Romans
8:31
HOW MUCH IS WRAPPED UP in these few words, “God for us”! They form
one of those marvelous chains of three links so frequently found in Scripture.
We have “God” linked on to “us” by that precious little
word “for.” This secures everything, for time and eternity. There
is not a single thing within the entire range of a creature’s necessities
that are not included in the brief but comprehensive sentence which forms the
heading of this paper. If God be for us, then it follows of necessity—blessed
necessity—that neither our sins, nor our iniquities, nor our guilt, nor
our ruined nature, nor Satan, nor the world, nor any other creature can possibly
stand in the way of our present peace and our everlasting felicity and glory.
God can dispose of all—has disposed of them, in such a way as to illustrate
His own glory, and magnify His holy name, throughout the wide forever and ever.
All praise and adoration be to the eternal Trinity!
It may be, however, that the reader feels disposed, at the very outset, to inquire
how he is to know his place amongst the “us” of our precious thesis.
This truly, is a most momentous question. Our eternal weal or woe hangs upon the
answer. How, then, are we to know that God is for us? In reply to this most weighty
question, we shall seek, by God’s grace, to furnish the reader with five
substantial proofs that God is for us, in all our need, our guilt, our misery,
and our danger—for us, spite of all that we are, and all that we have done—for
us, although there is no reason whatever, so far as we are concerned, why He should
be for us, but every reason why He should be against us.
The first grand proof which we shall adduce is the gift of His Son. “For
God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth
in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life” (John 3:16).
Now we are glad, for various reasons, to commence our series of proofs with these
memorable words. In the first place, they meet a difficulty which may suggest
itself to the mind of the anxious reader—a difficulty based upon the fact
that the sentence culled from Rom. 8:31 evidently applies primarily to believers,
and only to such, as does the entire Epistle and every one of the Epistles.
But, blessed be God, no such difficulty can be started in reference to the all-embracing,
and encouraging words of Him who spake as never man spake. When we have from the
lips of our blessed Lord Himself, the eternal Son of God, such words as these,
“God so loved the world,” we have no ground whatever for questioning
their application to each and all who come under the comprehensive word “world.”
Before any one can prove that the free love of God does not apply to him, he must
first prove that he does not form a part of the world, but that he belongs to
some other sphere of being. If indeed, our Lord had said, “God so loved
a certain portion of the world,” call it what you please, then verily it
would be absolutely necessary to prove that we belong to that particular portion
or class, ere we could attempt to apply His words to ourselves. If He had said
that God so loved the predestinated, the elect, or the called, then we must seek
to know our place amongst the number of such, before we can take home to ourselves
the precious assurance of the love of God, as proved by the gift of His Son.
But our Lord used no such qualifying clause. He is addressing one who, from his
earliest days, had been trained and accustomed to take a very limited view indeed
of the favor and goodness of God. Nicodemus had been taught to consider that the
rich tide of Jehovah’s goodness, loving-kindness, and tender mercy could
only flow within the narrow inclosure of the Jewish system and the Jewish nation.
The thought of its rolling forth to the wide wide world had never, we may safely
assert, penetrated the mind of one trained amid the contracting influences of
the legal system. Hence, therefore, it must have sounded passing strange in his
ear, to hear “a teacher come from God” giving utterance to the great
fact that God loved not merely the Jewish nation, nor yet some special portion
of the human race, but “the world.” No doubt, such a statement would
add not a little to the amazement felt by this master in Israel at being told
that he himself, with all His religious advantages, needed to be born again in
order to see or enter the kingdom of God.
Do we then deny or call in question the grand truth of predestination, election,
or effectual calling? God forbid. We hold these things as amongst the fundamental
principles of true Christianity. We believe in the eternal counsels and purposes
of our God—His unsearchable decrees—His electing love—His sovereign
mercy.
But do any or all of these things interfere, in the smallest degree, with the
gracious activities of the divine nature, or the outgoings of God’s love
towards a lost world? In no wise. God is love. That is His blessed nature, and
this nature must express itself toward all. The mistake lies in supposing that
because God has His purposes, His counsels, His decrees—because He is sovereign
in His grace and mercy—because He has chosen from all eternity a people
for His own praise and glory—because the names of the redeemed, all the
redeemed, were written down in the book of the slain Lamb, before the foundation
of the world—that therefore God cannot be said to love all mankind—to
love the world—and, moreover that the glad tidings of God’s full and
free salvation ought not to be proclaimed in the ears of every creature under
Heaven.
