pedantically
accurate, form of the antithesis would have been: ‘If we walk in the light
as He is in the light, we have fellowship with God.’ But John says, first,
‘we have fellowship one with another.’ Underlying that, as I shall have to
say in a moment, there is the other thought: ‘We have fellowship with
God.’ But he deals with the other side of the truth first. That just comes
to this, that the only cement that perfectly knits men to each other is
their common possession of that light, and the consequent fellowship with
God. There are plenty of other bonds that draw us to one another; but
these, if they are not strengthened by this deepest of all bonds, the
affinity of souls, that are moving together in the realm of light and
purity, are precarious, and apt to snap. Sin separates men quite as much
as it separates each man from God. It is the wedge driven into the tree
that rends it apart. Human society with its various bonds is like the iron
hoop that may be put around the barrel staves, giving them a quasi-unity.
The one thing that builds men together into a whole is that each shall be,
as it were, embedded in the rock which is the foundation, and the building
will rise into a holy temple in the Lord. Sin separates; as the prophet
confessed, ‘All we like sheep have gone astray, every one to his own way,’
and the flock is broken up into a multitude of scattered sheep. Social
enthusiasts may learn the lesson that the only way by which brotherhood
among men can become anything else than a name, and probably end, as it
did in the great French Revolution, in ‘brothers’ making hecatombs of
their brethren under the guillotine, is that it shall be the corollary
from the Fatherhood of God. If we walk in light, not otherwise, we have
‘fellowship one with another.’
Then, still further, in this fellowship one with another, John presupposes
the fellowship with God for each, which makes the possibility and the
certainty of all being drawn into one family. He does not think it
necessary to state, what is so plain and obvious, viz., that unless we are
in sympathy with God, in our aspiration and effort after the light which
is His home and ours, we have no real communion with Him. I said that sin
separated man from man, and disrupted all the sweet bends of amity, so
that if men come into contact, being themselves in the darkness, they come
into collision rather than into communion. A company of travellers in the
night are isolated individuals. When the sun rises on their paths they are
a company again. And in like manner, sin separates us from God, and if our
hearts are turned towards, and denizens of, the darkness of impurity, then
we have no communion with Him.
He cannot come to us if we love the darkness. He
‘Can but listen at the gate,
And hear the household jar within.’
The tide of the Atlantic feels along
the base of ironbound cliffs on our western shores, and there is not a
crevice into which it can come. So God moves about us, but is without us,
so long as we walk in darkness. So let us remember that no union with Him
is possible, except there be this common dwelling in the light. Two grains
of quicksilver laid upon a polished surface will never unite if their
surfaces be dusted over with minute impurities, or if the surface of one
of them be. Clean away the motes, and they will coalesce and be one. A
film of sin separates men from God. And if the film be removed the man
dwells in God, and God in him.
III. That brings me to my last
point: The progressive cleansing of those who dwell in the light.
‘The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth from all sin.’ Now if you will notice
the whole context, and eminently the words a couple of verses after my
text, you will see that the cleansing here meant is not the cleansing of
forgiveness, but the cleansing of purifying. For the two things are
articulately distinguished in the ninth verse: ‘He is faithful and just to
forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.’ So, to
use theological terms, it is not justification, but sanctification that is
meant here.
Then there is another thing to be noticed, and that is that when the
Apostle speaks here about the blood of Christ, he is not thinking of that
blood as shed on the Cross, the atoning sacrifice, but of that blood as
transfused into the veins, the source there of our new life. The Old
Testament says that ‘the blood is the life.’ Never mind about the
statement being scientifically correct; it conveys the idea of the time,
which underlies a great deal of Old and New Testament teaching. And when
John says the blood of Jesus cleanses from ‘all sin,’ he says just the
same thing as his brother Paul said, ‘the law of the spirit of life in
Jesus Christ makes me free from the law of sin and death.’ That is to say,
a growing cleansing from the dominion and the power of sin is granted to
us, if we have the life of Jesus Christ · breathed into our lives. The
metaphor is a very strong one. They tell us — I know nothing about the
truth of it — that sometimes it has been possible to revive a moribund man
by transfusing into his veins blood from another. That is a picture of the
only way by which you and I can become free from the tyranny that
dominates us. We must have the life of Christ as the animating principle
of our lives, the spirit of Jesus emancipating us from the power of sin
and death.
So you see, there are two aspects of Christ’s great work set before us
under that one metaphor of the blood in its two-fold form, first, as shed
for us sinners on the Cross; second, as poured into our veins day by day.
That works progressive cleansing. It covers the whole ground of all
possible iniquity. Pardon is much, purifying is more. The sacrifice on the
Cross is the basis of everything, but that sacrifice does not exhaust what
Christ does for us. He died for our sins, and lives for our sanctifying.
He died for us, He lives in us. Because He died, we are forgiven; because
He lives, we are made pure.. Only remember John’s ‘if.’ The ‘blood of
Jesus will progressively cleanse us until it has cleansed us from all sin,
on condition that we ‘walk in the light,’ not otherwise. If the main
direction of our lives is towards the light; if we seek, by aspiration and
by effort, and by deliberate choice, to live in holiness, then, and not
else, will the power of the life of Jesus Christ deliver us from the power
of sin and death.
Now, my text presupposes that the people to whom it is addressed, and whom
it concerns, have already passed from darkness into light, if not wholly,
yet in germ. But for those who have not so passed, there is something to
be said before my text. And John says it immediately; here it is, ‘If any
man sin we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous,
and He is the propitiation for our sins; and not for our sins only, but
for the whole world.’ So we have to begin with the blood shed for us, the
means of our pardon, and then we have the advance of the blood sprinkled
on us, the means of our cleansing. If by humble faith we take the dying
Lord for our Saviour, and the channel of our forgiveness, we shall have
the pardon of our sins. If we listen to the voice that says, ‘Ye were
sometime darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord. Walk as children of
the light,’ we shall have fellowship with the living Lord, and daily know
more and more of the power of His cleansing blood, making us ‘meet to be
partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light.’
1 John 2:7, 8
The Commandment, Old Yet New
‘I write no new commandment unto you,
but an old commandment which ye had from the beginning .... Again, a new
commandment I write unto you, which thing is true in him and in you.’ — 1
John 2:7, 8.
THE simplest words may carry the deepest thoughts. Perhaps angels and
little children speak very much alike. This letter, like all of John’s
writing, is pellucid in speech, profound in thought, clear and deep, like
the abysses of mid-ocean. His terms are such as a child can understand;
his sentences short and inartificial: he does not reason, he declares; he
has neither argument nor rhetoric, but he teaches us the deepest truths,
and shows us that we get nearer the centre by insight than by logic.
Now the words that I have taken for my text are very characteristic of
this Apostle’s manner. He has a great, wide-reaching truth to proclaim,
and he puts it in the simplest, most inartificial manner, laying side by
side two artless sentences, and stimulates us by the juxtaoution, leading
us to feel after, and so to make our own. the large lessons that are in
them. Let me, then, try to bring these out.
I. And the first one that strikes me is — ’the word’ is ‘a
commandment.’
Now, by ‘the word’ here the Apostle
obviously means, since he speaks about it as that which these Asiatic
Christians ‘heard from the beginning, ‘the initial truth which was
presented for their acceptance in the story of the life and death of Jesus
Christ. That was ‘the word,’ and, says he, just because it was a history
it is a commandment; just because it was the Revelation of God it is a
law. God never tells us anything merely that we may be wise. The purpose
of all divine speech, whether in His great works in nature, or in the
voices of our own consciences, or in the syllables that we have to piece
together from out of the complicated noises of the world’s history, or in
this book, or in the Incarnate Word, where all the wandering syllables are
gathered together into one word — the purpose of all that God says to men
is primarily that they may know, but in order that, knowing, they may do;
and still more that they may be. And so, inasmuch as every piece of
religious knowledge has in it the capacity of directing conduct, all God’s
word is a commandment.
And, if that is true in regard to other revelations and manifestations
that he has made of Himself, it is especially true in regard to the
summing-up of all in the Incarnate Word, and in His words, and in the
words that tell us of His life and of His death. So whatever truths there
may be, and there are many, which, of course, have only the remotest, if
any, bearing upon life and conduct, every bit of Christian truth has a
direct grip upon a man’s life, and brings with it a stringent obligation.
Now, the Revelation of God in Jesus Christ, ‘the Word which ye heard from
the beginning,’ which, I suppose, would roughly correspond with what is
told us in our four Gospels; the word which these Asiatic Christians heard
at first, the good news that was brought to them in the midst of their
gropings and peradventures, commanded, in the first place, absolute trust,
the submission of the will as well as the assent of the understanding. But
also it commanded imitation, for Jesus Christ was revealed to them, as He
is revealed to us, as being the Incarnate realisation of the ideal of
humanity; and what He is, the knowledge that He is that, binds us to try
to be in our turn.
And more than that, brethren, the Cross of Christ is a commandment. For we
miserably mutilate it, and sinfully as well as foolishly limit its
application and its power, if we recognise it only — I was going to say
mainly — as being the ground of our hope and of what we call our
salvation, and do not recognise it as being the obligatory example of our
lives, which we are bound to translate into our daily practice. Jesus
Christ Himself has told us that in many a fashion, never more touchingly
and wondrously than when in response to the request of a handful of Greeks
to see Him, He answered with the word which not only declared what was
obligatory upon Him, but what was obligatory upon us all, and for the want
of which all the great endowments of the Greek mind at last rotted down
into sensuousness, when He said, ‘Except a corn of wheat fall into the
ground and die, it abideth alone, but if it die it bringeth forth much
fruit,’ and then went on to say, ‘he that loveth his life shall lose it.’
So, then, brethren, ‘the word which ye heard at the beginning,’ the story
of Christ, His life and His death, is a stringent commandment. Now, this
is one of the blessings of Christianity, that all which was hard and
hopeless, ministering to despair sometimes, as well as stirring to fierce
effort at others, in the conception of law or duty as it stands outside
us, is changed into the tender word, ‘if ye love Me, keep My
commandments.’ If any man serve Me, let him... ‘follow Me.’ It is a law;
it is ‘the law of liberty.’ So you have not done all that is needful when
you have accepted the teaching of Christ in the Scriptures and the
teaching of the Scriptures concerning Christ. Nor have you done all that
is needful when clasping Him, and clinging simply to His Cross, you
recognise in it the means and the pledge of your acceptance with God, and
the ground and anchor of all your hope. There is something more to be
done. The Gospel is a commandment, and commandments require not only
assent, not only trust, but practical obedience. The ‘old commandment’ is
the ‘word which ye heard from the beginning.’
II. The old Christ is perpetually new.
The Apostle goes on, in the last words of my text, to say, ‘Which
thing’(viz., this combination of the old and the new) ‘is true in Him and
in you.’
‘True in Him’ — that is to say, Christ, the old Christ that was declared
to these Asiatic Christians as they were groping amidst the illusions of
their heathenism, is perpetually becoming new as new circumstances emerge,
and new duties are called for, and new days come with new burdens, hopes,
possibilities, or dangers. The perpetual newness of the old Christ is what
is taught here.
Suppose one of these men in Ephesus heard for the first time the story
that away in Judea there had lived the manifestation of God in the flesh,
and that He, in His wonderful love, had died for men, that they might be
saved from the grip of their sins. And suppose that man barely able to
see, had yet seen that much, and clutched at it. He was a Christian, but
the Christ that he discerned when he first discerned Him through the
mists, and the Christ that he had in his life and in his heart, after,
say, twenty years of Christian living, are very different. The old Christ
remained, but the old Christ was becoming new day by day, according to the
new necessities and positions. And that is what will be our experience if
we have any real Christianity in us. The old Christ that we trusted at
first was able to do for us all that we asked Him to do, but we did not
ask Him at first for half enough, and we did not learn at first a tithe of
what was in Him. Suppose, for instance, some great ship comes alongside a
raft with ship-wrecked sailors upon it, and in the darkness of the night
transfers them to the security of its deck. They know how safe they are,
they know what has saved them, but what do they know compared with what
they will know before the voyage ends of all the reservoirs of power and
stores of supplies that are in her? Christ comes to us in the darkness,
and delivers us. We know Him for our Deliverer from the first moment, if
we truly have grasped Him. But it will take summering and wintering with
Him, through many a long day and year, before we can ever have a partially
adequate apprehension of all that lies in Him.
And what will teach us the depths of Christ, and how does He become new to
us? Well — by trusting Him, by following Him, and by the ministry of life.