The simple fact is that the two lines, though so perfectly distinct, are laid
down with equal clearness, in the Word of God; neither interferes, in the smallest
degree, with the other, but both together go to make up the beauteous harmony
of divine truth and to set forth the glorious unity of the divine nature.
Now, it is with the activities of the divine nature and the outgoings of divine
love that the preacher of the gospel has specially to do. He is not to be cramped,
crippled, or confined in his blessed work, by any reference to God’s secret
decrees or purposes, though fully aware of the existence of such. His mission
is to the world—the wide wide world. His theme is salvation—a salvation
as full as the heart of God, as permanent as the throne of God—as free as
the air—free to all without any exception, limitation, or condition whatsoever.
The basis of his work is the atoning death of Christ which has removed all barriers
out of the way, and opened up the floodgates in order that the mighty tide of
divine love may roll forth, in all its fullness, richness and blessedness, to
a lost and guilty world.
And here, we may add, lies the ground of man’s responsibility in reference
to the gospel of God. If, indeed, it be true that God so loved the world as to
give His only begotten Son—if “the righteousness of God is unto all”
(Rom. 3:22)—if it be God’s gracious will that “all should be
saved and come to the knowledge of the truth” (1 Tim. 2:4)—if He is
“not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance”
(2 Pet. 3:9)—then verily is every man who hears this glorious gospel laid
under the most solemn responsibility to believe it and be saved. No one can honestly
and truthfully turn round and say, “I longed to be saved, but could not,
because I was not one of the elect. I longed to flee from the wrath to come but
was prevented by the insuperable barrier of the divine decree which irresistibly
consigned me to an everlasting hell.”
There is not, within the covers of the volume of God, in the entire range of His
dealings with His creatures, in the aspect of His character, or in the enactments
of His moral government, the very faintest shadow of a foundation for such an
objection. Every man is left without excuse. God can say to all who have rejected
His gospel, “I would, but ye would not.” There is absolutely no such
thing as reprobation in the Word of God, meaning thereby the consignment on God’s
part, of any number of His creatures to everlasting damnation. Everlasting fire
is prepared for the devil and his angels (Matt. 25). Men will rush into
it. “Vessels of wrath” are fitted, not by God, but by themselves,
“to destruction” (Rom. 9). Everyone who gets to Heaven will have to
thank God for it. Everyone who finds himself in hell will have to blame himself
for it.
Furthermore, we have ever to remember that the sinner has nothing to do with God’s
unpublished decrees. What does he—what can he—know about such? Nothing
whatever. But he has to do with God’s published love—His proffered
mercy—His free salvation—His glorious gospel. We may fearlessly assert
that so long as these glowing and glorious words shine in the record of God, “Whosoever
will let him take of the water of life freely,” (Rev. 22:17)
it is impossible for any son or daughter of Adam to say, “I longed to be
saved, but could not. I thirsted for the living water, but could not reach it.
The well was deep and I had nothing to draw with.” Ah, no! such language
will never be used, such an objection will never be urged by anyone in all the
ranks of the lost. When men pass into eternity they will see with awful clearness
what they now affect to think is so obscure and perplexing, namely, the perfect
compatibility of God’s electing sovereign grace and the free offer of salvation
to all—the fullest harmony between divine sovereignty and human responsibility.
We fondly trust the reader sees these things, even now. It is of the very last
possible importance to maintain the balance of truth in the soul—to allow
the beams of divine revelation to act, with full power, on the heart and conscience,
unimpeded by the murky atmosphere of mere human theology. There is imminent danger
in taking up a certain number of abstract truths and forming them into a system.
We want the adjusting power of all truth. The growth and practical sanctification
of the soul are promoted, not by some truth, but by the truth, in all its
fullness, as embodied in the person of Christ, and set forth by the eternal Spirit
in the holy Scriptures. We must get rid completely of all our own preconceived
notions—all merely theological views and opinions—and come like a
little child, to the feet of Jesus to be taught by His Spirit, from out His holy
word. Thus only shall we find rest from conflicting dogmas. Thus shall all the
heavy clouds and mists of human opinion be rolled away, and our enfranchised souls
shall bask in the clear sunlight of a full divine revelation.
We shall now proceed with our proofs.
The second fact which proves that God is for us will be found in the death
of His Son. It is only necessary for us to take up one feature in the atoning
death of Christ, but that one feature is a cardinal one. We refer to the marvelous
fact set forth by the Holy Ghost in the prophet Isaiah, “It pleased Jehovah
to bruise Him. He hath put Him to grief” (chapter 53).
Our blessed Lord might have come into this world of sin and sorrow. He might have
become a man. He might have been baptized in the Jordan—anointed by the
Holy Ghost—tempted of Satan in the wilderness. He might have gone about
doing good. He might have lived and labored, wept and prayed, and, at the close,
gone back to Heaven again, thus leaving us involved in deeper gloom than ever.
He might, like the priest or the Levite, in the parable, have come and looked
upon us in our wounds and misery, passed by on the other side and returned alone
to the place from whence He came.
And what if He had? what but the flames of an everlasting hell for thee and me?
For, be it well remembered, that all the living labors of the Son of God—His
amazing ministry—His days of toil and His nights of prayer—His tears,
His sighs, His groans—the whole of His life-work, from the manger up to,
but short of, the cross, could not have blotted out one speck of guilt from a
human conscience. “Without shedding of blood is no remission.” No
doubt, the eternal Son had to become a man that He might die; but incarnation
could not cancel guilt. Indeed, the life of Christ, as a man on this earth, only
proved the human race more guilty still. “If I had not come and spoken to
them, they had not had sin.” The light that shone in His blessed ways only
revealed the moral darkness of man—of Israel—of the world. Hence,
therefore, had He merely come and lived and labored here for three-and-thirty
years, and gone back to Heaven, our guilt and moral darkness would have been fully
proved but no atonement made. “It is the blood that maketh atonement for
the soul.” “Without shedding of blood is no remission” (Heb.
9:22).
This is a grand foundation-truth of Christianity, and must be constantly affirmed,
and tenaciously held. There is immense moral power in it. If it be true that all
the life-labors of the Son of God—His tears, His prayers, His groans, His
sighs—if all these things put together could not cancel one single speck
of guilt; then, indeed, may we not lawfully inquire what possible value can there
be in our works—our tears—our prayers—our religious services—our
ordinances, sacraments and ceremonies—the whole range of religious activity
and moral reform? Can such things avail to cancel our sins and give us a righteousness
before God? The thought is perfectly monstrous. If any or all of these things
could avail, then why the sacrificial, atoning death of Christ? Why that ineffable
and inestimable sacrifice, if aught else would have done?
But, it will perhaps be said that, although none of these things could avail without
the death of Christ, yet they must be added to it. For what? To make that peerless
death—that precious blood—that priceless sacrifice of full avail?
Is that it? Shall the rubbish of human doings, human righteousness, be flung into
the scale to make the sacrifice of Christ of full avail in the judgment of God?
The bare thought is positive and absolute blasphemy.
But are there not to be good works? Yes, verily; but what are they? Are they the
pious doings, the religious efforts, the moral activities of unregenerate, unconverted,
unbelieving nature? Nay. What then? What are the Christian’s good works?
They are life-works, not dead works. They are the precious fruits of life
possessed—the life of Christ in the true believer. There is not anything
beneath the canopy of Heaven which God can accept as a good work save the fruit
of the grace of Christ in the believer. The very feeblest expression of the life
of Christ, in the daily history of a Christian, is fragrant and precious to God.
But the most splendid and gigantic labors of an unbeliever are, in God’s
account, but “dead works.”
All this, however, is a digression from our main line, to which we must now return.
We refer to one special point in the death of Christ, and that is the fact that
it pleased Jehovah to bruise Him. Herein lies the striking and soul-subduing proof
that God is for us. “He spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for
us all.” He not merely gave Him but bruised Him, and that
for us. That spotless, holy, perfect One—the only perfect Man that ever
trod this earth—the One who ever did the things which pleased His Father—whose
whole life from the manger to the tree was one continued sweet odor ascending
to the throne and to the heart of God—whose every movement, every word,
every look, every thought was well pleasing to God—whose one grand object,
from first to last, was to glorify God and finish His work—this blessed
One was delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God—was
nailed to the cursed tree, and there endured the righteous wrath of a sin-hating
God; and all this because God was for us—even us.