Some of us, I have no doubt, can look back upon past days when sorrow fell
upon us, blighting and all but crushing; and then things that we had read
a thousand times in the Bible, and thought we had believed, blazed up into
a new meaning, and we felt as if we had never understood anything about
them before. The Christ that is with us in the darkness, and whom we find
able to turn even it, if not into light, at least into a solemn twilight
not unvisited by hopes, that Christ is more to us than the Christ that we
first of all learnt so little to know. And life’s new circumstances, its
emerging duties, are like the strokes of the spade which clears away the
soil, and discloses the treasure in all its extent which we purchased when
we bought that field. We buy the treasure at once, but it takes a long
time to count it. The old Christ is perpetually the new Christ.
So, brethren, Christian progress consists not in getting away from the
original facts, the elements of the Gospel, but it consists in penetrating
more deeply into these, and feeling more of their power and their grasp.
All Euclid is in the definitions and axioms and postulates at the
beginning. All our books are the letters of the alphabet. And progress
consists, not in advancing beyond, but in sinking into, that initial
truth, ‘God was in Christ reconciling the world unto Himself.’
I might say a word here as to another phase of this perpetual newness of
the old Christ — viz., in His adaptation to deal with all the
complications and perplexities and problems of each successive age. It has
taken the Church a long, long time to find out and to formulate, rightly
or wrongly, what it has discovered in Jesus. The conclusions to be drawn
from the simple Gospel truth, the presuppositions on which it rests,
require all the efforts of all the Church through all the ages, and
transcend them all. And I venture to say, though it may sound like
unsupported dogma, that for this generation’s questionings, social, moral,
and political, the answer is to be found in Him. He, and He only, will
interpret each generation to itself, and will meet its clamant needs.
There is none other for the world to-day but the old Christ with the new
aspect which the new conditions require.
Did it ever strike you how remarkable it is, and, as it seems to me, of
how great worth as an argument for the truth of Christianity it is, that
Jesus Christ comes to this, as to every generation, with the air of
belonging to it? Think of the difference between the aspect which a Plato
or a Socrates presents to the world to-day, and the aspect which that Lord
presents. You do not need to strip anything off Him. He committed Himself
to no statements which the progress of thought or knowledge has exploded.
He stands before the world to-day fitting its needs as closely as He did
those of the men of His own generation. The old Christ is the new Christ.
III. Lastly, in the Christian life the old commandment is perpetually
new.
‘Which thing is true... in you.’ That is to say, ‘the commandment which ye
received at the beginning,’ when ye received Christ as Saviour, has in
itself a power of adapting itself to all new conditions as they may
emerge, and will be felt increasingly to grow stringent, and increasingly
to demand more entire conformity, and increasingly to sweep its circle
round the whole of human life. For this is the result of all obedience,
that the conception of duty becomes more clear and more stringent. ‘If any
man will do His will’ the reward shall be that he will see more and more
the altitude of that will, the length and breadth and depth and height of
the possible conformity of the human spirit to the will of God. And so as
we advance in obedience we shall see un-reached advances before us, and
each new step of progress will declare more fully how much still remains
to be accomplished. In us the ‘old commandment’ will become ever new.
And not only so, but perpetually with the increasing sweep and stringency
of the obligation will be felt an increasing sense of our failure to
fulfil it. Character is built up, for good or for evil, by slow degrees.
Conscience is quickened by being listened to, and stifled by being
neglected. A little speck of mud on a vestal virgin’s robe, or on a swan’s
plumage, will be conspicuous, while a splash twenty times the size will
pass unnoticed on the rags of some travel-stained wayfarer. The purer we
become, the more we shall know ourselves to be impure.
Thus, my brother, there opens out before us an endless course in which all
the blessedness that belongs to the entertaining and preservation of
ancient convictions, lifelong friends, and familiar truths, and all the
antithetical blessedness that belongs to the joy of seeing, rising upon
our horizon as some new planet with lustrous light, will be united in our
experience. We shall at once be conservative and progressive; holding by
the old Christ and the old commandment, and finding that both have in them
endless novelty. The trunk is old; every summer brings fresh leaves. And
at last we may hope to come to the new Jerusalem, and drink the new wine
of the Kingdom, and yet find that the old love remains, and that the new
Christ, whose presence makes the new heavens and the new earth, is ‘the
same yesterday, today, and for ever,’ the old Christ whom, amid the
shadows of earth, we tried to love and copy.
1 John 2:14
Youthful Strength
“I have written unto you, young men, because ye are strong, and the
word of God abideth in you, and ye have overcome the wicked one.’—1 John
2:14.
‘WHAT am I going to be?’ is the question that presses upon young people
stepping out of the irresponsibilities of childhood into youth. But,
unfortunately, the question is generally supposed to be answered when they
have fixed upon a trade or profession. It means, rightly taken, a great
deal more than that. ‘What am I going to make of myself?’ ‘What ideal have
I before me, towards which I constantly press?’ is a question that I would
fain lay upon the hearts of all that now hear me. For the misery and the
reason of the failure of so many lives is simply that people have never
fairly looked that question in the face and tried to answer it, but drift
and drift, and let circumstances determine them. And, of course, in a
world like this, such people are sure to turn out what such an immense
number of people do turn out, failures as far as all God’s purposes with
humanity are concerned. The absence of a clear ideal is the misery and the
loss of all young people who do not possess it.
So here in my text is an old man’s notion of what young men ought to be
and may be. ‘Ye are strong, and the word of God abideth in you, and ye
have overcome the wicked one.’
So said the aged John to some amongst his hearers in these corrupt Asiatic
cities. It was not merely a fair ideal painted upon vacancy, but it was a
portrait of actual young Christians in these little Asiatic churches. And
I would fain have some of you take this realised ideal for yours and see
to it that your lives be conformed to it.
There are three points here. The Apostle, first of all, lays his finger
upon the strength, which is something more than mere physical strength,
proper to youth. Then he lets us see the secret source of that strength:
‘Ye have the word of God abiding in you.’ And then he shows the field on
which it should be exercised, and the victory which it secures: ‘And ye
have overcome the wicked one.’ Now let me touch upon these three points
briefly in succession.
I. First, Then, Note Here The Strength Which You Young People Ought To
Covet And To Aim At.
It is not merely the physical strength proper to their age, nor the mere
unworn buoyancy and vigour which sorrows and care and responsibilities
have not thinned and weakened. These are great and precious gifts. We
never know how precious they are until they have slipped away from us.
These are great and precious gifts, to be preserved as long as may be, by
purity and by moderation, and to be used for high and great purposes. But
the strength that is in thews and muscles is not the strength that the
Apostle is speaking about here, nor anything that belongs simply to the
natural stage of your development, whether it be purely physical or purely
mental. Samson was a far weaker man than the poor little Jew ‘whose bodily
presence was weak and his speech contemptible,’ and who all his days
carried about with him that ‘thorn in the flesh.’ It is not your body that
is to be strong, but yourselves.
Now the foundation of all true strength lies here, in a good, strong will.
In this world, unless a man has learned to say ‘No!’ and to say it very
decidedly, and to stick to it, he will never come to any good. Two words
contain the secret of noble life: ‘Resist!’ and ‘Persist!’ And the true
strength of manhood lies in this mainly, that, in spite of all
antagonisms, hindrances, voices, and things that array themselves against
you, having greatly resolved, you do greatly do what you have resolved,
and having said ‘I will!’ let neither men nor devils lead you to say, ‘I
will not.’ Depend upon it, that to be weak in this direction is to be weak
all through. Strong passions make weak men. And a strong will is the
foundation, in this wicked and antagonistic world in which we live, of all
real strength.
But then the strength that I would have you seek, and strive to cultivate,
must be a strength of will founded upon strong reason. Determination
unenlightened is obstinacy, and obstinacy is weakness. A mule can beat you
at that: ‘Be ye not as the mule, which have no understanding.’ A
determination which does not take into its view all the facts of the case,
nor is influenced by these, has no right to call itself strength. It is
only, to quote a modern saying—I know not whether true of the person to
whom it was originally applied or no—is ‘only a lath painted to look like
iron.’ Unintelligent obstinacy is folly, like the conduct of some man who
sticks to his pick and his task in a quarry after the bugle has warned him
of an impending explosion, which will blow him to atoms.
But that is not all. A strong will, illuminated by a strong beam of light
from the understanding, must be guided and governed by a strong hand put
forth by Conscience. ‘I should like’ is the weakling’s motto. ‘I will’ may
be an obstinate fool’s motto. ‘I ought, therefore, God helping me, and
though the devil hinders me, I will,’ is a man’s. Conscience is king. To
obey it is to be free; to neglect it is to be a slave.
Is not this a better ideal for life than gathering any outward
possessions, however you may succeed therein? A thousand things will have
to be taken into account, and may help or may hinder outward prosperity
and success. But nobody can hinder you working at your character and
succeeding in making it what it ought to be; and to form character is the
end of life. ‘To be weak is miserable, doing or suffering.’ Ay! that is
true, though Milton put it into the devil’s mouth. And there is only one
strength that will last, ‘for even the youths shall faint and be weary,
and the young men shall utterly fail.’ But the strength of a fixed and
illuminated and conscience-guided will, which governs the man and is
governed by God, shall never faint or grow weak. This is the strength
which we should seek, and which I ask you to make the conscious aim of
your lives.
II. Now Note, Secondly, How To Get It.
‘Ye are strong, and the Word of God abideth in you.’
Those young Asiatic Christians, that
John had in his eye, had learned the secret and the conditions of this
strength; and not only in limb and sinew, or in springy and elastic
buoyancy of youthful, mental, and spiritual vigour were they strong, but
they were so because ‘the Word of God abode in them.’ Now, there are two
significations of that great expression, both of them frequent in John’s
Gospel, and both of them, I think, transferred to this Epistle, each of
which may yield us a word of counsel. By ‘the Word of God,’ as I take it,
is meant—perhaps I ought to say both, but, at all events, either—the
revelation of God’s truth in Holy Scripture, or the personal revelation of
the will and nature of God in Jesus Christ our Lord. Whichever of these
two meanings—and at bottom they come to be one—we attach to this
expression, we draw from them an exhortation. Let me put this very
briefly.
Let me say to you, then, if you want to be strong, let Scripture truth
occupy ,and fill and be always present to your mind. There are powers to
rule and to direct all conduct, motive powers of the strongest character
in these great truths of God’s revelation. They are meant to influence a
man in all his doings, and it is for us to bring the greatest and
solemnest of them to bear on the smallest things of our daily life.
Suppose, now, that you go to your work, and some little difficulty starts
up in your path, or some trivial annoyance ruffles your temper, or some
lurking temptation is suddenly sprung upon you. Suppose your mind and
heart were saturated with God’s truth, with the great thoughts of His
being, of His love, of His righteousness, of Christ’s death for you, of
Christ’s presence with you, of Christ’s guardianship over you, of Christ’s
present will that you should walk in His ways, of the bright hopes of the
future, and the solemn vision of that great White Throne and the
retribution that streams thence, do you think it would be possible for you
to fall into sin, to yield to temptation, to be annoyed by any irritation
or bother, or over weighted by any duty? No! Whosoever lives with the
thoughts that God has given us in His Word familiar to His mind and within
easy reach of His hand, has therein an armlet against all possible
temptation, a test that will unveil the hidden corruption in the sweetest
seductions, and a calming power that will keep his heart still and
collected in the midst of agitations. If the Word of God in that lower
sense of the principles involved in the gospel of Jesus Christ, dwell in
your hearts, the fangs are taken out of the serpent. If you drink any
deadly thing it shall not hurt you, and you will ‘be strong in the Lord
and in the power of His might.’
Bring the greatest truths you can find to bear on the smallest duties, and
the small duties will grow great to match the principles by which they are
done. Bring the laws of Jesus Christ down to the little things, for, in
the name of common sense, if our religion is not meant to regulate
trifles, what is it meant to regulate? Life is made up of trifles. There
are half a dozen crises in the course of your life, but there are a
thousand trivial things in the course of every day. It would be a poor
kind of regulating principle that controlled the crises, and left us alone
to manage with the trifles the best way we could.