What marvelous and matchless grace is here! The Just One bruised for the unjust—the
sinless, spotless, holy Jesus, bruised by the hand of Infinite Justice in order
that guilty rebels might be saved; and not only saved but brought into the position
and relationship of sons—sons and daughters of the Lord Almighty—heirs
of God and joint-heirs with Christ.
This surely is grace—rich, free, sovereign grace—grace abounding to
the very chief of sinners—grace reigning, through righteousness, unto eternal
life, by Jesus Christ. Who would not trust this grace? Who can look at the cross,
and doubt that God is for the sinner—for any sinner—for him—for
the reader of these lines? Who would not confide in that love that shines in the
cross? Who can look at the cross and not see that God willeth not the death of
any sinner? Why did He not allow us to perish in our guilt—to descend into
that everlasting hell which we so richly deserved because of our sins? Why give
His Only-begotten Son? Why bruise Him on that shameful cross? Why hide His face
from the only perfect Man that ever lived—that Man His own Eternal Son?
Why all this? Surely it was because God is for us, spite of all our guilt and
sinful rebellion. Yes, blessed be His Name, He is for the poor self-destroyed,
hell-deserving sinner, be he who or what he may; and each one whose eye scans
these lines is now entreated to come and confide in the love that gave Jesus from
the bosom and bruised Him on the cross.
Oh! do come, just now. Delay not! Waver not! Reason not! Listen not to Satan!
Listen not to the suggestions and imaginings of your own heart; but listen to
that Word which assures you that God is for you, and to that love which shines
forth in the gift and the death of His Son.
In pursuing what we may truly call the golden chain of evidence in proof that
God is for us, we have dwelt upon the two precious facts of the gift and the death
of His Son. We have traveled from the bosom to the cross, along that mysterious
and marvelous path which is marked by the footprints of divine and everlasting
love. We have seen the blessed One not only giving His only begotten Son from
His bosom, but actually bruising Him for us—making His spotless soul an
offering for sin—bringing Him down into the dust of death—making Him
to be sin for us—judging Him in our stead—thus affording the most
unanswerable evidence of the fact that He is for us, that His heart is toward
us, that He earnestly desires our salvation, seeing that He hath not withheld
His Son, His only Son from us, but delivered Him up for us all.
Our third proof is furnished by the raising of His Son. And in speaking
of the glorious fact of resurrection, we must confine ourselves to the one point
therein, namely, the proof which it furnishes of God’s being friendly to
us. A passage or two of Scripture will suffice to unfold and establish this special
point.
In Romans 4 the inspired apostle introduces God to our hearts as the One who raised
Jesus our Lord from the dead. He is speaking of Abraham who, He tells us, “against
hope believed in hope, that he might become the father of many nations, according
to that which was spoken, So shall thy seed be. And being not weak in faith, he
considered not his own body now dead, when he was about an hundred years old,
neither yet the deadness of Sarah’s womb. He staggered not at the promise
of God through unbelief; but was strong in faith, giving glory to God; and being
fully persuaded that what He had promised, He was able also to perform. And therefore
it was imputed to him for righteousness. Now it was not written for his sake alone
that it was imputed to him; but for us also, to whom it shall be imputed, if we
believe on Him that”—what? That gave His Son? Nay. That bruised His
Son upon the cross? Nay. What then? “That raised up Jesus our Lord from
the dead”—the very same “who was delivered for our offences,
and was raised again for our justification.”
Weigh this great fact. What was it that brought the precious Saviour to the cross?
What brought Him down to the dust of death? Was it not our offences? Truly so.
“He was delivered for our offences.” He was nailed to the cursed tree
for us. He represented us on the cross. He was our Substitute, in all the full
value and deep significance of that word. He took our place and was treated, in
every respect, as we deserve to be treated. The hand of infinite justice dealt
with our sins—all our sins, at the cross. Jesus made Himself responsible
for all our offences, our iniquities, our transgressions, our liabilities, all
that was or ever could be against us; He—blessed be His peerless and adorable
name!—made Himself answerable for all, and died in our stead, under the
full weight of our sins. He died, the just for the unjust.