But in order that there shall be this continual operation of the motives
and principles involved in the gospel upon our daily lives, we must have
them very near our hand, ready to be laid hold of. The soldier that would
march through an enemy’s country, having left his gun in the hands of some
camp follower, would be very likely to be shot before he got his gun. I
remember going through the Red Sea; at the mouth of it where the entrance
is narrow, and the currents run strong, when the ship approaches the
dangerous place, the men take their stations at appointed places, and the
ponderous anchors are loosened and ready to be dropped in an instant if
the swirl of the current sweeps the ship into dangerous proximity to the
reel It is no time to cut the lashings of the anchors when the keel is
grating on the coral rocks. And it is no time to have to look about for
our weapons when the sudden temptation leaps upon us like a strong man
armed. You must have them familiar to you by devout meditation, by
frequent reflection, prayer, study of God’s Word, if they are to be of any
use to you at all. And I am afraid that about the last book in the world
that loads of young men and’ women think of sitting down to read,
systematically and connectedly, is the Bible. You will read sermons and
other religious books; you will read newspapers, pamphlets, novels; but
the Scripture, in its entirety, is a strange book to myriads of men who
call themselves Christians. And so they are weak. If you want to be
strong, ‘let the Word of God abide in your hearts. ‘
And then if we take the other view, which at bottom is not another, of the
meaning of this phrase, and apply it rather to the personal word, Jesus
Christ Himself, that will yield us another exhortation, and that is, let
Jesus Christ into your hearts and keep Him there, and He will make you
strong. I believe that it is no piece of metaphor or an exaggerated way of
putting the continuance of the influence of Christ’s example and Christ’s
teaching upon men’s hearts and minds, when He tells us that ‘if any man
open the door He will come in and sup with him.’ I want to urge the one
thought on you that it is possible, in simple literal fact, for that
Divine Saviour, who was ‘in Heaven’ whilst He walked on earth, and walks
on earth to-day when He has returned to His native Heaven, to enter into
my spirit and yours, and really to abide within us, the life of our lives,
‘the strength of our hearts, and our portion for ever.’ The rest of us can
render help to one another by strength ministered from without; Jesus
Christ will come into your hearts, if you let Him, in His very sweetness
and omnipotence of power, and will breathe His own grace into your
weakness, strengthening you as from within. Others can help you from
without, as you put an iron band round some over-weighted, crumbling brick
pillar in order to prevent it from collapsing, but He will pass into us as
you may drive an iron rod up through the centre of the column, and make it
strong inside, and we shall be strong if Jesus Christ dwells within us.
Open the door, dear young friends; let Christ come into your hearts, which
He will do if you do not hinder Him, and if you ask Him. Trust Him with
simple reliance upon Him for everything. Faith is ‘the door’; the door is
nothing of itself, but when it is opened it admits the guest. So do you
let that Master come and abide, and you will hear Him say to you, as He
said of old, ‘Child! My grace is sufficient.’ How modest He is.
Sufficient!-an ocean enough to fill a thimble! ‘My grace is sufficient for
thee; and My strength is made perfect in weakness. ‘
III. Now, Lastly, Notice The Field On Which The Strength Is To Be
Exercised, And The Victory Which It Secures. ‘Ye Have Overcome The Wicked
One.’
There is a battle for us all, on which I need not dwell, the conflict with
evil around and with evil within, and with the prince of the embattled
legions of the darkness, whom the New Testament has more clearly revealed
to us. You young people have many advantages in the conflict; you have
some special disadvantages as well. You have strong passions, you have not
much experience, you do not know how bitter the dregs are of the cup whose
foaming bubbles look so attractive, and whose upper inch tastes so sweet.
But on the other hand you have not yet contracted habits that it is misery
to indulge in, and, as it would seem, impossible to break, and the world
is yet before you.
You cannot begin too soon to choose your side. And here is the side on
which alone victory is possible for a man—the side of Jesus Christ, who
will teach your hands to war and your fingers to fight.
Notice that remarkable phrase, ‘Ye have overcome the wicked one.’ He is
talking to young Christians before whom the battle may seem to lie, and
yet He speaks of their conquest as an accomplished fact, and as a thing
behind them. What does that mean? It means this, that if you will take
service in Christ’s army, and by His grace resolve to be His faithful
soldier till your life’s end, that act of faith, which enrols you as His,
is itself the victory which guarantees, if it be continued, the whole
conquest in time.
There used to be an old superstition that—
‘Who sheds the foremost foeman’s life
His party conquers in the strife’
and whosoever has exercised, however imperfectly and feebly, the faith in
Jesus Christ the Lord has therein conquered the devil and all his works,
and Satan is henceforth a beaten Satan, and the battle, in essence, is
completed even in the act of its being begun.
‘This is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith’; not only
because our confidence in Jesus Christ is the blowing of the bugle that
summons to warfare and shakes off the tyrant’s yoke, but it is also the
means by which we join ourselves to Him who has overcome, and make His
victory ours. He has fought our antagonist in the wilderness once, in
Gethsemane twice, on the Cross thrice; and the perfect conquest in which
Jesus bound the strong man and spoiled his goods may become, and will
become, your conquest, if you wed yourselves to that dear Lord by simple
faith in Him.
What a priceless thing it is that you may begin your independent, manhood
with a conquest that will draw after it ultimate and supreme victory. You
will still have to fight, but you will have only to fight detachments. If
you trust yourselves to Jesus Christ you have conquered the main body of
the army, and it is only the stragglers that you will have to contend with
hereafter. He that loves Jesus, and has given himself to Him, has pinned
the dragon to the ground by its head, and though it may ‘swinge the scaly
horror of its folded tail,’ and twine its loathly coils around him, yet he
has conquered, and he is conquering, and he will conquer. Only let him
hold fast by the hand which brings strength into him by its touch.
Will you, dear young friends, take service in this army? Do you want to be
weak or strong? Do you want your lives to be victorious whatever may
happen to them in the way of outward prosperity or failure? Then give
yourselves to this Lord. His voice calls you to be His soldiers. He will
cover your heads in the day of battle. He will strengthen you ‘with might
by His Spirit in the inner man.’ He will hide His Word in your heart that
you offend not against Him. He will dwell Himself within you to make you
strong in your extremest weakness and victorious over your mightiest foe;
and in that sign you will conquer and ‘be more than conquerors through Him
that loved you.’
Oh, I pray that you may ask yourselves the question, ‘What am I going to
be?’ and may answer it, ‘I am going to be strong in the Lord and in the
power of His might’; and to overcome, as He also hath overcome, the world
and the flesh and the devil.
1 John 2:17
River And Rock
‘The world passeth away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the
will of God abideth for ever.’—1 John 2:17.
JOHN has been solemnly giving a charge not to love the world, nor the
things that are in it. That charge was addressed to ‘children,’ ‘young
men,’ ‘fathers.’ Whether these designations be taken as referring to
growth and maturity of Christian experience, or of natural age, they
equally carry the lesson that no age and no stage is beyond the danger of
being drawn away by the world’s love, or beyond the need of the solemn
exhortation therefrom.
My text is the second of the reasons which the Apostle gives for his
earnest charge. We all, therefore, need it, and we always need it; though
on the last Sunday of another year, it may be more than usually
appropriate to turn our thoughts in its direction. ‘The world passeth
away, and the lust thereof.’ Let us lay the handful of snow on our fevered
foreheads and cool our desires.
Now there are but two things set forth in this text, which is a great and
wonderful antithesis between something which is in perpetual flux and
passage and something which is permanent. If I might venture to cast the
two thoughts into metaphorical form, I should say that here are a river
and a rock. The one, the sad truth of sense, universally believed and as
universally forgotten; the other, the glad truth of faith, so little
regarded or operative in men’s lives.
I ask you, then, to look with me for a few moments at each of these
thoughts.
I. First, Then, The River, Or The Sad Truth Of Sense.
Now you observe that there are two things in my text of which this
transiency is predicated, the one ‘the world,’ the other ‘the lust
thereof’; the one outside us, the other within us. As to the former, I
need only, I suppose, remind you in a sentence that what John means by
‘the world’ is not the material globe on which we dwell, but the whole
aggregate of things visible and material, together with the lives of the
men whose lives are directed to, and bounded by, that visible and
material, and all considered as wrenched apart from God. That, and not the
mere external physical creation, is what he means by ‘the world,’ and
therefore the passing away of which he speaks is not only (although, of
course, it includes) the decay and dissolution of material things, but the
transiency of things which are or have to do with the visible, and are
separated by us from God. Over all these, he says, there is written the
sentence, ‘Dust thou art, and unto dust thou shalt return.’ There is a
continual flowing on of the stream. As the original implies even more
strongly than in our translation, ‘the world’ is in the act of ‘passing
away.’ Like the slow travelling of the scenes of some moveable panorama
which glide along, even as the eye looks upon them, and are concealed
behind the side flats before the gazer has taken in the whole picture, so
equably, constantly, silently, and therefore unnoticed by us, all is in a
state of continual motion. There is no present time. Even whilst we name
the moment it dies. The drop hangs for an instant on the verge, gleaming
in the sunlight, and then falls into the gloomy abyss that silently sucks
up years and centuries. There is no present, but all is movement.
Brethren, that has been the commonplace of moralists and poets and
preachers from the beginning of time; and it would be folly for me to
suppose that I can add anything to the impressiveness of the thought. All
that I want to do is to wake you up to preach it to yourselves, for that
is the only thing that is of any use.
‘So passeth, in the passing of an hour
Of mortal life, the leaf, the bud, the
flower.’
But besides this transiency external to us, John finds a corresponding
transiency within us. ‘The world passeth, and the lust thereof.’ Of course
the word ‘lust’ is employed by him in a much wider sense than in our use
of it. With us it means one specific and very ugly form of earthly desire.
With him it includes the whole genus—all desires of every sort, more or
less noble or ignoble, which have this for their characteristic, that they
are directed to, stimulated by, and fed or starved on, the fleeting things
of this outward life. If thus a man has anchored himself to that which has
no perpetual stay, so long as the cable holds he follows the fate of the
thing to which he has pinned himself. And if it perish he perishes, in a
very profound sense, with it. If you trust yourselves in the leaky vessel,
when the water rises in it, it will drown you, and you will go to the
bottom with the craft to which you have trusted yourselves, If you embark
in the little ship that carries Christ and His fortunes, you will come
with Him to the haven.
But these fleeting desires, of which my text speaks, point to that sad
feature of human experience, that we all outgrow and leave behind us, and
think of very little value, the things that once to us were all but
heaven. There was a time when toys and sweetmeats were our treasures, and
since that day how many burnt-out hopes we all have had! How little we
should know ourselves if we could go back to the fears and wishes and
desires that used to agitate us ten, twenty, thirty years ago! They lie
behind us, no longer part of ourselves; they have slipped away from us,
and
‘We all are changed, by still degrees,
All but the basis of the soul.’
The self-conscious same man abides, and yet how different the same man is!
Our lives, then will zig-zag instead of keeping a straight course, if we
let desires that are limited by anything that we can see guide and
regulate us.
But, brethren, though it be a digression from my text, I cannot help
touching for a moment upon a yet sadder thought than that. There are
desires that remain, when the gratification of them has become impossible.
Sometimes the lust outlasts the world, sometimes the world outlasts the
lust; and one knows not whether is the sadder. There is a hell upon earth
for many of us who, having set our affections upon some creatural object,
and having had that withdrawn from us, are ready to say, ‘They have taken
away my gods! And what shall I do?’ And there is a hell of the same Sort
waiting beyond those dark gates through which we have all to pass, where
men who never desired anything, except what the world that has slipped out
of their reluctant fingers could give them, are shut up with impossible
longings after a for-ever-vanished good. ‘Father Abraham! a drop of water;
for I am tormented in this flame.’ That is what men come to, if the fire
of their lust burn after its objects are withdrawn.
But let me remind you that this transiency of which I have been speaking
receives very strange treatment from most of us. I do not know that it is
altogether to be regretted that it so seldom comes to men’s consciousness.
Perhaps it is right that it should not be uppermost in our thoughts
always; but yet there is no vindication for the entire oblivion to which
we condemn it. The march of these fleeting things is like that of cavalry
with their horses’ feet wrapped in straw, in the night, across the snow,
silent and unnoticed. We cannot realise the revolution of the earth,
because everything partakes in it. We talk about standing still, and we
are whirling through space with inconceivable rapidity. By a like illusion
we deceive ourselves with the notion of stability, when everything about
us is hastening away. Some of you do not like to be reminded of it, and
think it a killjoy. You try to get rid of the thought, and hide your head
in the sand, and fancy that the rest of your body presents no mark to the
archer’s arrow. Now surely common sense says to all, that if there be some
fact certain and plain and applying to you, which, if accepted, would
profoundly modify your life, you ought to take it into account. And what I
want you to do, dear friends, now, is to look in the face this fact, which
you all acknowledge so utterly that some of you are ready to say, ‘What
was the use of coming to a chapel to hear that threadbare old thing dinned
into my ears again?’ and to take it into account in shaping your lives.
Have you done so? Have you? Suppose a man that lived in a land habitually
shaken by earthquakes were to say, ‘I mean to ignore the fact; and I am
going to build a house just as if there was not such a thing as an
earthquake expected’; he would have it toppling about his ears very soon.
Suppose a man upon the ice-slopes of the Alps was to say, ‘I am going to
ignore slipperiness and gravitation,’ he would before long find himself,
if there was any consciousness left in him, at the bottom of a precipice,
bruised and bleeding. And suppose a man says, ‘I am not going to take the
fleetingness of the things of earth into account at all, but intend to
live as if all things were to remain as they are’; what would become of
him do you think? Is he a wise man or a fool? And is he you? He is some of
you! ‘So teach us to number our days that we may apply our hearts unto
wisdom.’
Then let me say to you, see that you take noble lessons out of these
undeniable and all-important facts. There is one kind of lesson that I do
not want you to take out of it. ‘Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we
die,’ or, to put it into a more vulgar formula, ‘A short life and a merry
one.’ The mere contemplation of the transiency of earthly things may, and
often does, lend itself to very ignoble conclusions, and men draw from it
the thought that, as life is short, they had better crowd into it as much
of sensual enjoyment as they can.
‘Gather ye roses while ye may’ is a very common keynote, struck by poets
of the baser sort. And it is a thought that influences some of us, I have
little doubt. Or there may be another consideration, ‘Make hay whilst the
sun shines.’ ‘Hurry on your getting rich, because you have not very long
to do it in’; or the like.
Now all that is supremely unworthy. The true lesson to be drawn is the
plain, old one which it is never superfluous to shout into men’s ears,
until they have obeyed it—viz., ‘Set not thine heart on that which is not;
and which flieth away as an eagle towards heaven.’ Do you, dear brother,
see to it, that your roots go down through the gravel on the surface. Do
you see to it that you dig deeper than that; and thrusting your hand, as
it were, through the thin, silk-paper screen that stands between you and
the Eternal, grasp the hand that you will find on the other side, waiting
and ready to clasp you, and to hold you up.
When they build a new house in Rome they have to dig down through
sometimes sixty or a hundred feet of rubbish that runs like water, the
ruins of old temples and palaces, once occupied by men in the same flush
of life in which we are now. We too have to dig down through ruins, until
we get to the Rock and build there, and build secure. Withdraw your
affections and your thoughts and your desires from the fleeting, and fix
them on the permanent. If a captain takes anything but the pole-star for
his fixed point he will lose his reckoning, and his ship will be on the
reefs. If we take anything but God for our supreme delight and desire we
shall perish.
Then let me say, too, let this thought stimulate us to crowd every moment,
as full as it can be packed, with noble work and heavenly thoughts. These
fleeting things are elastic, and you may put all but infinite treasure
into them. Think of what the possibilities, for each of us, of this dying
year were on the 1st of January; and of what the realisation has been by
the 28th of December. So much that we could have done! so little that we
have done! So many ripples of the river have passed, bearing no golden
sand to pile upon the shore! ‘We have been’ is a sad word; but oh, the one
sad word is, ‘We might have been!’ And, so, do you see to it that you fill
time with that which is kindred to eternity, and make ‘one day as a
thousand years’ in the elastic possibilities and realities of consecration
and of service.
Further, let the thought help us to the conviction of the relative
insignificance of all that can change. That will not spoil nor shade any
real joy; rather it will add to it poignancy that prevents it from cloying
or from becoming the enemy of our souls. But the thought will wondrously
lighten the burden that we have to carry, and the tasks which we have to
perform. ‘But for a moment,’ makes all light. There was an old rabbi, long
ago, whose real name was all but lost, because everybody nick-named him
‘Rabbi Thisalso.’ The reason was because he had perpetually on his lips
the saying about everything as it came, ‘This also will pass.’ He was a
wise man. Let us go to his school and learn his wisdom.
II. Now Let Me Say A Word, ‘Rock’ Or The Glad Truth Of Faith.
And it can only be a word, about the second of the thoughts here, which I
designated as the Rock, or the glad truth of Faith.
We might have expected that John’s antithesis to the world that passeth
would have been the God that abides. But he does not so word his sentence,
although the thought of the divine permanence underlies it. Rather over
against the fleeting world he puts the abiding man who does the will of
God.
Of course there is a very solemn sense in which all men, even they who
have most exclusively lived for what they call the present, do last for
ever, and in which their deeds do so too. After death is the judgment, and
the issues of eternity depend upon the actions of time; and every fleeting
thought comes back to the hand that projected it, like the Australian
savage’s boomerang that, flung out, returns and falls at the feet of the
thrower. But that is not what John means by ‘abiding for ever.’ He means
something very much more blessed and lofty than that; and the following is
the course of his thought. There is only one permanent Reality in the
universe, and that is God. All else is shadow and He is the substance. All
else was, is, and is not. He is the One who was, is, and is to come, the
timeless and only permanent Being. The will of God is the permanent
element in all changeful material things. And consequently he who does the
will of God links himself with the Divine Eternity, and becomes partaker
of that solemn and blessed Being which lives above mutation.
Obedience to God’s will is the permanent element in human life. Whosoever
humbly and trustfully seeks to mould his will after the divine will, and
to bring God’s will into practice in his doings, that man has pierced
through the shadows and grasped the substance, and partakes of the
Immortality which he adores and serves. Himself shall live for ever in the
true life which is blessedness. His deeds shall live for ever when all
that lifted itself in opposition to the Divine will shall be crushed and
annihilated. They shall live in His own peaceful consciousness; they shall
live in the blessed rewards which they shall bring to the doers. His
habits will need no change.
What will you do when you are dead? You have to go into a world where
there are no gossip and no housekeeping; no mills and no offices; no
shops, no books; no colleges and no sciences to learn. What will you do
there? ‘He that doeth the will of God abideth for ever.’ If you have done
your housekeeping, and your weaving and spinning, and your book-keeping,
and your buying and selling, and your studying, and your experimenting
with a conscious reference to God, it is all right. That has made the act
capable of eternity, and there will be no need for such a man to change.
The material on which he works will change, but the inner substance of his
life will be unaffected by the trivial change from earth to heaven. Whilst
the endless ages roll he will be doing just what he was doing down here;
only here he was playing with counters, and yonder he will be trusted with
gold, and dominion over ten cities. To all other men the change that comes
when earth passes from them, or they from it, is as when a trench is dug
across a railway, into which the express goes with a smash, and there is
an end. To the man who, in the trifles of time, has been obeying the will
of God, and therefore subserving eternity and his interests there, the
trench is bridged, and he will go on after he crosses it just as he did
before, with the same purpose, the same desires, the same submission, and
the same drinking into himself of the fulness of immortal life.
Brother, John tells us that obedience to the will of God brings permanence
into our fleeting years. But how are we to obey the will of God? John
tells us that the only way is by love. But how are we to love God? John
tells us that the only way to love—which love is the only way to
obedience—is by knowing and believing the love that God hath to us. But
how are we to know that God hath love to us? John tells us that the only
way to know the love of God, which is the only way of our loving Him,
which in its turn is the only way to obedience, which again is the only
way to permanence of life, is to believe in Jesus Christ and His
propitiation for our sins. The river flows on for ever, but it sweeps
round the base of the Rock of Ages. And in Him, by faith in His blood, we
may find our sure refuge and eternal home.
1
John 3:1 The Love That Calls Us Sons
‘Behold, what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we
should be called the sons of God ’—1 John 3:1.
ONE or two points of an expository character will serve to introduce what
else I have to say on these words.
The text is, I suppose, generally understood as if it pointed to the fact
that we are called the sons of God as the great exemplification of the
wonderfulness of His love. That is a perfectly possible view of the
connection and meaning of the text. But if we are to translate with
perfect accuracy we must render, not ‘that we should be called,’ but ‘in
order that we should be called the sons of God.’ The meaning then is that
the love bestowed is the means by which the design that we should be
called His sons is accomplished. What John calls us to contemplate with
wonder and gratitude is not only the fact of this marvellous love, but
also the glorious end to which it has been given to us and works. There
seems no reason for slurring over this meaning in favour of the more vague
‘that’ of our version. God gives His great and wonderful love in Jesus
Christ, and all the gifts and powers which live in Him like fragrance in
the rose. All this lavish bestowal of love, unspeakable as it is, may be
regarded as having one great end, which God deems worthy of even such
expenditure, namely, that men should become, in the deepest sense, His
children. It is not so much to the contemplation of our blessedness in
being sons, as to the devout gaze on the love which, by its wonderful
process, has made it possible for us to be sons, that we are summoned
here.
Again, you will find a remarkable addition to our text in the Revised
Version—namely, ‘and such we are.’ Now these words come with a very great
weight of manuscript authority, and of internal evidence. They are
parenthetical, a kind of rapid ‘aside’ of the writer’s, expressing his
joyful confidence that he and his brethren are sons of God, not only in
name, but in reality. They are the voice of personal assurance, the voice
of the spirit ‘by which we cry Abba, Father,’ breaking in for a moment on
the flow of the sentence, like an irrepressible, glad answer to the
Father’s call. With these explanations let us look at the words.
I. The Love That Is Given.
We are called upon to come with our little vessels to measure the contents
of the great ocean, to plumb with our short lines the infinite abyss, and
not only to estimate the quantity but the quality of that love, which, in
both respects, surpasses all our means of comparison and conception.
Properly speaking, we can do neither the one nor the other, for we have no
line long enough to sound its depths, and no experience which will give us
a standard with which to compare its quality. But all that we can do, John
would have us do—that is, look and ever look at the working of that love
till we form some not wholly inadequate idea of it.
We can no more ‘behold what manner of love the Father has bestowed on us’
than we can look with undimmed eyes right into the middle of the sun. But
we can in some measure imagine the tremendous and beneficent forces that
ride forth horsed on his beams to distances which the imagination faints
in trying to grasp, and reach their journey’s end unwearied and ready for
their task as when it began. Here are we, ninety odd millions of miles
from the centre of the system, yet warmed by its heat, lighted by its
beams, and touched for good by its power in a thousand ways. All that has
been going on for no one knows how many aeons. How mighty the Power which
produces these effects! In like manner, who can gaze into the fiery depths
of that infinite Godhead, into the ardours of that immeasurable,
incomparable, inconceivable love? But we can look at and measure its
activities. We can see what it does, and so can, in some degree,
understand it, and feel that after all we have a measure for the
Immeasurable, a comparison for the Incomparable, and can thus ‘behold what
manner of love the Father hath bestowed on us.’
So we have to turn to the work of Christ, and especially to His death, if
we would estimate the love of God. According to John’s constant teaching,
that is the great proof that God loves us. The most wonderful revelation
to every heart of man of the depths of that Divine heart lies in the gift
of Jesus Christ. The Apostle bids me ‘behold what manner of love.’ I turn
to the Cross, and I see there a love which shrinks from no sacrifice, but
gives ‘Him up to death for us all.’ I turn to the Cross, and I see there a
love which is evoked by no lovableness on my part, but comes from the
depth of His own Infinite Being, who loves because He must, and who must
because He is God. I turn to the Cross, and I see there manifested a love
which sighs for recognition, which desires nothing of me but the repayment
of my poor affection, and longs to see its own likeness in me. And I see
there a love that will not be put away by sinfulness, and shortcomings,
and evil, but pours its treasures on the unworthy, like sunshine on a
dunghill. So, streaming through the darkness of eclipse, and speaking to
me even in the awful silence in which the Son of Man died there for sin, I
‘behold,’ and I hear, the ‘manner of love that the Father hath bestowed
upon us,’ stronger than death and sin, armed with all power, gentler than
the fall of the dew, boundless and endless, in its measure measureless, in
its quality transcendent—the love of God to me in Jesus Christ my Saviour.
In like manner we have to think,, if we would estimate the ‘manner of this
love,’ that through and in the great sacrifice of Jesus Christ there comes
to us the gift of a divine life like His own. Perhaps it may be too great
a refinement of interpretation; but it certainly does seem to me that that
expression ‘to bestow His love upon’ us, is not altogether the same as ‘to
love us,’ but that there is a greater depth in it. There may be some idea
of that love itself being as it were infused into us, and not merely of
its consequences or tokens being given to us; as Paul speaks of ‘the love
of God shed abroad in our hearts’ by the spirit which is given to us. At
all events this communication of divine life, which is at bottom divine
love—for God’s life is God’s love—is His great gift to men.