Where is He now? The heart bounds with ineffable joy and holy triumph at the thought
of the answer. Where is the blessed One who hung on yonder cross, and lay in yonder
tomb? He is at the right hand of God, crowned with glory and honor. Who set Him
there? Who put the crown upon His blessed brow? God Himself. The One who gave
Him, and the One who bruised Him is the One who raised Him, and it is in Him we
are to believe if we are to be counted righteous. This is the special point before
the apostle’s mind. Righteousness shall be imputed to us if we believe on
God as the One who raised Jesus our Lord from the dead.
Mark the vital link. Seize the all-important connection. The selfsame One who
hung upon the cross, charged with all our offences, is now on the throne without
them. How did He get there? Was it in virtue of His eternal Godhead? No: for on
that ground He was always there. He was God over all, blessed forever. Was it
in virtue of His eternal Sonship? Nay; for He was ever there on that ground also.
Therefore, it could, in no wise, meet our need as guilty sinners, charged with
innumerable offences, to be told that the eternal Son of the Father had taken
His seat at the right hand of the majesty in the heavens, inasmuch as that place
ever belonged to Him—yea, the very deepest and tenderest place in the bosom
of the Father.
But, further, we may inquire, was it as the spotless, sinless, perfect Man that
our adorable Lord took His seat on the throne? Nay; as such, He could, at any
moment, between the manger and the cross, have taken His place there.
To what conclusion, then, are we absolutely shut up, in this matter? To that most
precious, that tranquilizing conclusion, that the selfsame One who was delivered
for our offences, bruised for our iniquities, judged in our stead, is now in Heaven;
that the One who represented us on the cross, is now on the throne; that the One
who stood charged with all our guilt, is now crowned with glory and honor; that,
so perfectly, so absolutely and completely, has He disposed of the entire question
of our sins, that infinite justice has raised Him from the dead, and placed a
diadem of glory upon His sacred brow.
Reader, dost thou understand this? Dost thou see its bearing upon thyself? Dost
thou believe in the One who raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead? Dost thou
see that, in so doing, He has declared Himself friendly to thee? And dost thou
believe that, in raising up Jesus, He set forth His infinite satisfaction in the
great work of atonement, and furnished thee with a receipt in full for all thy
debts—a receipt for the “ten thousand talents.”
Here lies the gist, marrow, and substance of this magnificent argument of Romans
4. If the Man who was delivered for our offences is now in Heaven,—in Heaven,
too, by the hand and act of God Himself; then, most surely, our offences are all
gone, and we stand justified from all things, as free from every charge of guilt,
and every breath of condemnation, as the blessed One Himself. It cannot possibly
be otherwise, if we believe on Him who raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead.
It is utterly impossible for a charge to be brought against the believer in the
God of resurrection, for the simplest of all reasons that the One whom He raised
was the One whom He bruised for the believer’s sins. Why did He raise Him?
Because the sins for which He bruised Him were all put away, and put away forever.
The Lord Jesus, having undertaken our cause, and made Himself answerable for
us in every way, could not be where He now is, if a single jot or tittle of
our guilt remained. But on the other hand, being where He now is, and being there
by God’s own act, it is impossible—utterly impossible—for any
question to be raised as to the full and complete justification and perfect righteousness
of the soul that believes in Him. Thus, the moment that any one believes in God,
in the special character of the raiser of Jesus, he is counted perfectly righteous
before Him. This is most marvelous, but divinely and eternally true. May the reader
feel its power, sweetness, and tranquilizing virtue! Yea, may the eternal Spirit
give him the blessed sense of it, deep down in his heart! Then, indeed shall he
have perfect peace in his soul; then, too, shall he understand how that, in raising,
as well as in bruising and giving His Son, God has declared and proved Himself
to be for us.
We had intended to bring under the special notice of the reader Hebrews 13:20,
but we must allow him to dwell upon that lovely passage for himself, while we
proceed to exhibit our fourth proof that God is for us, which will be found in
the descent of the Holy Ghost. Here, too, we must confine ourselves to
one point in that most glorious event, and that is the form in which that august
witness, the eternal Spirit, descended.