Be that as it may, these two are the great tokens, consequences, and
measures of God’s love to us—the gift of Christ, and that which is the
sequel and outcome thereof, the gift of the Spirit which is breathed into
Christian spirits. These two gifts, which are one gift, embrace all that
the world needs. Christ for us and Christ in us must both be taken into
account if you would estimate the manner of the love that God has bestowed
upon us.
We may gain another measure of the greatness of this love if we put an
emphasis—which I dare say the writer did not intend—on one word of this
text, and think of the love given to ‘us,’ such creatures as we are. Out
of the depths we cry to Him. Not only by the voice of our supplications,
but even when we raise no call of entreaty, our misery pleads with His
merciful heart, and from the heights there comes upon our wretchedness and
sin the rush of this great love, like a cataract, which sweeps away all
our sins, and floods us with its own blessedness and joy. The more we know
ourselves, the more wonderingly and thankfully shall we bow down our
hearts before Him, as we measure His mercy by our unworthiness.
From all His works the same summons echoes. They all call us to see
mirrored in them His loving care. But the Cross of Christ and the gift of
a Divine Spirit cry aloud to every ear in tones of more beseeching
entreaty and of more imperative command to ‘behold what manner of love the
Father hath bestowed upon us.’
II. Look Next At The Sonship Which Is The Purpose Of His Given Love.
It has often been noticed that the Apostle John uses for that expression
‘the sons of God,’ another word from that which his brother Paul uses.
John’s phrase would perhaps be a little more accurately translated
‘children of God,’ whilst Paul, on the other hand, very seldom says
‘children,’ but almost always says ‘sons.’ Of course the children are sons
and the sons are children, but still, the slight distinction of phrase is
characteristic of the men, and of the different points of view from which
they speak about the same thing. John’s word lays stress on the children’s
kindred nature with their father and on their immature condition.
But without dwelling on that, let us consider this great gift and dignity
of being children of God, which is the object that God has in view in all
the lavish bestowment of His goodness upon us.
That end is not reached by God’s making us men. Over and above that He has
to send this great gift of His love, in order that the men whom He has
made may become His sons. If you take the context here you will see very
clearly that the writer draws a broad distinction between ‘the sons of
God’ and ‘the world’ of men who do not comprehend them, and so far from
being themselves sons, do not even know God’s sons when they see them. And
there is a deeper and solemner word still in the context. John thinks that
men (within the range of light and revelation, at all events) are divided
into two families—‘the children of God and the children of the devil.’
There are two families amongst men.
Thank God, the prodigal son in his rags amongst the swine, and lying by
the swine-troughs in his filth and his husks, and his fever, is a son! No
doubt about that! He has these three elements and marks of sonship that no
man ever gets rid of: he is of a divine origin, he has a divine likeness
in that he has got mind and will and spirit, and he is the object of a
divine love.
The doctrine of the New Testament about the Fatherhood of God and the
sonship of man does not in the slightest degree interfere with these three
great truths, that all men, though the features of the common humanity may
be almost battered out of recognition in them, are all children of God
because He made them; that they are children of God because still there
lives in them something of the likeness of the creative Father; and,
blessed be His name! that they are all children of God because He loves
and provides and cares for every one of them.
All that is blessedly and eternally true; but it is also true that there
is a higher relation than that to which the name ‘children of God’ is more
accurately given, and to which in the New Testament that name is confined.
If you ask what that relation is, let me quote to you three passages in
this Epistle which will answer the question. ‘Whoever believeth that Jesus
is the Christ is born of God,’ that is the first; ‘Every one that doeth
righteousness is born of God,’ that is the second; ‘Every one that loveth
is born of God,’ that is the third. Or to put them all into one expression
which holds them all, in the great words of his prologue in the first
chapter of John’s Gospel you find this: ‘To as many as received Him to
them gave He power to become the sons of God.’ Believing in Christ with
loving trust produces, and doing righteousness and loving the brethren, as
the result of that belief, prove the fact of sonship in its highest and
its truest sense.
What is implied in that great word by which the Almighty gives us a name
and a place as of sons and daughters? Clearly, first, a communicated life,
therefore, second, a kindred nature which shall be ‘pure as He is pure,’
and, third, growth to full maturity.
This sonship, which is no mere empty name, is the aim and purpose of God’s
dealings, of all the revelation of His love, and most especially of the
great gift of His love in Christ. Has that purpose been accomplished in
you? Have you ever looked at that great gift of love that God has given
you on purpose to make you His child? If you have, has it made you one?
Are you trusting to Jesus Christ, whom God has sent forth that we might
receive the standing of sons in Him? Are you a child of God because a
brother of that Saviour? Have you received the gift of a divine life
through Him? My friend, remember the grim alternative! A child of God or a
child of the devil! Bitter words, narrow words, uncharitable words—as
people call them! And I believe, and therefore I am bound to say it, true
words, which it concerns you to lay to heart.
III. Now, Still Further, Let Me Ask You To Look At The Glad Recognition
Of This Sonship By The Child’s Heart.
I have already referred to the clause added in the Revised Version, ‘and
such we are.’ As I said, it is a kind of ‘aside,’ in which John adds the
Amen for himself and for his poor brothers and sisters toiling and moiling
obscure among the crowds of Ephesus, to the great truth. He asserts his
and their glad consciousness of the reality of the fact of their sonship,
which they know to be no empty title. He asserts, too, the present
possession of that sonship, realising it as a fact, amid all the
commonplace vulgarities and carking cares and petty aims of life’s little
day. ‘Such we are’ is the ‘Here am I, Father,’ of the child answering the
Father’s call, ‘My Son.’
He turns doctrine into experience. He is not content with merely having
the thought in his creed, but his heart clasps it, and his whole nature
responds to the great truth. I ask you, do you do that? Do not be content
with hearing the truth, or even with assenting to it, and believing it in
your understandings. The truth is nothing to you, unless you have made it
your very own by faith. Do not be satisfied with the orthodox confession.
Unless it has touched your heart and made your whole soul thrill with
thankful gladness and quiet triumph, it is nothing to you. The mere belief
of thirty-nine or thirty-nine thousand Articles is nothing; but when a man
has a true heart-faith in Him, whom all articles are meant to make us know
and love, then dogma becomes life, and the doctrine feeds the soul. Does
it do so with you, my brother? Can you say, ‘And such we are?’
Take another lesson. The Apostle was not afraid to say ‘I know that I am a
child of God.’ There are many very good people, whose tremulous, timorous
lips have never ventured to say ‘I know.’ They will say, ‘Well, I hope,’
or sometimes, as if that was not uncertain enough, they will put in an
adverb or two, and say, ‘I humbly hope that I am.’ It is a far robuster
kind of Christianity, a far truer one, ay, and a humbler one too, that
throws all considerations of my own character and merits, and all the rest
of that rubbish, clean behind me, and when God says, ‘My son!’ says ‘My
Father; and when God calls us His children, leaps up and gladly answers,
‘And we are!’ Do not be afraid of being too confident, if your confidence
is built on God, and not on yourselves; but be afraid of being too
diffident, and be afraid of having a great deal of self-righteousness
masquerading under the guise of such a profound consciousness of your own
unworthiness that you dare not call yourself a child of God. It is not a
question of worthiness or unworthiness. It is a question, in the first
place, and mainly, of the truth of Christ’s promise and the sufficiency of
Christ’s Cross; and in a very subordinate degree of anything belonging to
you.
IV. We Have Here, Finally, The Loving And Devout Gaze Upon This
Wonderful Love.
‘Behold,’ at the beginning of my text, is not the mere exclamation which
you often find both in the Old and in the New Testaments, which is simply
intended to emphasise the importance of what follows, but it is a distinct
command to do the thing, to look, and ever to look, and to look again, and
live in the habitual and devout contemplation of that infinite and
wondrous love of God.
I have but two remarks to make about that, and the one is this, that such
a habit of devout and thankful meditation upon the love of God, as
manifested in the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, and the consequent gift of
the Divine Spirit, joined with the humble, thankful conviction that I am a
child of God thereby, lies at the foundation of all vigorous and happy
Christian life. How can a thing which you do not touch with your hands and
see with your eyes produce any effect upon you, unless you think about it?
How can a religion which can only influence through thought and emotion do
anything in you, or for you, unless you occupy your thoughts and your
feelings with it? It is sheer nonsense to suppose it possible. Things
which do not appeal to sense are real to us, and indeed we may say, are at
all for us, only as we think about them. If you had a dear friend in
Australia, and never thought about him, he would even cease to be dear,
and it would be all one to you as if he were dead. If he were really dear
to you, you would think about him. We may say (though, of course, there
are other ways of looking at the matter) that, in a very intelligible
sense, the degree in which we think about Christ, and in Him behold the
love of God, is a fairly accurate measure of our Christianity.
Now will you apply that sharp test to yesterday, and the day before, and
the day before that, and decide how much of your life was pagan, and how
much of it was Christian? You will never make anything of your professed
Christianity, you will never get a drop of happiness or any kind of good
out of it; it will neither be a strength nor a joy nor a defence to you
unless you make it your habitual occupation to ‘behold the manner of
love’; and look and look and look until it warms and fills your heart.
The second remark is that we cannot keep that great sight before the eye
of our minds without effort. You will have very resolutely to look away
from something else if, amid all the dazzling gauds of earth, you are to
see the far-off lustre of that heavenly love. Just as timorous people in a
thunder-storm will light a candle that they may not see the lightning, so
many Christians have their hearts filled with the twinkling light of some
miserable tapers of earthly care and pursuits, which, though they be dim
and smoky, are bright enough to make it hard to see the silent depths of
Heaven, though it blaze with a myriad stars. If you hold a sixpence close
enough up to the pupil of your eye, it will keep you from seeing the sun.
And if you hold the world close to mind and heart, as many of you do, you
will only see, round the rim of it, the least tiny ring of the overlapping
love of God. What the world lets you see you will see, and the world will
take care that it will let you see very little —not enough to do you any
good, not enough to deliver you from its chains. Wrench yourselves away,
my brethren, from the absorbing contemplation of Birmingham jewellery and
paste, and look at the true riches. If you have ever had some glimpses of
that wondrous love, and have ever been drawn by it to cry, ‘Abba, Father,’
do not let the trifles which belong not to your true inheritance fill your
thoughts, but renew the vision, and by determined turning away of your
eyes from beholding vanity, look off from the things that are seen, that
you may gaze upon the things that are not seen, and chiefest among them,
upon the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.
If you have never looked on that love, I beseech you now to turn aside and
see this great sight. Do not let that brightness burn unnoticed while your
eyes are fixed on the ground, like the gaze of men absorbed in gold
digging, while a glorious sunshine is flushing the eastern sky. Look to
the unspeakable, incomparable, immeasurable love of God, in giving up His
Son to death for us all. Look and be saved. Look and live. ‘Behold what
manner of love the Father hath bestowed on you,’ and, beholding, you will
become the sons and daughters of the Lord God Almighty.
1
John 3:2
The Unrevealed Future Of The Sons Of God
Beloved, now are we the sons of God,
and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when He
shall appear, we shall be like Him; for we shall see Him as He is.’—1 John
3:2.
I HAVE hesitated, as you may well believe, whether I should take these
words for a text. They seem so far to surpass anything that can be said
concerning them, and they cover such immense fields of dim thought, that
one may well be afraid lest one should spoil them by even attempting to
dilate on them. And yet they are so closely connected with the words of
the previous verse, which formed the subject of my last sermon, that I
felt as if my work were only half done unless I followed that sermon with
this.
The present is the prophet of the future, says my text: ‘Now we are the
sons of God, and’ (not ‘but’) ‘it doth not yet appear what we shall be.’
Some men say, ‘Ah! now are we, but we shall be—nothing!’ John does not
think so. John thinks that if a man is a son of God he will always be so.
There are three things in this verse, how, if we are God’s children, our
sonship makes us quite sure of the future; how our sonship leaves us
largely in ignorance of the future, but how our sonship flings one bright,
all-penetrating beam of light on the only important thing about the
future, the dear vision of and the perfect likeness to Him who is our
life. ‘Now are we the sons of God,’ therefore we shall be. We are the
sons; we do not know what we shall be. We are the sons, and therefore,
though there be a great circumference of blank ignorance as to our future,
yet, blessed be His name, there is a great light burning in the middle of
it! ‘We know that when He shall appear we shall be like Him, for we shall
see Him as He is.’
I. The Fact Of Sonship Makes Us Quite Sure Of The Future.
I am not concerned to appraise the relative value of the various arguments
and proofs, or, it may be, presumptions, which may recommend the doctrine
of a future life to men, but it seems to me that the strongest reasons for
believing in another world are these two:—first, that Jesus Christ was
raised from the dead and has gone up there; and, second, that a man here
can pray, and trust, and love God, and feel that he is His child. As was
noticed in the preceding sermon, the word rendered ‘sons’ might more
accurately be translated ‘children.’ If so, we may fairly say, ‘We are the
children of God now—and if we are children now, we shall be grown up some
time.’ Childhood leads to maturity. The infant becomes a man.
That is to say, he that here, in an infantile way, is stammering with his
poor, unskilled lips the name ‘Abba! Father! will one day come to speak it
fully. He that dimly trusts, he that partially loves, he that can lift up
his heart in some more or less unworthy prayer and aspiration after God,
in all these emotions and exercises, has the great proof in himself that
such emotions, such relationship, can never be put an end to. The roots
have gone down through the temporal, and have laid hold of the Eternal.
Anything seems to me to be more credible than that a man who can look up
and say, ‘My Father,’ shall be crushed by what befalls the mere outside of
him; anything seems to me to be more believable than to suppose that the
nature which is capable of these elevating emotions and aspirations of
confidence and hope, which can know God and yearn after Him, and can love
Him, is to be wiped out like a gnat by the finger of Death. The material
has nothing to do with these feelings, and if I know myself, in however
feeble and imperfect a degree, to be the son of God, I carry in the
conviction the very pledge and seal of eternal life. That is a thought
‘whose very sweetness yieldeth proof that it was born for immortality.’
‘We are the sons of God,’ therefore we shall always be so, in all worlds,
and whatsoever may become of this poor wrappage in which the soul is
shrouded.
We may notice, also, that not only the fact of our sonship avails to
assure us of immortal life, but that also the very form which our
religious experience takes points in the same direction.
As I said, infancy is the prophecy of maturity. ‘The child is father of
the man’; the bud foretells the flower. In the same way, the very
imperfections of the Christian life, as it is seen here, argue the
existence of another state, where all that is here in the germ shall be
fully matured, and all that is here incomplete shall attain the perfection
which alone will correspond to the power that works in us. Think of the
ordinary Christian character. The beginning is there, and evidently no
more than the beginning. As one looks at the crudity, the inconsistencies,
the failings, the feebleness of the Christian life of others, or of
oneself, and then thinks that such a poor, imperfect exhibition is all
that so divine a principle has been able to achieve in this world, one
feels that there must be a region and a time where we shall be all which
the transforming power of God’s spirit can make us. The very
inconsistencies of Christians are as strong reasons for believing in the
perfect life of Heaven as their purities and virtues are. We have a right
to say mighty principles are at work upon Christian souls—the power of the
Cross, the power of love issuing in obedience, the power of an indwelling
Spirit; and is this all that these great forces are going to effect on
human character? Surely a seed so precious and divine is somewhere, and at
some time, to bring forth something better than these few poor,
half-developed flowers, something with more lustrous petals and richer
fragrance. The plant is clearly an exotic; does not its obviously
struggling growth here tell of warmer suns and richer soil, where it will
be at home?
There is a great deal in every man, and most of all in. Christian men and
women, which does not fit this present. All other creatures correspond in
their capacities to the place where they are set down; and the world in
which the plant or the animal lives, the world of their surroundings,
stimulates to activity all their powers. But that is not so with a man.
‘Foxes have holes, birds of the air have nests.’ They fit exactly, and
correspond to their ‘environment.’ But a man!—there is an enormous amount
of waste faculty about him if he is only to live in this world. There are
large capacities in every nature, and most of all in a Christian nature,
which are like the packages that emigrants take with them, marked ‘Not
wanted on the voyage.’ These go down into the hold, and they are only of
use after landing in the new world. If I am a son of God I have much in me
that is ‘not wanted on the voyage,’ and the more I grow into His likeness,
the more I am thrown out of harmony with the things round about me, in
proportion as i am brought into harmony with the things beyond.
That consciousness of belonging to another order of things, because I am
God’s child, will make me sure that when I have done with earth, the tie
that binds me to my Father will not be broken, but that I shall go home,
where I shall be fully and for ever all that I so imperfectly began to be
here, where all gaps in my character shall be filled up, and the
half-completed circle of my heavenly perfectness shall grow like the
crescent moon, into full-orbed beauty. ‘Neither life, nor death, nor
things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other
creature’ shall be able to break that tie, and banish the child from the
conscious grasp of a Father’s hand. Dear brother and sister, can you say,
‘Now am I a child of God!’ Then you may patiently and peacefully front
that dim future.
II. Now I Come To The Second Point, Namely, That We Remain Ignorant Of
Much In That Future.
That happy assurance of the love of God resting upon me, and making me His
child through Jesus Christ, does not dissipate all the darkness which lies
on that beyond. ‘We are the sons of God, and,’ just because we are, ‘it
does not yet appear what we shall be.’ Or, as the words are rendered in
the Revised Version, ‘it is not yet made manifest what we shall be.’
The meaning of that expression, ‘It doth not yet appear,’ or, ‘It is not
made manifest,’ may be put into very plain words. John would simply say to
us, ‘There has never been set forth before men’s eyes in this earthly life
of ours an example, or an instance, of what the sons of God are to be in
another state of being.’ And so, because men have never had the instance
before them, they do not know much about that state.
In some sense there has been a manifestation through the life of Jesus
Christ. Christ has died; Christ is risen again. Christ has gone about
amongst men upon earth after Resurrection. Christ has been raised to the
right hand of God, and sits there in the glory of the Father. So far it
has been manifested what we shall be. But the risen Christ is not the
glorified Christ, and although He has set forth before man’s senses
irrefragably the fact of another life, and to some extent given glimpses
and gleams of knowledge with regard to certain portions of it, I suppose
that the ‘glorious body’ of Jesus Christ was not assumed by Him till the
cloud ‘received Him out of their sight,’ nor, indeed, could it be assumed
while He moved among the material realities of this world, and did eat and
drink before them. So that, while we thankfully recognise that Christ’s
Resurrection and Ascension have ‘brought life and immortality to light,’
we must remember that it is the fact, and not the manner of the fact,
which they make plain; and that, even after His example, it has not been
manifested what is the body of glory which He now wears, and therefore it
has not yet been manifested what we shall be when we are fashioned after
its likeness.
There has been no manifestation, then, to sense, or to human experience,
of that future, and, therefore, there is next to no knowledge about it.
You can only know facts when the facts are communicated. You may speculate
and argue and guess as much as you like, but that does not thin the
darkness one bit. The unborn child has no more faculty or opportunity for
knowing what the life upon earth is like than man here, in the world, has
for knowing that life beyond. The chrysalis’ dreams about what it would be
when it was a butterfly would be as reliable as a man’s imagination of
what a future life will be.
So let us feel two things:—Let us be thankful that we do not know, for the
ignorance is the sign of the greatness; and then, let us be sure that just
the very mixture of knowledge and ignorance which we have about another
world is precisely the food which is most fitted to nourish imagination
and hope. If we had more knowledge, supposing it could be given, of the
conditions of that future life, it would lose some of its power to
attract. Ignorance does not always prevent the occupation of the mind with
a subject. Blank ignorance does; but ignorance, shot with knowledge like a
tissue which, when you hold it one way seems all black, and when you tilt
it another, seems golden, stimulates desire, hope, and imagination. So let
us thankfully acquiesce in the limited knowledge.
Fools can ask questions which wise men cannot answer, and will not ask.
There are questions which, sometimes, when we are thinking about our own
future, and sometimes when we see dear ones go away into the mist, become
to us almost torture. It is easy to put them; it is not so easy to say:
‘Thank God, we cannot answer them yet!’ If we could it would only be
because the experience of earth was adequate to measure the experience of
Heaven; and that would be to bring the future down to the low levels of
this present. Let us be thankful then that so long as we can only speak in
language derived from the experiences of earth, we have yet to learn the
vocabulary of Heaven. Let us be thankful that our best help to know what
we shall be is to reverse much of what we are, and that the loftiest and
most positive declarations concerning the future lie in negatives like
these:—‘I saw no temple therein.’ ‘There shall be no night there.’ ‘There
shall be no curse there.’ ‘There shall be no more sighing nor weeping, for
the former things are passed away.’
The white mountains keep their secret well; not until we have passed
through the black rocks that make the throat of the pass on the summit,
shall we see the broad and shining plains beyond the hills. Let us be
thankful for, and own the attractions of, the knowledge that is wrapt in
ignorance, and thankfully say, ‘Now are we the sons of God, and it doth
not appear what we shall be!
III. Now I Must Be Very Brief With The Last Thought That Is Here.
Now I must be very brief with the last thought that is here, and I am the
less unwilling to be so because we cannot travel one inch beyond the
revelations of the Book in reference to the matter. The thought is this,
that our sonship flings one all-penetrating beam of light on that future,
in the knowledge of our perfect vision and perfect likeness. ‘we know that
when He shall be manifested, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as
He is.’
‘When He shall be manifested’—to what period does that refer? It seems
most natural to take the manifestation here as being the same as that
spoken of only a verse or two before. ‘And now, little children, abide in
Him, and when He shall be manifested, we may have confidence, and not be
ashamed before Him at His coming (1 John 2:28). That ‘coming’ then, is the
‘manifestation’ of Christ; and it is at the period of His coming in His
glory that His servants ‘shall be like Him, and see Him as He is.’ Clearly
then it is Christ whom we shall see and become like, and not the Father
invisible.
To behold Christ will be the condition and the means of growing like Him.
That way of transformation by beholding, or of assimilation by the power
of loving contemplation, is the blessed way of ennobling character, which
even here, and in human relationships, has often made it easy to put off
old vices and to clothe the soul with unwonted grace. Men have learned to
love and gaze upon some fair character, till some image of its beauty has
passed into their ruder natures. To love such and to look on them has been
an education. The same process is exemplified in more sacred regions, when
men here learn to love and look upon Christ by faith, and so become like
Him, as the sun stamps a tiny copy of its blazing sphere on the eye that
looks at it. But all these are but poor, far-off hints and low preludes of
the energy with which that blessed vision of the glorified Christ shall
work on the happy hearts that behold Him, and of the completeness of the
likeness to Him which will be printed in light upon their faces.
It matters not, though it doth not yet appear what we shall be, if to all
the questionings of our own hearts we have this for our all-sufficient
answer, ‘We shall be like Him.’ As good old Richard Baxter has it:—
‘My knowledge of that life is small,
The eye of faith is dim;
But, ‘tis enough that Christ knows all,
And I shall be like Him!’
‘It is enough for the servant that he be as his Lord.’ There is no need to
go into the dark and difficult questions about the manner of that vision.
He Himself prayed, in that great intercessory prayer, ‘Father, I will that
these whom Thou hast given Me be with Me where I am, that they may behold
My glory.’ That vision of the glorified manhood of Jesus Christ—certain,
direct, clear, and worthy, whether it comes through sense or through
thought—to behold that vision is all the sight of God that men in Heaven
ever will have. And through the millenniums of a growing glory, Christ as
He is will be the manifested Deity. Likeness will clear sight, and clearer
sight will increase likeness. So in blessed interchange these two will be
cause and effect, and secure the endless progress of the redeemed spirit
towards the vision of Christ which never can behold all His Infinite
Fulness, and the likeness’ to Christ which can never reproduce all his
Infinite Beauty.
As a bit of glass when the light strikes it flashes into sunny glory, or
as every poor little muddy pool on the pavement, when the sunbeams fall
upon it, has the sun mirrored even in its shallow mud, so into your poor
heart and mine the vision of Christ’s glory will come, moulding and
transforming us to its own beauty. With unveiled face reflecting as a
mirror does, the glory of the Lord, we ‘shall be changed into the same
image.’ ‘We shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.’
Dear brethren, all begins with this, love Christ and trust Him and you are
a child of God! ‘And if children, then heirs, heirs of God, and joint
heirs with Christ.’
1 John 3:3 The
Purifying Influence Of Hope
“And every man that hath this hope in Him purifieth himself, even as He is
pure.’—1 John 3:3.
THAT is a very remarkable ‘and’ with which this verse begins. The Apostle
has just been touching the very heights of devout contemplation, soaring
away up into dim regions where it is very hard to follow,—‘We shall be
like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.’
And now, without a pause, and linking his thoughts together by a simple
‘and,’ he passes from the unimaginable splendours of the Beatific Vision
to the plainest practical talk. Mysticism has often soared so high above
the earth that it has forgotten to preach righteousness, and therein has
been its weak point. But here is the most mystical teacher of the New
Testament insisting on plain morality as vehemently as his friend James
could have done.
The combination is very remarkable. Like the eagle he rises, and like the
eagle, with the impetus gained from his height, he drops right down on the
earth beneath!