Let the reader turn to the second chapter of the Acts. “And when the day
of Pentecost was fully come, they were all with one accord in one place. And suddenly
there came a sound from heaven, as of a rushing mighty wind, and it filled all
the house where they were sitting. And there appeared unto them cloven tongues,
like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them. And they were all filled with the
Holy Ghost, and began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them
utterance. And there were dwelling at Jerusalem, Jews, devout men, out of every
nation under heaven. Now, when this was noised abroad, the multitude came
together, and were confounded, because that every man heard them speak in his
own language. And they were all amazed and marveled, saying one to another,
Behold, are not all these which speak Galileans? And how hear we every man
in our own tongue wherein we were born? Parthians, and Medes, and Elamites,
and the dwellers in Mesopotamia, and in Judea, and Capadocia, in Pontus, and Asia,
Phrygia, and Pamphylia, in Egypt, and in the parts of Libya about Cyrene, and
strangers of Rome, Jews and proselytes, Cretes and Arabians, we do hear them speak
in our tongues, the wonderful works of God.”
Here then we mark one special fact—a fact of deepest interest—three
times referred to in the foregoing quotation. It is this, the Holy Ghost came
down to speak to every man “in his own dialect”—not the dialect
in which he was educated merely, but “in which he was born”—the
very dialect in which his mother first whispered into his infant ears, the sweet
and tender accents of a mother’s love. Such was the medium, such the vehicle
which the divine Messenger adopted for the blessed purpose of making known to
man that God was for us. He did not speak to the Hebrew in Greek, or to the Greek
in Latin. He spoke to each one in the language which he understood, in the plain
vernacular—the mother tongue. If there was any peculiarity in that mother
tongue, any idiom, any provincialism in the dialect of each, the blessed Spirit
would make use of it for the purpose of reaching the heart with the sweet story
of grace.
Contrast with this the giving of the law from mount Sinai. There Jehovah confined
Himself absolutely to one language. If persons had been gathered there “from
every nation under heaven,” they would not have understood a single syllable.
The law—the ten words—the record of man’s duty to God
and to his neighbor was sedulously wrapped up in one tongue. But when “the
wonderful works of God” were to be published—when the blessed
story of love was to be told out—when the heart of God towards poor guilty
sinners was to be revealed, was one language enough? No! “Every nation under
heaven” must hear, and hear, too, in their own mother tongue.
Is not this a telling fact? It will perhaps be said that those who heard Peter
and the rest on the day of Pentecost, were Jews. Well, that in no wise robs our
fact of its charm, its sweetness, and its power. Our fact is that when the eternal
Spirit descended from Heaven, to tell of the resurrection of Christ, to tell of
accomplished redemption—to publish the glad tidings of salvation—to
preach repentance and remission of sins—He did not confine Himself to one
language, but spoke in every dialect under Heaven!
And why? Because He desired to make man understand what He had to say to him—He
desired to reach his heart with the sweet tidings of redeeming love—the
soul-stirring message of full remission of sins. When the law was to be given—when
Jehovah had to speak to man about his duty—when He had to address him in
such terms as, “Thou shalt do this, and thou shalt not do that,” He
confined Himself to one solitary language. But when He would unfold the precious
secret of His love—when He would prove to man that He was for him, He, blessed
forever be His name, took care to speak in every language under Heaven, so that
every man might hear, in his own dialect wherein he was born, the wonderful works
of God.*
Thus, then, in our series of proofs—our golden chain of evidence, we have
traveled from the bosom of God to the cross of Christ, and from that precious
cross back to the throne—we have marked the giving, the bruising, and the
raising of the Son; we have seen the very heart of God told out in deep and marvelous
love, and tender compassion toward guilty perishing sinners. Moreover, we have
marked the descent of the eternal Spirit, from the throne of God—His mission
to this world to announce to every creature under Heaven the glad tidings of a
full, free, and everlasting salvation, through the blood of the Lamb, and to announce
these tidings not in an unknown tongue, but in the very tongue wherein each was
born.
What more remains? Is there yet another link to be added to the chain? Yes; there
is the possession of the Holy Scriptures. It may perhaps be said that our
fifth proof is involved in our fourth, inasmuch as the fact of my possessing a
copy of the Bible in my mother tongue is, in reality, the Holy Ghost speaking
to me in the language in which I was born.