And that is not only a characteristic of St. John’s teaching, but it is a
characteristic of all the New Testament morality—its highest revelations
are intensely practical. Its light is at once set to work, like the
sunshine that comes ninety millions of miles in order to make the little
daisies open their crimson-tipped petals; so the pro-roundest things that
the Bible has to say are said to you and me, not that we may know only,
but that knowing we may do, and do because we are.
So John, here: ‘We shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.’
‘And’—a simple coupling-iron for two such thoughts—‘every man that hath
this hope in Him’-that is, in Christ, not in himself, as we sometimes read
it—‘every man that hath this hope,’ founded on Christ, ‘purifies himself
even as He is pure.’
The thought is a very simple one, though sometimes it is somewhat
mistakenly apprehended. Put into its general form it is just this:—If you
expect, and expecting, hope to be like Jesus Christ yonder, you will be
trying your best to be like Him here. It is not the mere purifying
influence of hope that is talked about, but it is the specific influence
of this one hope, the hope of ultimate assimilation to Christ leading to
strenuous efforts, each a partial resemblance of Him, here and now. And
that is the subject I want to say a word or two about now.
I. First, Then, Notice The Principle That Is Here, Which Is The Main
Thing To Be Insisted Upon, Namely, If We Are To Be Pure, We Must Purify
Ourselves.
There are two ways of getting like Christ, spoken about in the context.
One is the blessed way, that is more appropriate for the higher Heaven,
the way of assimilation and transformation by beholding—‘If we see Him’ we
shall be ‘like Him.’ That is the blessed method of the Heavens. Yes, but
even here on earth it may to some extent be realised! Love always breeds
likeness. And there is such a thing, here on earth and now, as gazing upon
Christ with an intensity of affection, and simplicity of trust, and
rapture of aspiration, and ardour of desire which shall transform us in
some measure into His own likeness. John is an example of that for us. It
was a true instinct that made the old painters always represent him as
like the Master that he sat beside, even in face. Where did John get his
style from? He got it by much meditating upon Christ’s words. The disciple
caught the method of the Master’s speech, and to some extent the manner of
the Master’s vision.
And so he himself stands before us as an instance of the possibility, even
on earth, of this calm, almost passive process, and most blessed and
holiest method of getting like the Master, by simple gazing, which is the
gaze of love and longing.
But. dear brethren, the law of our lives forbids that that should be the
only way in which we grow like Christ. ‘First the blade, then the ear,
then the full corn in the ear,’ was never meant to be the exhaustive,
all-comprehensive statement of the method of Christian progress. You and I
are not vegetables; and the Parable of the Seed is only one side of the
truth about the method of Christian growth. The very word ‘purify’ speaks
to us of another condition; it implies impurity, it implies a process
which is more than contemplation, it implies the reversal of existing
conditions, and not merely the growth upwards to unattained conditions.
And so growth is not all that Christian men need; they need excision, they
need casting out of what is in them; they need change as well as growth.
‘Purifying’ they need because they are impure, and growth is only half the
secret of Christian progress.
Then there is the other consideration, viz., if there is to be this
purifying it must be done by myself. ‘Ah!’ you say, ‘done by yourself?
That is not evangelical teaching.’ Well, let us see. Take two or three
verses out of this Epistle which at first sight seem to be contradictory
of this. Take the very first that bears on the subject:—‘The blood of
Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin’ (1 John 1:7). ‘If we
confess our sins He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to
cleanse us from all unrighteousness’ (1 John 4:9). ‘He that abideth in Him
sinneth not’ (1 John 3:6). ‘This is the victory that overcometh the world,
even our faith’ (1 John 5:4).
Now if you put all these passages together, and think about the general
effect of them, it comes to this: that our best way of cleansing ourselves
is by keeping firm hold of Jesus Christ and of the cleansing powers that
lie in Him. To take a very homely illustration—soap and water wash your
hands clean, and what you have to do is simply to rub the soap and water
on to the hand, and bring them into contact with the foulness. You cleanse
yourselves. Yes! because without the friction there would not be the
cleansing. But is it you, or is it the soap, that does the work? Is it you
or the water that makes your hands clean? And so when God comes and says,
‘Wash you, make you clean, put away the evil of your doings, your hands
are full of blood,’ He says in effect, ‘Take the cleansing that I give you
and rub it in, and apply it: and your flesh will become as the flesh of a
little child, and you shall be clean.’
That is to say, the very deepest word about Christian effort of
self-purifying is this—keep close to Jesus Christ. You cannot sin as long
as you hold His hand. To have Him with you;—I mean by that to have the
thoughts directed to Him, the love turning to Him, the will submitted to
Him, Him consciously with us in the day’s work. To have communion with
Jesus Christ is like bringing an atmosphere round about us in which all
evil will die. If you take a fish out of water and bring it up into the
upper air, it writhes and gasps, and is dead presently; and our evil
tendencies and sins, drawn up out of the muddy depths in which they live,
and brought up into that pure atmosphere of communion with Jesus Christ,
are sure to shrivel and to die, and to disappear. We kill all evil by
fellowship with the Master. His presence in our lives, by our communion
with Him, is like the watchfire that the traveller lights at night—it
keeps all the wild beasts of prey away from the fold.
Christ’s fellowship is our cleansing, and the first and main thing that we
have to do in order to make ourselves pure is to keep ourselves in union
with Him, in whom inhere and abide all the energies that cleanse men’s
souls. Take the unbleached calico and spread it out on the green grass,
and let the blessed sunshine come down upon it, and sprinkle it with fair
water; and the grass and the moisture and the sunshine will do all the
cleansing, and it will glitter in the light, ‘so as no fuller on earth can
white it.’
So cleansing is keeping near Jesus Christ. But it is no use getting the
mill-race from the stream into your works unless you put wheels in its way
to drive. And our holding ourselves in fellowship with the Master in that
fashion is not all that we have to do. There have to be distinct and
specific efforts, constantly repeated, to subdue and suppress individual
acts of transgression. We have to fight against evil, sin by sin. We have
not the thing to do all at once; we have to do it in detail. It is a war
of outposts, like the last agonies of that Franco-Prussian war, when the
Emperor had abdicated, and the country was really conquered, and Paris had
yielded, but yet all over the face of the land combats had to be carried
on.
So it is with us. Holiness is not feeling; it is character. You do not get
rid of your sins by the act of divine amnesty only. You are not perfect
because you say you are, and feel as if you were, and think you are. God
does not make any man pure in his sleep. His cleansing does not dispense
with fighting, but makes victory possible.
Then, dear brethren, lay to heart this, as the upshot of the whole matter:
First of all, let us turn to Him from whom all the cleansing comes; and
then, moment by moment, remember that it is our work to purify ourselves
by the strength and the power that is given to us by the Master.
II. The Second Thought Here Is This:
This purifying of ourselves is the link or bridge between the present and
the future.—‘Now are we the sons of God,’ says John in the context. That
is the pier upon the one side of the gulf. ‘It doth not yet appear what we
shall be, but when He is made manifest we shall be like Him.’ That is the
pier on the other. How are the two to be connected? There is only one way
by which the present sonship will blossom and fruit into the future
perfect likeness, and that is,—if we throw across the gulf, by God’s help
day by day here, that bridge of our effort after growing likeness to
Himself, and purity therefrom.
That is plain enough, I suppose. To speak in somewhat technical terms, the
‘law of continuity’ that we hear so much about, runs on between earth and
Heaven; which, being translated into plain English, is but this—that the
act of passing from the limitations and conditions of this transitory life
into the solemnities and grandeurs of that future does not alter a man’s
character, though it may intensify it. It does not make him different from
what he was, though it may make him more of what he was, whether its
direction be good or bad.
You take a stick and thrust it into water; and because the rays of light
pass from one medium to another of a different density, they are refracted
and the stick seems bent; but take the human life out of the thick, coarse
medium of earth and lift it up into the pure rarefied air of Heaven, and
there is no refraction; it runs straight on. Straight on! The given
direction continues; and in whatever direction my face is turned when I
die, thither my face will be turned when I live again.
Do not you fancy that there is any magic in coffins and graves and shrouds
to make men different from their former selves. The continuity runs clean
on, the rail goes without a break, though it goes through the Mont Cenis
tunnel; and on the one side is the cold of the North, and on the other the
sunny South. The man is the same man through death and beyond.
So the one link between sonship here and likeness to Christ hereafter is
this link of present, strenuous effort to become like Him day by day in
personal purity. For there is another reason, on which I need not dwell,
viz., unless there be this daily effort on our part to become like Jesus
Christ by personal purity, we shall not be able to ‘see Him as He is.’
Death will take a great many veils off men’s hearts. It will reveal to
them a great deal that they do not know, but it will not give the faculty
of beholding the glorified Christ in such fashion as that the beholding
will mean transformation. ‘Every eye shall see Him,’ but it is conceivable
that a spirit shall be so immersed in self-love and in godlessness that
the vision of Christ shall be repellent and not attractive; shall have no
transforming and no gladdening power. And I beseech you to remember that
about that vision, as about the vision of God Himself, the principle
stands true; it is ‘the pure in heart that shall see God’ in Christ. And
the change from life to the life beyond will not necessarily transform
into the image of His dear Son. You make a link between the present and
the future by cleansing your hands and your hearts, through faith in the
cleansing power of Christ, and direct effort at holiness.
III. Now I Must Briefly Add Finally:
That this self-cleansing of which I have been speaking is the offspring
and outcome of that ‘hope’ in my text. It is the child of hope. Hope is by
no means an active faculty generally. As the poets have it, she may ‘smile
and wave her golden hair’; but she is not in the way of doing much work in
the world. And it is not the mere fact of hope that generates this effort;
it is, as I have been trying to show you, a certain kind of hope—the hope
of being like Jesus Christ when ‘we see Him as He is.’
I have only two things to say about this matter, and one of them is this:
of course, such strenuous effort of purity will only be the result of such
a hope as that, because such a hope will fight against one of the greatest
of all the enemies of our efforts after purity. There is nothing that
makes a man so down-hearted in his work of self-improvement as the
constant and bitter experience that it seems to be all of no use; that he
is making so little progress; that with immense pains, like a snail
creeping up a wall, he gets up, perhaps, an inch or two, and then all at
once he drops down, and further down than he was before he started.
Slowly we manage some little, patient self-improvement; gradually, inch by
inch and bit by bit, we may be growing better, and then there comes some
gust and outburst of temptation; and the whole painfully reclaimed soil
gets covered up by an avalanche of mud and stones, that we have to remove
slowly, barrow-load by barrow-load. And then we feel that it is all of no
use to strive, and we let circumstances shape us, and give up all thoughts
of reformation.
To such moods then there comes, like an angel from Heaven, that holy,
blessed message, ‘Cheer up, man! “We shall be like Him, for we shall see
Him as He is.” ‘Every inch that you make now will tell then, and it is not
all of no use. Set your heart to the work, it is a work that will be
blessed and will prosper.
Again, here is a test for all you Christian people, who say that you look
to Heaven with hope as to your home and rest.
A great deal of the religious contemplation of a future state is pure
sentimentality, and like all pure sentimentality is either immoral or
non-moral. But here the two things are brought into clear juxtaposition,
the bright hope of Heaven and the hard work done here below. Now is that
what the gleam and expectation of a future life does for you?
This is the-only time in John’s Epistle that he speaks about hope. The
good man, living so near Christ, finds that the present, with its ‘abiding
in Him,’ is enough for his heart. And though he was the Seer of the
Apocalypse, he has scarcely a word to say about the future in this letter
of his, and when he does it is for a simple and intensely practical
purpose, in order that he may enforce on us the teaching of labouring
earnestly in purifying ourselves.
My brother, is that your type of Christianity? Is that the kind of
inspiration that comes to you from the hope that steals in upon you in
your weary hours, when sorrows, and cares, and changes, and loss, and
disappointments, and hard work weigh you down, and you say, ‘It would be
blessed to pass hence’? Does it set you harder at work than anything else
can do? Is it all utilised? Or if I might use such an illustration, is it
like the electricity of the Aurora Borealis, that paints your winter sky
with vanishing, useless splendours of crimson and blue? or have you got it
harnessed to your tramcars, lighting your houses, driving sewing-machines,
doing practical work in your daily life? Is the hope of Heaven, and of
being like Christ, a thing that stimulates and stirs us every moment to
heroisms of self-surrender and to strenuous martyrdom of self-cleansing?