True; but still, so far as the reader is concerned, the fact that God has put
into his hand or within his reach the sacred volume—the inestimable boon,
the holy Scriptures—is an additional proof that He is for him. For why were
we not left in ignorance and total darkness? Why was the divine book put into
our hands? Why, each one may say, for himself and herself, was I thus favored?
Why was I not left to live and die in heathen blindness? Why was the heavenly
lamp allowed to cast its precious beams on me—even me?
Ah! the answer is, “Because God is for thee.” Yes, for thee, notwithstanding
all thy many sins—for thee, spite of all thy forgetfulness, ingratitude
and rebellion—for thee, although as thou very well knowest, thou canst not
show a single reason why He should not be against thee. He gave His Son from His
bosom, bruised Him on the cross, raised Him from the dead, sent down the Holy
Ghost, put into your very hands His blessed book, all to show you that He is for
you, that His heart is toward you, that He earnestly desires your salvation.
And mark, we pray thee, thou canst not say, nor wilt thou ever dare to say, “I
could not understand the Bible; it was beyond me; it was full of abstruse mysteries
which I could not fathom; of difficulties which I could not solve; of discrepancies
which I could not reconcile. And when I turned to those who professed to be Christians,
I found them split up into almost innumerable sects, and divided into almost endless
schools of doctrine. And, not only so, but I saw such utter hollowness, such gross
inconsistency, such flagrant contradiction between profession and practice, that
I was forced to abandon the whole subject of religion with a mingled feeling of
perplexity, contempt, and disgust.”
These objections will not stand in the judgment, nor keep thee out of the lake
that burneth with fire and brimstone. Remember this. Yes, ponder it deeply. Let
not the devil, let not thine own heart deceive thee. What does Abraham say to
the rich man, in Luke 16? “They have Moses and the prophets, let them
hear them.” Why does the rich man not reply, “They cannot understand
them?” He dare not.
No; a child can understand the holy Scriptures, which are able to make us wise
unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. There is not one beneath
the canopy of God’s Heaven, who possesses a copy of the holy Scriptures,
who is not solemnly responsible before God for the use he makes of them. If professing
Christians were split up into ten thousand times as many sects as they are; if
they were ten thousand times as inconsistent as they are; if schools and doctors
of divinity were ten thousand times more conflicting than they are—still
the word to each possessor of the Bible is, “You have Moses and the prophets,
and the New Testament, hear them.”
Oh! that we could persuade the unconverted, the unawakened, the unbelieving reader
to think of these things, to think of them now, to ponder them, in the very hidden
depths of his moral being, to give them his heart’s undivided attention,
ere it be too late. We contemplate, with ever-deepening horror, the condition
of a lost soul in hell—of one opening his eyes, in that place of endless
torment, to the tremendous fact that God is against him and against him forever;
that all hope is gone; that nothing can ever bridge the chasm that separates the
region of the lost from the heaven of the redeemed; that “there is a great
gulf fixed.”
We cannot proceed. The thought is really overpowering. The heart is crushed by
the appalling contemplation. Dear reader, do let us entreat of thee, ere we lay
down the pen, to turn, this very hour, to a dear loving Saviour who stands with
open arms and open bosom to receive all who come to Him, and who assures thee
that “him that cometh unto Me I will in no wise cast out.” Do come
and trust in God’s faithful word and Christ’s finished work.
Here lies the precious secret of the whole matter. Look away from self, look straight
to Jesus, confide simply in Him, and in what He has done for thee on the cross,
and all thy sins shall be blotted out, divine righteousness shall be thine, eternal
life, sonship, an indwelling Spirit, an all-prevailing Advocate, a bright home
in the heavens, a portion in Christ’s eternal glory—yes, if thou wilt
but believe in Jesus all shall be thine—Himself the best of all.
May the Holy Ghost lead thee, this moment, to the feet of Jesus, and enable thee
to cry out, in holy triumph, “If God be for us, who can be against us?”
God grant it for Jesus Christ’s sake!
* The reader will note with interest a fact alluded to elsewhere, that in Genesis
11 divers tongues were given as a judgment upon man’s pride. In Acts 2 divers
tongues were given in grace to meet man’s need. And in Revelation 7 the
various tongues are all found united in one song of praise to God and to the Lamb.
Such are some of the wonderful works of God. May we praise Him with all our ransomed
powers! May our hearts adore Him!
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