All is gathered up into the one lesson. First, let us go to that dear Lord
whose blood cleanseth from all sin, and let us say to Him, ‘Purge me and I
shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.’ And then,
receiving into our hearts the powers that purify, in His love and His
sacrifice and His life, ‘having these promises’ and these possessions,
‘Dearly beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of flesh and
spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of the Lord.’
1
John 3:7
Practical Righteousness
‘Little children, let no man deceive you; he that doeth righteousness is
righteous, even as He is righteous.’—1 John 3:7.
THE popular idea of the Apostle John is strangely unlike the real man. He
is supposed to be the gentle Apostle of Love, the mystic amongst the
Twelve. He is that, but he was the ‘son of thunder’ before he was the
Apostle of Love, and he did not drop the first character when he attained
the second. No doubt his central thought was, ‘God is Love’; no doubt that
thought had refined and assimilated his character, but the love which he
believed and the love which he exercised were neither of them facile
feebleness, but strong and radiant with an awful purity. None of the New
Testament writers proclaims a more austere morality than does John. And
just because he loved the Love and the Light, he hated and loathed the
darkness. He can thunder and lighten when needful, and he shows us that
the true divine love in a man recoils from its opposite as passionately as
it cleaves to God and good.
Again, John is, par excellence, the mystic of the New Testament, always
insisting on the direct communion which every soul may have with God,
which is the essence of wholesome mysticism. Now that type of thinking has
often in its raptures forgotten plain, pedestrian morality; but John never
commits that error. He never soars so high as to lose sight of the flat
earth below; and whilst he is always inviting us and enjoining us to dwell
in God and abide in Christ, with equal persistence and force he is
preaching to us the plainest duties of elementary morality.
He illustrates this moral earnestness in my text. The ‘little children’
for whom he was so affectionately solicitous were in danger, either from
teachers or from the tendencies native in us all, to substitute something
else for plain, righteous conduct; and the Apostle lovingly appeals to
them with his urgent declaration, that the only thing which shows a man to
be righteous—that is to say, a disciple of Christ—is his daily life, in
conformity with Christ’s commands. The errors of these ancient Asiatics
live to-day in new forms, but still substantially the same. And they are
as hard to kill amongst English Nonconformists like us as they were
amongst Asiatic Christians nineteen centuries ago.
I. So Let Me Try Just To Insist, First Of All, On That Thought That
Doing Righteousness Is The One Test Of Being A Christian.
Now that word ‘righteousness’ is a theological word, and by much usage the
lettering has got to be all but obliterated upon it; and it is worn smooth
like sixpences that go from pocket to pocket. Therefore I want, before I
go further, to make this one distinct point, that the New Testament
righteousness is no theological, cloistered, peculiar kind of excellence,
but embraces within its scope ‘whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever
things are fair, whatsoever things are of good report’; all that the world
calls virtue, all which the world has combined to praise. There are
countries on the earth which are known by different names to their
inhabitants and to foreigners. The ‘righteousness’ of the New Testament,
though it embraces a great deal more, includes within its map all the
territories which belong to morality or to virtue. The three words cover
the same ground, though one of them covers more than the other two. The
New Testament ‘righteousness’ differs from the moralist’s morality, or the
world’s virtue, in its scope, inasmuch as it includes our relations to God
as well as to men; it differs in its perspective, inasmuch as it exalts
some types of excellence that the world pooh-poohs, and pulls down some
that the world hallelujahs and adulates; it strips the fine feathers of
approving words off some vices which masquerade as virtues. It casts round
the notion of duty, of morality, of virtue, a halo, and it touches it with
emotion. Christianity does with the dictates of the natural conscience
what we might figure as being the leading out of some captive virgin in
white, from the darkness into the sunshine, and the turning of her face up
to heaven, which illuminates it with a new splendour, and invests her with
a new attractiveness. But all that any man rightly includes in his notion
of the things that are ‘of good report’ is included in this theological
word, righteousness, which to some of you seems so wrapped in mists, and
so far away from daily life.
I freely confess that in very many instances the morality of the moralist
has outshone the righteousness of the Christian. Yes! and I have seen
canoe-paddles carved by South Sea Islanders with no better tools than an
oyster-shell and a sharp fish-bone, which in the minuteness and delicacy
of their work, as well as in the truth and taste of their pattern, might
put to shame the work of carvers with better tools. But that is not the
fault of the tools; it is the fault of the carvers. And so, whilst we
acknowledge that Christian people have but poorly represented to the world
what Christ and Christ’s apostles meant by righteousness, I reiterate that
the righteousness of the gospel is the morality of the world plus a great
deal more.
That being understood, let me remind you of two or three ways in which
this great truth of the text is obscured to us, and in some respects
contradicted, in the practice of many professing Christians. First, let me
say my text insists upon this, that the conduct, not the creed, makes the
Christian. There is a continual tendency on our part, as there was with
these believers in Asia Minor long ago, to substitute the mere acceptance,
especially the orthodox acceptance, of certain great fundamental Christian
truths for Christianity. A man may believe thirty-nine or thirty-nine
thousand Articles without the smallest intellectual drawback, and not be
one whit nearer being a Christian than if he did not believe one of them.
For faith, which is the thing that makes a man a Christian to begin with,
is not assent, but trust. And there is a whole gulf, wide enough to drown
a world in, between the two attitudes of mind. On the one side of the gulf
is salvation, on the other side of the gulf there may be loss. Of course,
I know that it is hard, though I do not believe it is impossible, to erect
the structure of a saving faith on a very, very imperfect intellectual
apprehension of Scripture truth. That has nothing to do with my present
point. What I am saying is that, unless you erect that structure of a
faith which is an act of your will and of your whole nature, and not the
mere assent of your understanding, upon your belief, your belief is
impotent, and is of no use at all, and you might as well not have it.
What is the office of our creed in regard to our conduct? To give us
principles, to give us motives, to give us guidance, to give us weapons.
If it does these things then it does its work. If it lies in our heads a
mere acceptance of certain propositions, it is just as useless and as dead
as the withered seeds that rattle inside a dried poppy-head in the autumn
winds. You are meant to begin with accepting truth, and then you are meant
to take that truth as being a power in your lives that shall shape your
conduct. To know, and there an end, is enough in matters of mere science,
but in matters of religion and in matters of morality or righteousness
knowing is only the first step in the process, and we are made to know in
order that, knowing, we may do.
But some professing Christians seem to have their natures built, like
ocean-going steamers, with water-tight compartments, on the one side of
which they keep their creed, and there is no kind of communication between
that and the other side where their conduct is originated. ‘Little
children, let no man deceive you; he that doeth righteousness is
righteous.’
Again, my text suggests conduct and not emotion. Now there is a type of
Christian life which is more attractive in appearance than that of the
hard, fossilised, orthodox believer—viz., the warmly emotional and fervent
Christian. But that type, all experience shows, has a pit dug close beside
it into which it is apt to fall. For there is a strange connection between
emotional Christianity and a want of straightforwardness in daily business
life, and of self-control and government of the appetites and the senses.
That has been sadly shown, over and again, and if we had time one could
easily point to the reasons in human nature, and its strange contexture,
why it should be so. Now I am not disparaging emotion —God forbid—for I
believe that to a very large extent the peculiarity of Christian teaching
is just this, that it does bring emotion to bear upon the hard grind of
daily duty. But for all that, I am bound to say that this is a danger
which, in this day, by reason of certain tendencies in our popular
Christianity, is a very real one, and that you will find people gushing in
religious enthusiasm, and then going away to live very questionable, and
sometimes very mean, and sometimes even very gross and sensual lives. The
emotion is meant to spring from the creed, and it is meant to be the
middle term between the creed and the conduct. Why, we have learnt to
harness electricity to our tramcars, and to make it run our messages, and
light our homes, and that is like what we have to do with the emotion
without which a man’s Christianity will be a poor, scraggy thing. It is a
good servant; it is a bad master. You do not show yourselves to be
Christians because you gush. You do not show yourselves to be Christians
because you can talk fervidly and feel deeply. Raptures are all very well,
but what we want is the grind of daily righteousness, and doing little
things because of the fear and the love of the Lord.
May I say again, my text suggests conduct, and not verbal worship. You and
I, in our adherence to a simpler, less ornate and aesthetic form of
devotion than prevails in the great Episcopal churches, are by no means
free from the danger which, in a more acute form, besets them, of
substituting participation in external acts of worship for daily
righteousness of life Laborare est orate —to work is to pray. That is true
with explanations, commentaries, and limitations. But I wonder how many
people there are who sing hymns which breathe aspirations and wishes that
their whole daily life contradicts. And I wonder how many of us there are
who seem to be joining in prayers that we never expect to have answered,
and would be very much astonished if the answers came, and should not know
what to do with if they did come. We live in one line, and worship in
exactly the opposite. Brethren, creed is necessary; emotion is necessary;
worship is necessary! But that on which these three all converge, and for
which they are, is daily life, plain, practical righteousness.
II. Now Let Me Say, Secondly, That Being Righteous Is The Way To Do
Righteousness.
One of the great characteristics of New Testament teaching of morality, or
rather let me say of Christ’s teaching of morality, is that it shifts, if
I may so put it, the centre of gravity from acts to being, that instead of
repeating the parrot-cry, ‘Do, do, do, ‘or ‘Do not, do not, do not,’ it
says, ‘Be, and the doing will take care of it. self. Be; do not trouble so
much about outward acts, look after the inward nature.’ Character makes
conduct, though, of course, conduct reacts upon character. ‘As a man
thinketh in his heart so is he,’ and the way to set actions right is to
set the heart right.
Some of us are trying to purify the stream by putting in disinfectants
half-way down, instead of going up to the source and dealing with the
fountain. And the weakness of all the ordinary, commonplace morality of
the world is that it puts its stress upon the deeds, and leaves
comparatively uncared for the condition of the person, the inward self,
from whom the deeds come. And so it is all superficial, and of small
account.
If that be so, then we are met by this experience: that when we honestly
try to make the tree good that its fruit may be good we come full front up
to this, that there is a streak in us, a stain, a twist—call it anything
you like—like a black vein through a piece of Parian marble, or a scratch
upon a mirror, which streak or twist baffles our effort to make ourselves
righteous. I am not going, if I can help it, to exaggerate the facts of
the case. The Christian teaching of what is unfortunately called total
depravity is not that there is no good in anybody, but that there is a
diffused evil in everybody which affects in different degrees and in
different ways all a man’s nature. And that is no mere doctrine of the New
Testament, but it is a transcript from the experience of every one of us.
What then? If I must be righteous in order that I may do righteousness,
and if, as I have found out by experience (for the only way to know myself
is to reflect upon what I have done)—if I have found out that I am not
righteous, what then? You may say to me, ‘Have you led me into a blind
alley, out of which I cannot get? Here you are, insisting on an imperative
necessity, and in the same breath saying that it is impossible. What is
left for me?’ I go on to tell you what is left.
III. Union With Jesus Christ By Faith Makes Us ‘Righteous Even As He Is
Righteous.’
There is the pledge, there is the prophecy, there is the pattern; and
there is the power to redeem the pledge, to fulfil the prophecy, to make
the pattern copyable and copied by every one of us. Brethren, this is the
very heart of John’s teaching, that if we will, not by the mere assent of
our intellect, but by the casting of ourselves on Jesus Christ, trust in
Him, there comes about a union between us and Him so real, so deep, so
vital, so energetic, that by the touch of His life we live, and by His
righteousness breathed into us, we, too, may become righteous. The great
vessel and the tiny pot by its side may have a connecting pipe, and from
the great one there shall flow over into the little one as much as will
fill it brim full. In Him we too may be righteous.
My friend, there are men and women who are ready to set to their seals
that that is true, and who can say, ‘I have found it so. By union with
Jesus Christ in faith, I have received new tastes, new inclinations, a new
set to my whole life, and I have been able to overcome unrighteousnesses
which were too many and too mighty for myself.’ It is so; and some of us
to our own consciences and consciousness are witnesses to it, however
imperfectly. God forgive us! We may have manifested the renewing power of
union with Christ in our daily lives.
‘Even as He is righteous’—the water in the great vessel and the little one
are the same, but the vase is not the cistern. The beam comes from the
sun, but the beam is not the sun. ‘Even as’ does not mean equality, but it
does mean similarity. Christ is righteous, eternally, essentially,
completely; we may be ‘even as He is’ derivatively, partially, and if we
put our trust in Him we shall be so, and that growingly through our daily
lives. And then, after earth is done with, ‘we know that, when He shall be
manifested, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.’
May we each, dear brethren, ‘be found in Him, not having our own
righteousness which is of the law, but that which is through faith in
Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith.’